Technology
Automation Revolution Hasn't Fully Arrived In Wealth Sector - Study

The figures come from Swiss financial infrastructure business SIX, which is owned by 122 banks as its users.
Wealth managers and other financial players want more automated
solutions to help them know about and handle corporate actions
such as rights issues, mergers and other moves, with the vast
majority of them still handling this information manually, a
survey shows.
Swiss financial infrastructure firm SIX, conducted a survey from April
to June among 54 respondents. It found that 87 per cent of them
are processing part of their corporate actions manually and some
30 per cent process more than half of such actions this way. (SIX
is owned by its users – 122 banks.)
The survey looked into the kind of work that wealth managers have
to handle in the middle and back office of their business, the
“plumbing” of the industry that end-clients rarely get to see.
Sector figures say that this part of the business needs to be
more “industrialised” to cope with price pressures and the demand
for faster service.
Some 45 per cent of respondents said they wanted corporate
actions to be processed as close to real time as possible and a
quarter of them wanted to start an automated project
imminently.
“By relieving themselves of such a manual labour-intensive task,
they will be able to reduce operating costs, manage growing
corporate actions volumes and, in turn, service their clients
better,” Annelotte De Nanassy, senior product manager, Financial
Information, SIX, said.
Asked by this publication why automating certain processes is so
important, a spokesperson for SIX said: “Manual processing of
corporate actions can also lead to greater instances of error,
which comes back to affect other parts of the business. If, for
example, a rights issue is processed incorrectly and investment
decisions are made on that basis then it is the individuals that
own the client relationship who are responsible for explaining
the error. This can affect the relationship with their client and
impact the reputation of the business.”
“Some of these [corporate actions] are more time consuming to
process than others. For example, processing dividends is a far
more efficient process than handling more complex events with
many options. However, the key point is that firms are having to
deal with multiple different streams of corporate actions data
which all require processing. This is especially important for
wealth management firms which may not have the same amount of
resources compared to a tier one or tier two investment bank,”
the spokesperson said.
“Just over half of the respondents mention that legacy technology
is the greatest challenge to increase automation of corporate
actions. Looking at cloud-based repositories may be a trend in
the coming years to overcome this hurdle,” the spokesperson
added.