Technology
Fixing Family Offices' Data Problem
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Our US correspondent reports on views on fintech held by industry figures at a summit organised by the publisher of this news service.
(An earlier version of this article, written by our US
correspondent appeared on Family Wealth Report, sister news
service to this one. While some of the areas are specific to the
US, most aren't, and we hope readers in different regions will
find these comments of value.)
If managing mountains of data is the problem for family offices
and wealth managers – and it is – then what’s the
solution?
Leading industry executives and experts offered a range of
options at Family Wealth Report’s Family Office Fintech
Forum in midtown Manhattan.
The biggest conundrum facing family offices is that even when
they start to digitise the back office, they “still live in an
analogue world,” according to keynote speaker Raymond Dinunzio, a
partner with TOS, a
Houston-based family office which also provides digital
management services.
High performing family offices are rare, if not non-existent.
They are plagued by a lack of automation, digitisation and
cybersecurity as well as an “extraordinary” variability in
employee quality, Dinunzio asserted. And, as family offices face
more regulation, he said, the subsequent increase in
administrative work and back office staff are making matters
worse.
What’s more, family offices, characterised by a wide array of
family members who have different interests and control different
entities, are inherently idiosyncratic and disorganised, argued
keynote speaker David Teten, a venture partner with Coolwater
Capital.
As a result, family offices are starting from a “weakened
position” when it comes to centralising data, Teten
maintained.
Better to outsource?
So should family offices and wealth managers outsource management
of this ever-increasing and widely dispersed amount of data?
While studies indicated that firms that did outsource tech
functions outperformed those that didn’t, Doug Fritz, president
of F2 Strategy,
a fintech consulting firm, cautioned family offices to be very
careful before signing on with an outsourcer.
Wealth firms and family offices should make a list of things that
could go wrong and benchmarks it expects vendors to meet, Fritz
counselled. “Have measurable ROI on the table” to gauge how the
investment will pay off, he told the audience.
Potential clients should also carry out due diligence to
determine whether a vendor, especially a startup, is likely
to be around in five years, go out of business or become an
acquisition target, Fritz added.
Also critical when making a decision on outsourcing: make sure
that the “right stakeholders” in the firm or family office are
involved, said Kelly Moore, senior sales director for Arch, a digital administration
firm specialising in private investments.
Who owns the data – and what does it cost to service
it?
Ownership of data also emerged as a key issue. While family
office and wealth management firms may technically “own” their
data, they can become too dependent on software vendors, said
Jonathan Theberge, director of Wealth Services at KeyBank.
“You want to be sure you have the ability to transition away
[from a vendor] and that their capabilities will keep up with
your needs,” Theberge said in an interview with FWR.
No matter what choices firms make, tech costs will only continue
to increase, Fritz said estimating that multi-family offices
now spend around 7 to 8 per cent of revenue on tech, a number
that he said will increase to at least 10 per cent in five to 10
years.
‘Sources of pain’ and solutions
As to where that money will be spent, a number of vendors at the
forum described their services.
“Sources of pain” for family offices include regulatory demands,
staffing constraints, investor frustration and compressed
timelines, rise in alternatives and disparate technology,
according to Scott Trimble, executive director of Asset Vantage, which
offers clients secure global data hosting by partnering with
Amazon Web Services.
TOS aims to support fully-digital family offices using “best of
breed” fully-connected technology, Dinunzio said. The firm offers
secure portal access, a reporting platform with integrated data
aggregation tools, alternative investment data management and
internal processes for automated data archiving and data audit he
said.
Collation.ai uses AI bots to store data from reconciliation,
investment reporting and audits in a “data warehouse,” said CEO
Tanmai Sharma. Collation can standardise structured data from a
variety of sources, including portfolio, CRM and general ledger
systems, even if they have their own silos, he said.
A frustrated family office member, Sumit CEO Alexandre Kin said he
founded the software company to simplify family office
accounting. Sumit integrates with Addepar, streamlines workflow
and reduces dependency on manual paperwork and Excel and
QuickBooks, Kin said.
AltExchange
manages and reports on alternative investments and specialises in
data aggregation, reconciliation and streamlining documents, said
CEO Kareem Hamady.
According to CEO Gary Langham, After
Tax Reporting Solutions, software is the only third-party
data integration technology for after-tax reporting on Addepar’s
performance reporting platform.
K1x specialises in reducing back office clutter by moving,
integrating and automating data in K-1, K-3 and 990 filings for
alternative investment data distribution, said CEO John
Lamancuso.
Mohamed Elzomor said he came to understand the “lifestyle
challenges” of his wealthy clients as a personal trainer. He went
on to co-found Nines Living and developed a “household
management” platform app to centralise staffing needs and tasks
ranging from car care to appliance warranties.