WM Market Reports
Legacy Tech Is Potential Wealth Sector Vulnerability – Study
.jpg)
Broadridge, a New York-listed firm, makes the case for "data harmonization" in its new report on how technology is affecting the wealth management sector.
A study by Broadridge
Financial Solutions, which provides tech solutions to
financial firms, finds that almost half of the 500 industry
figures it has polled say legacy tech makes their businesses
vulnerable.
Almost half (41 per cent) of executives think that their
technology strategy is not moving fast enough at its current
rate and 46 per cent think legacy tech is hurting
resiliency.
The findings come in the New York-listed firm’s fifth annual
Digital Transformation & Next-Gen Technology Study.
Today, when the introduction of a new AI model has the power to
send shockwaves through financial markets, bitcoin ETFs are
routinely turning over billions in average daily volume, and
cybersecurity has become a global mandate. Financial
services firms can no longer afford half-measures or indecision
when it comes to data harmonization or addressing legacy
technology, Broadridge said. (Broadridge has spoken to this
publication about the use
cases of AI in the sector, and other topics.)
While AI has tended to dominate much of the wealthtech conversation in recent months, digitalization of the industry continues on a number of fronts, from achieving efficiencies in back-office functions through development of front-office client reporting. (This publication produces an annual Technology and Operations report; see here for our latest edition.)
Sweet harmony?
More than half (58 per cent) of financial services technology and
operations executives globally identified data harmonization as
the ideal driver for maximizing their return on investment with
60 per cent said they are confident their data quality won't
cause transformation challenges.
In other findings, 72 per cent of those questioned are making
moderate to large investments in GenAI this year, up from 40 per
cent in 2024.
More than two-thirds (68 per cent) think GenAI will have the
greatest impact on employee productivity and 35 per cent expect
to start seeing return on investment from generative AI within
six months. Some 67 per cent said they personally use GenAI most
for investment or market research.
Digital assets go mainstream
The Broadridge survey also showed that 71 per cent of firms are
making “major investments” in blockchain and distributed ledger
technologies in 2025, up from 59 per cent doing so in 2024.
Some 64 per cent are making big investments in cryptocurrency, up
from 51 per cent in 2024. Almost half (47 per cent) think DLT is
enabling the development of new capital markets ecosystem.