Technology
Let's Make It Personal: StanChart Launches Tailor-Made Investment Service In Asia

The bank is rolling out a service allowing affluent clients to put ideas to work rapidly to seize market opportunities, tapping bank ideas and the power of automated systems.
Standard
Chartered has launched a wealth management tool that allows
clients to tailor-make investment ideas in minutes, an innovation
it claims is the first of its kind in Asia.
Known as Personalised Investment Ideas, the offering is pitched
at Priority Banking clients so they can respond more rapidly than
before to market opportunities, deploying automated investment
ideas based on considerations such as a client’s risk profile and
the bank’s market views.
The service has gone live in Singapore; Standard Chartered plans
to introduce it into other Asian markets, it said in a
statement.
Personalised Investment Ideas is available on a relationship
manager’s tablet-based sales-and-service device. The service
generates and gives priorities to investment ideas for funds and
bonds, tailored for each client. Following a conversation with
their RM, a client is emailed a report with suggestions for
buy/sell/hold, backed by a set of reasons. The RM will also
advise clients on the suitability of a product based on their
needs and objectives and help them to act on their chosen
idea.
The service can be viewed in some ways as an example of “hybrid”
wealth management, taking elements of automated, “robo” processes
and combining these with personal, human interaction at the
outset of a client/RM conversation. Recent years have seen a
flurry of interest around so-called robo-advisors, which use
automated systems to calculate, for example, how a portfolio
should be set up after information about risk appetite and other
points are fed in.
A number of banks, such as UBS with its SmartWealth offering,
have invested in, or developed, robo-advisory models of their own
to avoid being overtaken by industry upstarts.
DBS, the
Singapore-headquartered bank, for example, has worked with IBM’s
Watson cognitive computing team to develop new services
harnessing such ideas. The ascent of e-commerce players such as
Google and Alibaba has also prompted
thoughts of how they could push into finance; Alibaba, for
example, already has its own wealth management brand in China,
Ant Financial.
“Our clients want banking to be easy, just a few clicks on their
smartphones. But for bigger decisions, like investing large sums
of money, they often want to speak to an expert as well,” Karen
Fawcett, chief executive of retail banking and group head of
brand and marketing, said.
Recent launches by Standard Chartered include virtual access to
investment advisors via video banking, online and mobile access
to mutual funds, market information optimised for mobile, as well
as mobile FX trading services.