Strategy
From The Editor's Chair: Geopolitical Risks, AI, Talent Management And Compliance

The editor looks back at the past two months, which have been an eventful start to 2024, and gives a few pointers to what is coming down the track.
It is mid-March already (not a good time for the late Julius
Caesar, as fans of Shakespeare might recall), and this time last
year, we were covering the various shotgun weddings of Silicon
Valley Bank, Credit Suisse, and First Republic.
So far this year the editorial team has spent considerable
time interviewing wealth and asset managers to find out how they
are reframing clients’ expectations after two years of rising
interest rates. We continued to track investment thinking on
Japan, which has won its way back into investors’ favours.
Emerging markets have been beaten up over the past decade.
Several managers are now telling us they think the market is due
for better times. We’ll see.
The macroeconomic and geopolitical background cannot be ignored:
Ukraine, Gaza, Israel, the Red Sea, worries about what China
might do regarding Taiwan, and so forth. This is a US election
year, involving the likely battle by an ageing Joe Biden to
retain the White House against an ageing – if still seemingly
vigorous and combative, Donald Trump. The UK faces a general
election, and the polling figures look grim for the ruling
Conservatives. There are also elections in several other
nations.
I am typing these words from Monaco, where I
attended a
conference on how to structure and protect legitimate
privacy.The fact that it was so well attended reflects the
potency of the subject. Battles over people's ability to gain
unfettered access to public registers of beneficial ownership,
for example, remain heated. There are signs of
a pushback as people realise, perhaps belatedly, that
privacy is important and not just something that “the rich” need
to worry about. Next, I am off to Luxembourg to attend a funds
conference, and take the temperature in another important
financial hub for Europe. A week ago, with colleagues for our
Swiss EAM awards programme, I had a chance to meet bankers
and EAMs in Zurich. Getting out on the road is hard but enjoyable
work, necessary for understanding what concerns industry
players. Topics that come up include the constant changes
in so-called compliance "grey lists," the ease of doing
business – or the opposite – and how to balance compliance with
legitimate profitability. Here in Monaco, there are concerns in
the luxury yachting sector, for instance, that local banks are
making it very hard for yacht businesses to open commercial bank
accounts, suggesting that Monaco is determined to avoid the
slightest issues as a Moneyval assessment is carried out by the
end of this month. (It is a permanent monitoring body of the
Council of Europe with 35 member states and jurisdictions.)
We are looking a lot at technology at the moment and, of
course, AI seems to be a dominant topic. Deciding how to get the
best use out of artificial intelligence, while not overlooking
the problems, seems to be order of the day. The ways that firms
use data to handle compliance, fund selection, mass-customisation
and other tasks remain important editorial areas. I’ve written
quite a bit lately about the work undertaken to track the
vast funds' universe, or manage KYC tasks –
when I
spoke to Dow Jones, for example, or Moody’s
Analytics. Technology is an inescapable part of our
business.
My deputy editor, Amanda Cheesley, continues to produce a stream
of important investment management profiles delving into what
managers think about topics such as
agriculture, for example. I had a fascinating chat with
TOBAM, a fund management
house, about its approach to diversification and what it calls
“autocracy risk”. It is plain that there is a lot of
high-quality thinking on how to manage money more intelligently.
We have also looked at how rising interest rates have galvanised
interest in the world of
money market funds, for example.
Over in the US, our correspondent, Charles Paikert, has written
about high-profile changes
of personnel in certain businesses, attended a major
fintech conference in Las Vegas to find out what
managers really want, and spent time in a classroom to
discover what wealth advisors are learning and how to
improve the world of
talent management. This is the “boots-on-the-ground” coverage
we are keen to deliver.
In addition to all this coverage, we continue to produce a steady
stream of guest articles from experts in law, technology,
business development and strategy, and I think this showcases how
our publications drive thought leadership. And I also want to
point out a few additions to our editorial
board membership, highlighting the rich vein of expertise we
are able to draw on.
In coming weeks we will continue to look at topics such as the
shifting fortunes of international financial centres, the
external asset manager space in Asia, Switzerland, and other
regions, and look at what cryptocurrencies and blockchain
technology continues to offer. (Here is our
forward features calendar.) As ever, if you want to engage
with us editorially, please email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com
and amanda.cheesley@clearviewpublishing.com
Thanks again for your support and engagement with our
publications.