Industry Surveys
It's Tough Out There For Global Wealth Managers, But Lots Of Varied Fortunes - PwC

Wealth managers around the world must contend with a still-tough global economy although there are wide variations in how firms fare, such as in Asia and emerging markets, says PwC in its bi-annual report.
  Wealth managers struggle with a tough global economy and
  near-endless increases in regulations, although there are wide
  variations in
  how firms in different regions fare, PwC says in its bi-annual
  survey of
  industry trends.
  Wealth managers in the Americas are more tech-savvy and
  target a leaner business model than is the case for their global
  peers. Globally,
  wealth creation is becoming ever more dispersed and diverse;
  “multi-speed
  geographic markets are evolving”, it said.
  In Western Europe growth is slowest of all, while North America
  shows moderate growth, and in emerging markets
  growth remains relatively high but has slowed in some areas.
  There is also what
  PwC calls a further group of nascent markets which accumulate new
  wealth most
  rapidly with net new money growth forecast at 16 per cent in
  2013.
  The report adds to a slew of surveys from other
  organisations such as Boston Consulting Group, Scorpio
  Partnership and
  ClearView Financial Media – publisher of this website - showing
  the global sector
  in a state of flux. Some 74 per cent of firms are making
  significant changes to
  their business models. The 60-page study, entitled,
  Navigating to tomorrow: serving clients and creating
  value, covers
  200 organisations in 51 nations. Survey participants said the
  industry is
  moving away from simply providing products towards delivering
  solutions and
  advice to clients. Trust, reputation and brand will likely all
  play a greater
  role in client propositions and clients' perception of value, the
  firm said.
  Although – as demonstrated by recent evidence from the likes
  of RBC Wealth Management/Capgemini - that high net worth
  individuals are
  getting wealthier again after 2008, this is not an easy source of
  help. Margins
  are under “significant” pressure; growth in different markets is
  uneven, while
  shifting demographics and technology pose their own challenges to
  business models.
  During last year, cost/income ratios, on average, stood at 69 per
  cent. Globally,
  managers expect that rate to fall to 64 per cent by 2014.
Changing fortunes
  “Switzerland
  is expected to not only be overtaken by Singapore, but to also
  face
  stronger competition from London. The future for Switzerland,
  and all international financial centres, will increasingly be
  about
  developing
  defined areas of expertise to differentiate as transparency
  and
  increased regulatory
  standards create a more level playing field between the larger
  IFCs than
  has been the case
  in the past,” PwC said.
  Respondents said Shanghai and
  Dubai are fast growing centres, closely followed
  by Brazil, Miami
  and Mexico City
  as competition between traditional and newer IFCs and cities for
  the wealthy is
  expected to intensify
Americas
  In terms of the Americas,
  a stand-out finding was that cost/income ratios are
  “significantly lower for
  the Americas
  with firms targeting 48 per cent for 2014 – way below the global
  average
  expectation. Respondents in the Americas
  are nearly twice as likely to use new technology to communicate
  with their
  wealth clients (43 per cent of Americas
  firms currently use PDAs and mobile tablets compared to 26 per
  cent globally).
  Firms in the region are “making significant investments in
  core processes and technology as reflected in substantially
  higher operations
  and technology budget forecasts”, the report continued.
  Specifically, PwC's survey found that the industry must
  confront five areas of transformative change that will define
  business success:
1, Markets and clients
  An in-depth understanding of an increasingly diverse and
  disparate client base is essential to retaining a competitive
  edge, PwC said. “The
  industry should become more agile in using data analytics and
  other resources
  to pinpoint what clients really value and how much that value is
  worth to them,”
  it said.
  Perhaps unsurprisingly, PwC concluded that newly emerging
  wealth markets are set to outpace established emerging markets
  while
  traditional sources of wealth such as North America and
  Western
  Europe will experience lower growth.
  Adding to other comments about the potential of services for
  women, the report noted that women represent a significant but
  underleveraged
  growth opportunity. Though they currently comprise one third of
  the client
  base, only 8 per cent of firms surveyed focus on gender in their
  segmentation
  approach. 
  Generation Y has unique characteristics not shared by their
  predecessors that must be understood and addressed to attract new
  and preserve
  existing relationships, it said.
  Respondents said a decision by the next generation is the
  third most common reason clients leave a private bank, indicating
  a need to
  build more relevance for this segment. “This aligns with survey
  findings
  indicating that wealth managers are not confident that their
  talent management
  strategy is conducive to meeting the needs of next generation
  heirs and
  millennials,” it said.
  Americas-based respondents indicated they are almost three
  times as confident in their ability to meet the needs of the
  millennial
  generation, it said.
  "In Western Europe growth is slow, while North America shows
  moderate growth, and in the emerging
  markets growth remains relatively high but has slowed in some
  areas. To these
  markets, we can add a further group of nascent emerging markets
  which are
  accumulating new wealth most rapidly, with net new money growth
  forecast as 16
  per cent in 2013. The multi-speed wealth management market is
  here to stay and
  wealth managers should embrace this," said Jeremy Jensen, EMEA
  leader,
  global private banking and wealth management, PwC.
  "Retaining clients remains a focus for wealth managers.
  Changes in personal circumstances are cited as the greatest
  reason for clients
  leaving, but the fact that 'a decision by the next generation' is
  the third
  most common shows both the importance and the challenge of better
  managing
  inter-generational wealth transfer. Wealth managers should
  improve their
  understanding of clients' extended family issues to capitalise on
  the inter-generational
  opportunity,” he said.
2, Risk and regulation
  Compliance replaced reputation as the top risk concern, as
  wealth management firms struggle to keep pace with the scale,
  speed and costs
  of current and planned regulatory change.
  Client and suitability risk is the second greatest area of
  concern after compliance both today and two years from now.
  “While the current approach to risk management centers
  around compliance and loss prevention initiatives, risk
  quantification and
  stakeholder value integration will assume greater priority in the
  next two
  years (this is a 28 per cent increase for risk quantification and
  25 per cent
  increase for stakeholder value/integration, respectively),” it
  said.
  The cost of regulation will continue to rise, with
  respondents forecasting that risk and regulatory compliance will
  account for 7
  per cent of annual revenue in two years, up from 5 per cent
  today. Tax
  information exchange leads the list of specific regulatory
  concerns, followed
  by client privacy/data protection and tax amnesties.
  "Compliance and risk management is here to stay;
  private banks should accept this as reality, and that business as
  usual means
  doing things the right way, with the right people and right
  skills. The ability
  to understand and manage the avalanche of regulatory and risk
  issues, such as
  cross border transactions, tax transparency and sales practices
  will likely
  require private banks to continue investing heavily into systems
  and training
  to ensure that they are able to do business in a profitable, but
  compliant
  way," said Justin Ong, Asia Pacific leader, global private
  banking and wealth
  management, PwC.
3, Human capital
  Hiring experienced CRMs and improving overall skill levels
  is one of the top strategic considerations for senior leaders in
  the next two
  years.
  With remuneration reported as the leading cause of attrition
  (70 per cent), firms are reconsidering reward and incentive
  structures in an
  effort to balance talent goals and stringent new rules around
  variable compensation.
  Profitability by CRM and managing the cost of servicing are
  also expected to become substantially more important, rising from
  35 per cent
  to 45 per cent and 26 per cent to 44 per cent, respectively.
4, Operations and technology
  A “superabundance” of manual processes is the leading
  challenge of operations and technology infrastructure by a
  substantial margin.
  However, more than half of participants (54 per cent) are
  optimistic that they
  will achieve predominantly common processes and automation within
  the next two
  years - a threefold increase from today (17 per cent).
  “In the future, wealth managers may need to accept more
  standard packages and service offerings, and shy away from
  customisation. At
  present customisation rates range from 30-60 per cent of standard
  package applications.
  Unless a firm enters into a joint development relationship
  carefully, there can
  be problems and unplanned expenses. Invasive customisation
  threatens the ability of
  commercial packages to be
  upgradeable and can require wholesale reinstallation.
  Replication of the status quo in a new technology is expensive
  and time-consuming; moving
  to a better set of functions and processes with a more standard
  package is far
  better,” it said.
Products and services
  Only one-third of firms plan to engage in revenue sharing and
  retrocessions during the next two years as compared to half
  today, the
  report said. With commission revenues falling, 71 per cent of
  senior
  wealth management executives expect that, two years from now,
  their
  business model will encompass broader financial and wealth
  planning
  solutions, up from 56 per cent.