WM Market Reports
EXCLUSIVE: Researchers Discover New Sub-Species - The "Hybrid" Robo Advisor

A report by MyPrivateBanking Research explores a form of "robo-advisor" that does not jettison the human element.
Rather like botanists discovering new species in the jungle,
watchers of the wealth management industry at MyPrivateBanking
Research have found a new life-form among
robo-advisors.
A study by the Swiss research firm, issued exclusively to this
news service, analyses the model of a hybrid robo/personal
contact service. Automated processes deliver many wealth
management functions for a client but the role of a human advisor
is not removed. The study expects that these hybrids will
grow by size to $3.7 trillion of assets globally by 2020. The
total market size for robos will stand at $16.3 trillion by 2025
and that number will be 10 per cent of total investable wealth
around the world by that date, it predicts.
In contrast, “pure” robo advisors – where no human advisors are
involved – are likely to hold only 1.6 per cent of total global
wealth by the middle of the next decade.
The term robo advisor has become a theme in wealth management
over the past few years. As regulatory burdens have mounted and
some private banks and other companies have raised minimum
investable asset sizes for clients to remain profitable, the
“robos” are seen as a way to continue offering advice, but at
lower cost. In the UK there are business models such as Nutmeg or
Money On Toast; in the US, Wealthfront and Betterment. Meanwhile,
Bank of Montreal in Canada recently entered the robo field.
Traditional players say they need to provide robo offerings to
avoid being sidelined. Bank industry luminaries such as Morgan
Stanley CEO James Gorman and Wells Fargo chief financial officer
John Shrewsberry have said their firms must develop robo-advisors
to complement their sales force (source: Bloomberg). As
wealth managers encourage some clients to access services via
mobile devices and embrace tech, the robo trend seems a natural
one. To see a recent report by Deloitte about the robo
trend, see
here.
“Hybrid robo solutions are a dynamic and also unstable new phase
in the wealth management industry’s transformation,” said Francis
Groves, senior analyst of MyPrivateBanking. “We expect 2016 to be
a year of significant developments – several major players have
announced that they will reveal their hybrid offerings in the
course of the year and many more wealth managers are currently
working through the issues of hybrid robo adoption.”
In the analyst's view, the next 12 to 18 months will provide
numerous demonstrations of the impact of the new (white label)
technology providers and robo/conventional partnering on wealth
management.
Quasi-wealth
The research firm expects to see a “significant” increase in
quasi-wealth management services from sections of the industry
that have been considered as distinct from wealth management,
such as pension providers, fund managers and retail
banks.
“The robo model of investment portfolio management will be good
enough in the eyes of a larger proportion of investors than the
wealth management industry itself yet seems ready to recognise,”
predicted Groves.
"Moreover, hybrid robo-advisory services will increase the
efficiency of advisors, in terms of numbers of clients served per
professional, and the increasing numbers of hybrid solutions will
also have a significant downwards effect on the client charges
the market will bear," he added.
The report highlights 20 different recommendations for
consideration by wealth managers in weighing up hybrid robo
opportunities, among them:
- Wealth managers should be wary of assuming that one or
more robo-advisory elements can be just "added on" to an
existing service;
- Especially in the retail and affluent segments, tie-ups
with non-financial retail services of various kinds will be of
increasing importance for the success of robo-advisory client
recruitment;
- For most wealth managers the path to a hybrid solution
will have several stages; this is fine, the authors say, but
clients’ awareness of the capabilities of automation will be
increasing rapidly in the next few years;
- In the higher wealth segments, wealth managers who
automate "behind the scenes" processes will be best placed
to introduce client-facing robo elements when they have
established their client-base is ready.