Monday 11 July 2016

Many IFAs Regardrobo-advice As A Competing Challenge

Many IFAs Regardrobo-advice As A Competing Challenge. But How Can That Be Turned On It’s Head?

It is an undeniable reality that robo-advice will become more and more widely available and used by a bigger and bigger percentage of the retail investor world. It is therefore of critical importance that IFAs look to work with this emerging trend rather that fighting the inevitable.

How can this paradigm shift be leveraged by IFAs as an opportunity to diversify their revenue stream whilst at the same time improving their service that is offered to clients?

For advisers, the addition of a robo-advice service working in tandem with their existing more traditional business model can deliver a number of synergies.

Robo-advice can act as a scalable channel to access potential clients that will require ‘in-the-flesh’ IFA services further down the line when looking at inheritance, buying a house and planning for retirement as just 3 examples. Banks already use this model but an IFA robo-offering will allow advisers to compete.

The ‘advice gap’ and the risk of ‘orphaned’ clients is as big a headache for IFAs as it is for the investors themselves but a robo-advice solution provides an efficient method to address the issue. It is no surprise that regulators across the world are very much behind the sensible use of robo-advice services to solve this specific problem.

Robo-advice is not always limited to those with a smaller investment portfolio. There are many high net worth investors whose 1st priority is to ensure that annual fees are minimized in their efforts to maximize their portfolio performance. An adviser providing a robo element to their service can position this as a differentiating USP giving clients or potential clients a wider choice than competitors.

Many IFAs are likely to be daunted by the unknown levels of investment and resource required to add a robo-advice service to their existing proposition. However, there are turnkey solutions now available that provide the IT and the access to proven fund management solutions that the IFA can white-label quickly and at low to no incremental marginal cost. I will be examining some of the options in blogs to come.

Robo-advice is nowhere near a point where it can justifiably claim to be able to replace the role of an IFA. And even at some point in the future, if this were a technical possibility across the complexities of pensions and tax planning etc, there is no technology that could ever replace the requirement for personal expertise and the human touch. However now is the time where IFAs who add an intelligently selected robo-advice offering to the services, may be able to steal a march on their competition and turn a regulatory and admin nightmare into a significant revenue stream.


Saturday 2 July 2016

Robo-Advice – The Rise Of The Machines

Intro
This blog will cover the impact and opportunity of Robo-advice on financial advisers and the public.

What Does Robo-advice Mean?
‘Robo advice’ is big news currently as a relatively new concept. Good Robo-advice provides cutting edge technology that enables investors to benefit from the real world expertise of wealth managers. The service delivers portfolios founded on top quality asset allocation designed to meet the investment objectives of the investor at a cost effective pricepoint.

An individual responds to a short list of simple questions to assess their investment requirements which then drives the construction of an institutional quality investment portfolio suggestion that the investor can accept or decline. This process can take as little as a quarter of an hour.

Why Is Robo-advice Required?
The vast majority of personal investors handle all or part of their investments themselves. This ‘Do It Yourself’ method requires a lot of time and can be very risky even for those with investment experience.

There are also vast swathes of people who would like to have an investment acccount managed by an expert but for whom the use of an IFA is too expensive. These people end up with cash in the bank which does not deliver growth objectives over time. Robo-advice gives these disintermediated investors the opportunity to own a top quality investment portfolio which they otherwise would not have had. The FCA are vocal advocates of Robo-advice for this very reason.

What Next From This Blog?

Ongoing blog posts will cover the history of Robo-advice, how to choose a Robo-adviser plus more detail on how Robo-advice can revolutionise the personal investment landscape for investors and financial advisers.