Technology
After Being Laggards, Wealth Managers Increasingly Embrace Outsourcing - Celent

The
use that wealth managers are making of outsourced services to
reconcile
rising client demands and increasing costs after the 2008
financial
crisis is explored in a new report by
Celent, the advisory and consultancy firm.
Many firms are “increasingly looking at outsourcing as a viable alternative,” says the report, called Wealth Management Outsourcing - A Global Market Perspective.
Cost-cutting remains the primary driver: estimates of what
wealth
managers could save range from 20 per cent to 30 per cent of
costs on
average. Second, outsourcing providers are viewed as enabling a
firm's
ability to quickly scale operations up or down.
The recent Scorpio Partnership Benchmark study of the world's
wealth
management industry showed that the 20 largest wealth managers'
average
cost-income ratios fell slightly in 2011 to 78 per cent from 79
per cent
a year before. A number of firms, such as Pershing (part of BNY
Mellon)
and SEI, the US firm, say industry pressures on costs will
continue to
boost the case for outsourcing.
“In the aftermath of the financial crisis, wealth management
firms
are facing a number of challenges, including having to lower
costs,
improve efficiency, reduce turnaround time, scale up or down
operations,
mitigate risk, and adhere to stringent regulations. All of these
have
brought technology centre stage in managing financial
institutions,” the
report says.
The financial services industry has been familiar with
outsourcing
for some time but wealth managers have been slower to adapt, the
report
said.
“This hesitancy to use outsourcing can be largely attributed
to
confidentiality and privacy issues inherent in managing wealth
of
highly-valued clients,” it says.
Even so, the meltdown of the sub-prime market and associated
market
pyrotechnics has encouraged firms, facing higher costs and
regulations,
to examine the outsourcing idea with more vigor, the report said.
“Generally speaking, the further a wealth management function is
from
a client 'touchpoint', the more likely it is to be outsourced,”
the
report said.
For example, wealth managers have rarely outsourced front
office
activities; it is more widespread to outsource functions such as
global
custody, securities lending, client servicing, and accounting
and
settlement of trades in complex financial instruments.
The report said firms will increasingly engage outsourcing
providers
in the areas of: client-facing technology,
advisor/relationship
manager-facing technology, channels, data management, CRM,
client
reporting, providing mobile presence, portfolio
management/order
management for execution services, and seamless integration of
channels
for various products and services delivery.