Market Research
Wealthy Investors Are Warming To Robo-Advisors, Exclusive Research Shows

As part of the report, titled Investors’ attitudes towards robo-advisors 2017 – Evidence from five key wealth management markets, MyPrivateBanking surveyed 1,000 “mostly affluent and wealthy” respondents from the US, UK, France, Germany and Switzerland to gauge their feelings towards robo-advisors.
High net worth investors are “very open” towards robo-advisors
and are willing to allocate a significant share of their assets
to them, according to a new report shared exclusively with this
publication.
Data presented in the report by MyPrivateBanking, the
Swiss research house, shows that nearly two thirds (63 per cent)
of wealthy individuals would invest more than a quarter of their
assets with a robo-advisor.
“The openness of the young and wealthy client segments towards
robo-advisors is very promising for the long-term perspective of
automated investment services,” Carmela Melone, senior analyst at
MyPrivateBanking, said.
As part of the report, titled Investors’ attitudes towards
robo-advisors 2017 – Evidence from five key wealth management
markets, MyPrivateBanking surveyed 1,000 “mostly affluent
and wealthy” respondents from the US, UK, France, Germany and
Switzerland to gauge their feelings towards robo-advisors.
Generally speaking, these are digital platforms that use complex
algorithms and online questions to determine asset allocation and
risk appetite.
In terms of age, the Millennial cohort (defined as age 18-34) is
the leading segment, as 40 per cent are already managing their
assets through a robo-advisor and 44 per cent have said they
would consider doing so in future.
But investors still want a human touch when investing, the
research shows, giving merit to arguments that face-to-face
advisory is still a cornerstone of wealth management.
Some 91 per cent of respondents want to have the option to
interact with a human advisor.
“They [robo-advisors] will not replace traditional wealth
management services, but complement them by gaining access to the
next generation of clients,” Melone said.
Mobile capabilities are a must, the research shows. Mobile
applications and mobile-optimised websites are among the top
three must-have technical features of robo-advice platforms, as
cited by 54 per cent of respondents.
But Melone stressed that plush interfaces alone will not garner
the interests of the uber-rich.
“Robo-advisors that want to win affluent and wealthy clients must
carefully design the onboarding process, but to keep them they
have to offer more than a fancy interface and software,” Melone
said. “To succeed in this demanding client group, they need to
enable clients to connect to a human advisor. The pure robo
approach is not an option for the majority of affluent and
high-net-worth investors.”
Attitudes towards robo-advisors vary “significantly”
cross-jurisdictionally, the report says.
US investors, for example, appear particularly cautious and
demanding of robo-advice, and they expect human advice to be an
“integral” part of a digital platform.
Across the pond, UK investors have an above-average robo
awareness, MyPrivateBanking points out.
Nearly two-thirds (64 per cent) of the cohort have “at least some
knowledge” about robo-advisors, compared with 59 per cent of the
global sample. In France, nearly half (45 per cent) of
respondents use a robo-advisor, compared to 29 per cent of
overall respondents.
Germany and Switzerland have the “highest potential” for pure
robo-advisors, as 12 per cent of those surveyed in each nation
expect no human interaction.