Strategy
Wealth Managers Must Raise Client Reporting GameÂ
Client reporting is a crucial part of how wealth managers interact with customers and many still fall short in quality. This article examines what is changing, and why.
Wealth management firms are not always easy to tell apart and with back- and middle-office functions outsourced and commoditised, a happy client experience is crucial in winning new custom and retaining it. Thatâs why client reporting counts for so much.
A recent research report conducted by this publication asked readers, in August last year, the question âDo you see enhanced reporting capabilities as a key way for wealth managers to attract and retain clients?â Of those who clicked on the poll, 72 per cent said yes; 14 per cent said clients âare likely to demand better capabilities going forwardâ and 14 per cent answered ânoâ, and agreed with the statement that âthe industry is already meeting client demand well.â
Client reporting may be a big differentiator but thereâs dissatisfaction around how well wealth managers shape up. James Day, managing director of Peritus Investment Consultancy, quoted in that report, said: âThe quality of client reporting is generally mediocre, with only a few stars in the field. Of the hundreds of institutions that we work with, I can only think of ten who have invested capably in their reporting and communication process.â
With markets becoming more volatile and some of the easy equity gains of past years more elusive, clients need quick and simple information. New technological channels and desire for 24/7 on-the-go access also means that clients arenât impressed by infrequent emails or chunky PDF files stocked with regulatory health warnings, eye-straining charts and jargon.
âAsk yourself how many people are looking forward to their reports and sit down and think that it is fun to read,â Nicholas Hochstader, chief executive of Performance Watcher by IBO, a business headquartered from Morges, near Geneva, told this publication.
âIf you look at a lot of private bank reports, they arenât often very simpleâŠ.but reports should get direct to the point. The report should show why what youâre doing is relevant to clients,â Hochstadter, who has an extensive banking background, said.
Hochstaderâs business is built around the idea of building an objective, un-conflicted database of evidence showing trustees, wealth managers and others how well portfolios perform. (This publication interviewed him back in February 2016.)
Urs Bolt, a former senior Credit Suisse wealth manager and now running his own firm, bolt.now, is enthused about what technology can bring to the client reporting party. (Bolt is also a judge for the WealthBriefing Swiss Awards programme.)
âI agree that any client-facing process can make the difference in a competitive and transparent market. In wealth management, client reporting is certainly one of the most important areas. A clear and easy to understand reporting of performance and risk figures is how the client can gain further confidence,â Bolt, who is based in Switzerland, said.
A headache for firms is that some of the material they issue to clients is mandated by regulators, and thatâs not always the same as what customers might want, and might also eat up budgetary resources.
âThe regulation tsunami in the last decade since the financial crisis, such as MiFID II, increased AML/KYC and other documentation requirements, led to a massive increase of compliance staff. Unfortunately it didnât increase client satisfaction and many client processes including portfolio reports became thicker instead of thinner. Also, the disclaimers and other mandatory information rather decreased the usability.
This has to change and technology is one of the areas helping out here,â Bolt said.
A common misconception among wealth managers is that their clients are slow to embrace technology. âEven among the more traditional wealth management demographic, real-time access to client portfolio analysis and information is becoming the expectation rather than the exception,â Andrew Watson, Head of Regulatory Change at JHC, a technology firm, said.
The banks
Given the importance of this topic, this publication contacted a
raft of banks and wealth management houses about the issue. With
a few exceptions, none were willing to comment on the
issue.
One senior private banker who did comment was Etienne DâArenberg, the head of the UK market and a limited partner at Mirabaud, the Swiss private banking group marking its 200th birthday this year. He is also a member of this news serviceâs editorial advisory board.
âEvery manager must present [clients] with a statement and these are faily simple and always done to present information quickly,â he told this publication from the Mirabaud Europe Ltd branch offices in the Victoria area of central London.
âThe key is simplicity and transparency,â DâArenberg said.
âWe are very happy to publish the total expense ratio,â he said, talking about how Mirabaud sets out the total cost of running portfolios for clients.
âNormally account statements are photographs of a given moment but such regular reports need to show how money in a portfolio has been managed, in a specific way and if fiscal or other restrictions have been followed,â he said.
Many clients are also happy to take a longer-term view in how their money is being managed even if they get a snapshot of their accounts and its performance. âYou can quickly see if it worth using an active manager,â he said, adding: âReporting allows you to show that thereâs a process involved.â
Tech perspectives
Unsurprisingly, some of the more forthcoming respondents to this
news serviceâs questions were tech firms producing the systems
behind client reporting and hope, no doubt, to win
business.
âRelying on legacy, overly complex analytics and reporting is the primary way we see firms failing to get reporting right. Rather than focus on bells and whistles, most firms would benefit from technology to ensure data and inputs that drive reports are accurate and obtained in a timely manner,â Seth Brotman, chief executive of US-based Canoe Software, said.
âGreat reporting is the act of taking data and creating knowledge. Technology is a powerful tool to systematically ensure data is accurate, efficiently collected, and synthesized/visualized to drive decisions,â he said.
Another firm operating in such a space is Mirador, as previously interviewed here. INSERT CROSS-LINK That organization argues that wealth managers donât customize client data sufficiently â it is too much âoff-the-shelfâ.
âToo often firms fail to provide clients with insightful reporting that presents a clientâs assets in a way in which meaningful decisions can be made. Instead of customizing reporting to meet the clientâs particular situation, they present very generic and âcannedâ views of their portfolio. While standard views such as performance vs benchmark and assets by asset type are interesting KPIs, todayâs tools enable managers to present a much more personalized presentation,â Joseph Larizza, managing partner, said.
Educating ESG
Ben Constable Maxwell, head of impact investing at M&G
Investments, part of the Prudential Group, said these are early
days in the advisory space for ESG and impact investing and
education plays a huge role in reporting back to clients.
"In the listed equity space, which is the most suitable for advisors, the oldest fund in this area is probably three years old, and there are only a handful of positive impact equities funds, so education is very much a part of this and it requires a different sort of dialogue and a deeper approach with customers,â he told this publication.
This includes not just explaining criteria behind ESG but how to label a fund as an impact investment fund, how you press companies to disclose impact strategies and how they intend to deliver them. The very concept of impact investing is that it can be tangibly measured.
Constable Maxwell said the starting line is developing understanding and awareness that changes the whole tenor of the conversation with advisors and the subsequent conversations they have with clients.
To aid this effort, M&G is developing an investor micro site and an app to encourage conversations and interaction. The language must be different from just performance reporting and benchmark, he said. ~
The conversation is motivational
The group launched a new investment impact fund a few months ago
and said it has seen record numbers of clients register for
webcasts that explain the framework behind ESG and positive
investing.
âEducation is crucial to uptake,â said M&Gâs advisor VĂ©ronique Chapplow, but it hasnât helped that âwe have introduced the concept of impact when some people havenât mastered the ESG part yet. That is the challenge we are facing, mixing ESG and impact â explaining what is the difference,â she said.
Artificial or real
The rise of artificial intelligence and channels such as chatbots
create some opportunities but also a few challenges for handling
clients and their expectations. (A chatbot is a computer
programme designed to simulate conversation with human users,
especially over the internet.) OCBC, the parent of Bank of
Singapore, BNY Mellon and Credit Suisse have developed these
channels.
Hochstadter said managers must be careful in how and when to use these communication channels. A problem can arise, he said, when a client thinks they are talking to a real person via the internet and finds out that they are in fact communicating with an algorithm. Managing expectations and the client experience around AI-driven channels is a delicate balancing act.
Canoeâs Brotman sounded a word of caution about such devices: âChatbots and faceless/anonymous communication will be helpful on the margin, but is not an area that drives client comfort and long-term relationships.â
âClient/firm interaction has been and will be more positively impacted by video and digitally-enabled communications which foster a more personal and direct relationship between client and account executive,â he said.
JHCâs Watson said AI-driven reporting channels have real potential if done right. âWhere we are seeing AI really add value is via processes such as portfolio monitoring, as opposed to making key investment decisions; for example, by monitoring a portfolio against set risk, performance and benchmarking parameters, automatic notification of when these are breached and adjusting the portfolio investment strategy accordingly,â he said.
So what of the future, such as where the industry will be in five yearsâ time? Mark Wickersham, vice president of family wealth at US-based Datafaction, agrees with Hochstadter that businesses should try and enthuse clients when they report, not bore or alarm them. âIf you take the Amazon approach to product development and focus on the things that will not change you know that clients want their information to be timely, available when they want it, and on the device they want it on, and in an easy-to-use and interactive manner.â
âThe client experience (including reporting) needs to become a
lot more frictionless and firms need to find a way to delight
their clients, he added.