188bet

How Fintech Is Disrupting Wealth Management

As I travel the country and spend time with advisors, partners, and industry colleagues, there is a lot of dialogue about how fintech is disrupting wealth management and how the advisor industry is evolving. All the chatter about evolution got me thinking about lessons from Charles Darwin, the famous naturalist who taught us that it is not the strongest of the species that survive, nor the most intelligent, but the ones most responsive to change. 

The strong and cunning may win the short-term battles but, over the long term, Darwin’s lessons suggest that those who are not able to adapt may end up on the endangered species list. In this article, I take a look at the impact financial technology has had on wealth management and what financial advisors can do to ensure they continue to thrive in a rapidly evolving industry.

Key Takeaways

  • Financial technology, more commonly known as "fintech," includes the emergence of a whole range of new technology used to improve and automate the delivery of financial services.
  • The rise of robo-advisors—along with the proliferation of artificial intelligence (AI) tools—has transformed the way financial advisors interact with and provide services to their clients.
  • Surveys show that a high percentage of affluent investors and those under the age of 40 prefer to do business with investment firms that use online collaboration and digital tools.
  • Those wealth management firms that are able to embrace the new fintech tools—while simultaneously helping investors navigate an increasingly complex financial landscape—will be more likely to grow and thrive.

The Rise of Fintech Wealth Management

For years, the industry has been predicting the disruption of the financial advisor model, all the way back to when commissions were no longer regulated in the '70s, which led to the rise of the discount broker. The '80s and '90s brought forward no-load mutual funds, and the Internet gave us online trading. And now, here in the 2000s, we have the emergence of the robo-advisor, or the computer-automated investment platform, giving cynics even more ammunition to predict that advisors will go the way of the travel agent or taxi driver.

I am much more bullish on the future of the financial advisory profession. Despite all of these financial services and technology innovations that have the potential to put human advisors to the test, their role and importance in helping investors navigate complexity and meet their goals have only increased in demand. Advisors have proven time and time again that they can adapt to these structural changes quite nicely. In fact, advisors have been able to respond to these changes by engineering new models that take advantage of commission and technology disruption.

While some studies show that the number of financial advisors is expected to stay flat or grow moderately over the next five years, growth in assets managed by advisors shows that the industry is alive and well. The Registered Investment Advisor (RIA) Benchmarking Study from Charles Schwab shows that assets under management have increased steadily, with a five-year compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 14.5% from 2015 to 2020. 

Advisors' Ability to Adapt and Thrive

Advisors should still take note of the change around them and understand how it could force them to once again prove their ability to adapt and thrive. Each year, the fintech drums only beat louder. This has played out not just in the media, but with investment dollars.  Global investments in financial technology ventures amounted to $210 billion, in 2021, according to KPMG Pulse. The fintech industry segments include payments, cybersecurity, insurtech, wealthtech, regtech, as well as blockchain and cryptocurrency.

This surge in fintech industry investment may have something to do with the rise of robo-advisors. According to industry research, the total valuation of robo-advisors was nearly $4.51 billion in 2019, and it's expected to grow to $41.07 billion by 2027.

The Impact of Artificial Intelligence (AI)

While the robo-advisor craze is well documented, the proliferation of artificial intelligence (AI) tools hitting the wealth management landscape has made a dramatic entrance into the financial trade press. While it might be early, AI’s role in financial advice is an area to watch. The launch of the predictive analytics tool from Salesforce, Einstein, gives the industry reason to consider the role of AI in supporting advisors with where to focus or automating tasks. The same is true with IBM Watson’s partnership with H&R Block.

From my standpoint as an advisor fintech leader, the rapid and ongoing innovations in technology are exciting. For advisors, the more exciting innovations are about providing scale and removing behind-the-scenes work to prep for conversations with clients. Many advancements support the advisor-client relationship directly. High-net-worth investors, the sweet spot for most registered investment advisors (RIAs), are interested in digital financial advice of some sort and benefit from new developments.

What Fintech Means for Advisors

What does it all mean for advisors? First, it’s clear that investors expect digital tools as part of their relationship with their financial advisor. They enjoy online collaboration and digital tools in other parts of their lives, so why shouldn’t they when it comes to managing their wealth?

With Betterment and other firms advertising in mainstream media, investors are exposed to modern, understandable, and easy-to-use tools that display performance. While user design has been commonplace in consumer packaged goods firms for years, it has only more recently become a sought-after skill in the financial services industry.

Second, advisors need to ensure they are communicating with clients in new and different ways. Not all clients have time to come into the office. Clients who are still working usually expect interactions with their advisors to be efficient and direct. They also expect to be able to review information on their own at any time through a client portal and use online collaboration tools to check in with their advisor. This on-demand access provides an ultimate level of transparency. 

Third, there's the question of value—more specifically, clients understanding the value that their advisors deliver. Many advisors offer much more than investment allocation and portfolio construction, but it’s not clear whether investors understand all the “extra” support they are getting. 

What Fintech Means for Clients

Based on a 2020 generational survey, 41% of all generations surveyed would consider using a robo-advisor. However, close to half of generation Z and millennials are confident in allowing a robo-advisor to make personalized investment decisions while only a third of Generation X and 15% of young boomers would be. We could discount that since most millennials aren’t facing the complexity in their financial lives as their baby boomer parents are experiencing. However, it creates yet another reason why advisors need to continue to grow their trusted relationships. After all, we know that trust and communication are huge factors in why investors select or leave an advisor. 

If delivered well, clients may benefit in many ways from fintech. In addition to digital experience and transparency, new competition is driving costs down, and digital tools are removing overhead and certain manual processes for advisors. Case in point: Charles Schwab Corp. offers robo+advisor product, Schwab Intelligent Advisory, at 28 basis points, or $3,600 maximum, per year. With a minimum of $5,000 investment, the product includes tax-loss harvesting and automatic rebalancing. The premium offering targets mass affluent investors with a minimum of $25,000 to invest, but it still sends a message to the industry that costs matter.

The Bottom Line

My advice to advisors is to grab on to technology that helps you be more efficient and get closer to clients. After all, technology, when used well, can help you with the seemingly daunting challenges facing all advisors today—running an efficient and profitable business, demonstrating your value, and leveraging tools for growth. Darwin’s advice remains sound.

This article was written by Dave Welling, CEO of and former managing director and co-general manager of .

Article Sources
Investopedia requires writers to use primary sources to support their work. These include white papers, government data, original reporting, and interviews with industry experts. We also reference original research from other reputable publishers where appropriate. You can learn more about the standards we follow in producing accurate, unbiased content in our editorial policy.
  1. Charles Schwab. "," Page 5.
  2. KMPG Pulse. "."
  3. KMPG Pulse. "."
  4. TMR Research. "."
  5. Salesforce. "."
  6. H&R Block. "."
  7. Vanguard. "," Page 10.
  8. Charles Schwab. "," Pages 5, 7.
Take the Next Step to Invest
×
The offers that appear in this table are from partnerships from which Investopedia receives compensation. This compensation may impact how and where listings appear. Investopedia does not include all offers available in the marketplace.
m88 trực tuyến nhacaiuytin link 12bet 2888k casino fb88 nhà cái w88