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Buying More Tech Tools Won't Fix Digitalisation Demands
Will Lawton
20 November 2019
Will Lawton, global head of study – over 70 per cent of clients in Asia expect access to infrastructure or platform type services with digital being their preferred channel of receiving advice. Greater customer experience • Portfolio aggregation – in a multi custodian world, an aggregated portfolio view is rarely available; But fintech adoption creates new problems as older ones are solved • Client onboarding and KYC – 40-60 per cent; Fintech solutions are now pervasive in many areas of wealth management including onboarding, client management and reporting. Technology has deeply impacted digital onboarding, and biometric technology is widespread. There are several companies working in the portfolio analytics domain. The flip side of this focus has been the inability of smaller firms to get reliable connectivity to core banking systems. Execution in a multi asset world (think bonds, FX, structured products, funds as well as listed securities) is challenging and “best execution” continues to remain elusive. Wealth managers still have to log into multiple bank portals while OTC products remain almost completely offline. There are few, if any, “workflow solutions” that can digitise execution and aggregate across multiple banks or custodians. Stitching together disparate systems results in expensive technology bloat with multiple points of failure. The truth is that wealth managers need workflow solutions – not fragmented tools That’s why digital systems that connect with legacy core banking software are the only way forward The task of digitising workflows like trading, compliance checks and portfolio aggregation is daunting when looked at from the prism of current legacy systems. Most legacy systems were conceived in the pre internet era - when customer experience and aggregation were not even concepts. However, ditching decades old legacy bank systems would have unacceptable business risks. On the other hand, not integrating via APIs to online systems carries clear obsolescence risk. A workflow solution that can connect to banking legacy systems and provide the layer of digital efficiency to wealth and asset managers is the only way forward. Creating a future proof wealth practice requires a holistic approach to digitisation; just buying technology tools simply isn’t a viable solution. Multi-custodian systems like QUO which integrate with legacy core banking solutions are a good example of this.
Some 60 per cent of wealth management firms state (as per an EY survey) that enhancing the customer experience is their number one priority. For private banks digitising their external asset manager network this is vitally important:
• Market access for multi asset trading - poor execution has large costs especially in OTC; and
• Compliance risk – manual pre trade checks create risk of breaches.
A BCG study estimates that the work flow digitisation in wealth management is:
• Execution and reporting – 20-30 per cent;
• Compliance and risk – 20-30 per cent; and
• Portfolio analytics – 40-60 per cent.
Private banks and asset managers who make investment decisions need aggregate information about their clients’ portfolios, real price information, and to eliminate execution risk.
Wealth firms and family offices need to integrate new technology, data and analytics across their whole ecosystem. An incremental approach to updating legacy systems, or buying off-the-shelf tools, cannot create a future proof workflow solution.