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FNZ Buys Client Onboarding Specialist Appway

The deal turns a spotlight on the rising business sector of specialist onboarding services for private banks, wealth managers and other financial organisations.
FNZ, the wealth management
technology provider, announced today that it has agreed to buy
Switzerland-based client onboarding and servicing business
Appway. The financial
terms of the deal, due to complete early in 2022, were not
disclosed.
Private equity house Summit Partners put
$37 million of equity funding into Appway in June last year.
Appway is used by firms including Credit Suisse, JP Morgan, HSBC,
Deutsche Bank, Pictet, LGT, AXA and LPL Financial (the US wealth
management organisation). Its solutions include onboarding for
wealth and retail, know-your-client and regulatory reviews, a
digital banking platform and solutions in the mortgages and
insurance space.
According to modelled data from Dun & Bradstreet, Appway
generates around $15.18 million in annual sales, and has about
120 employees.
The transaction highlights how areas such as client onboarding –
which has become increasingly automated to handle anti-money
laundering and know-your-client requirements, for example – are
important client experience differentiators. Appway has become
one of the most prominent players in this space and has also won
accolades from the publisher of this news service.
Under the terms of the agreement, Hanspeter Wolf (pictured),
Appway’s founder and chief executive, will become chief
technology officer of the FNZ Group and join its senior
leadership team, effective on the acquisition closing date, FNZ
said in a statement.
Brunner spoke to this publication about the deal's impact and
rationale.
"We expect a very positive impact to Appway customers
and users. On the one hand, we will continue to invest
in Appway’s current offering which will continue to be
available as a dedicated offering in itself and will
co-exist with all the offerings of the FNZ global wealth
management platform," he said. "On the other hand - as part of
the acquisition, FNZ intends to leverage Appway’s
award-winning low-code/no-code workflow automation solution to
enhance propositions of the wealth management industry through
access to FNZ’s technology, resources, and international
reach."
"Financial institutions who use the combined platform will be able to simplify, de-risk and accelerate the wealth management client onboarding journey, enabling more personalised solutions, accelerating platform deployment timescales and ensuring faster compliance with new regulations," Brunner said.
Addition
“With this acquisition, FNZ continues to add significant
next-generation technology to its leading global wealth
management platform helping financial institutions around the
world to accelerate innovation and rapidly deploy personalised
customer propositions across the wealth continuum that are
differentiated, scalable and that meet regulatory requirements,”
Edinburgh-based FNZ said.
Appway, whose headquarters are in Zurich, said that it is used by
“10 of the top 25 wealth managers to digitise, automate, and
accelerate core business processes, such as the onboarding of new
clients, managing changing client circumstances, and regulatory
reviews." It says that its software is “proven to rapidly deliver
unparalleled client experiences, a 90 per cent reduction in
onboarding time, a 10 per cent increase in margin per client, and
a 225 per cent return on investment.”
In the case of FNZ, the firm provides a technology, transaction
and custody platform for wealth managers, banks, insurers and
asset managers in 18 countries across North America, Europe and
Asia-Pacific. Its client base amounts to more than 150 large
financial institutions and it has more than $1.5 trillion in
assets under administration. In early November it agreed to buy
Fondsdepot Bank, the German trading and custody platform.
The next step
Appway has already worked with FNZ, so the deal evolves from
that, Brunner told this news service.
"Both FNZ and Appway have a shared vision centered around a
relentless focus on customer success and having a track record of
innovation. As a result, we strongly believe that the combination
of FNZ and Appway will help to provide financial institutions
with an unrivalled global wealth management platform that will
accelerate digital transformations, deliver significant
operational efficiencies, and improve the overall client
experience," Brunner said.
Asked how the pandemic has affected Appway and its strategy, Brunner said: "As an international company, we felt the impact from the very beginning. When the world retired into home office, our customers’ demand for digitalisation of their clients’ touchpoints spiked. In this phase, our customers realised that they are lacking the time to fully integrate their point-solutions with their enterprise business workflows. The result was a flood of new touchpoints and additional tools for their employees."
"However, this led to email inboxes overflowing with additional
(and unnecessary) steps to take. Those workflows had to be
consolidated; their disconnected activities had to be connected.
That's what Appway does best: connecting the disconnected. Going
forward the acquisition will accelerate the deployment of
personalised propositions at scale across the financial services
industry," he added.
FNZ was founded in 2003 in New Zealand.