Strategy
Getting Chinese Wealth Strategy Right - The View From Deutsche Bank

A senior figure in the international wealth management arena talks about the requirements for success in the industry.
The following article is by Michael Morley, chief executive of Deutsche Bank Wealth Management UK and he is also a member of the Cambridge Judge Business School China Advisory Council. This article was first published in December 2018 by the China Advisory Council, in association with SEEC and the University of Cambridge Judge Business School. This news service republishes this article with permission. We are pleased to share these comments with readers and invite responses. Michael is also a member of this news service’s editorial advisory board.
Introduction
There was a time of course when the only wealth worth having was
land. It was legal control over real estate that gave the global
medieval elites access to both physical security and leverage
with rulers, whether Kings, Emperors or local warlords.
Today, if we have it, we think of wealth as something that
enables us to plan our lives. Partha Dasgupta, emeritus professor
of economics at Cambridge University, has written that “wealth is
[essentially] what enables you to plan by converting one form of
capital into another.”
Wealth management has traditionally been thought of as a branch
of financial services which is concerned solely with looking
after the needs of very wealthy individuals and their families.
However, the need to plan, to ensure an efficient conversion of
all types of income and capital, both tangible and intangible,
into a range of asset and liability outcomes that support the
life of an individual or family, is a recurring need, whether you
are very rich, of middle income, or of modest means.
Research from a range of independent organisations which produce
regular commentary on how private client wealth is distributed
across the global regions of the world has tended to confirm that
over the last 25 years wealth has become ever more concentrated:
i.e. the wealthy have become wealthier, and the very wealthy - so
called UHNWIs - have become wealthier still, confirming the rise
of a phenomenon that William Rees-Mogg and James Dale Davidson
described in 1997 as the Sovereign Individual.
Concentration of wealth appears to be one of the factors which
has led to growing dissatisfaction amongst western electors and
the rise of populism in a number of countries. The rise of the
Sovereign Individual, with global resources at his/her fingertips
equivalent to those of small sovereign nations potentially
threatens the authority of governments in both western and
eastern states.
Wealth management as a strategic industry
sector
Having spent the last twenty years running large, medium-sized
and small wealth management organisations, and having had
literally hundreds of conversations with wealthy men and women
and their families over this time, I have reached the conclusion
that part of the business of a wealth manager is to have a view
on how countries should organise themselves to ensure that they
successfully harness the private client capital resources that
they need to drive growth in their respective economies. It is
also to recognise that there is a vital social dimension to
managing wealth.
Ensuring that all citizens have access to high quality advice and
resources to enable them to take the appropriate decisions on
what makes sense for them to plan for their own lifetime goals
turns out to be both a macroeconomic necessity and a social
good.
The philanthropy practised by many wealthy individuals and their
families through foundations and institutes has had many positive
benefits for societies across the world. John Ruskin, the 19th
century art critic and author, wrote in his essay Unto this
Last: “that country is the richest which nourishes the
greatest number of noble and happy human beings; that man is
richest who, having perfected the functions of his own life to
the utmost, has also the widest helpful influence, both personal
and by means of his own possessions, over the lives of others”.
He had a point.
But governments cannot rely on philanthropy alone to get the job
done and, as already mentioned, relying on so-called Sovereign
Individuals to make objective choices for their fellow citizens,
be they global or local, has its limits.
This paper will argue that investing in advice-led wealth
management propositions which educate both those who have wealth,
however modest, and those who pretend to advise on it, is a
strategic necessity for China as a buttress to its Belt and Road
strategy.
But what do we mean by wealth management?
To be in the business of “wealth management” means a whole lot of
different things to different audiences. For some it means to be
in the business of asset gathering and then managing the assets
that have been “gathered”. For others it means to be in the
business of private banking and to provide bespoke current and
capital account services. For some it means to be in the business
of providing structured lending facilities to enable better
liability management for clients. For others it means to be in
the business of providing stockbroking or platform execution
services.
All of the services mentioned above may be valuable in and of
themselves - but as standalone services to drive forward a growth
agenda for a sustainable wealth management industry they are
unlikely to be sufficient. Businesses which focus solely on
providing investment management services may unintentionally end
up in pushing products that may or may not be suitable for
clients; simply concentrating on credit and current account
banking runs the risk of too narrow a focus on a client’s overall
needs; merely being a stockbroker runs the risk of making Woody
Allen’s often quoted dictum come true: i.e. that a stockbroker is
someone who invests your money until there isn’t any left!
The thing that almost all clients require is someone who takes
the time to understand their needs and their lifetime goals:
someone who has skills that are more akin to those of a
professional services advisor, able to advise on both sides of a
client’s personal financial balance sheet. The aim of the wealth
management advisor is to make a positive impact on a client’s
life by helping them to achieve their client’s lifetime goals. It
is in this sense that the wealth manager of this century is in
the life planning business, aiming to be the trusted advisor who
ensures that a financial or wealth plan is in place that supports
the client’s life plan.
If the service begins with a comprehensive financial or wealth
plan which is designed to advise clients on both sides of their
personal balance sheets, credibility and trust are more easily
established. The advisor is then much more likely to be entrusted
with the job of executing the plan, bringing to bear the skills
and services of other parts of his/her wealth management
operation (banking, credit, investments etc.) and enabling
further expertise to be established, deepening the trust between
client and service provider.
Most wealth management organisations that developed in the west
began as product organisations, often with strong links to their
retail, commercial or investment banking arms. Experience has
shown that, whilst innovative and effective products are
essential, a wealth management business needs to start by
building long-term trusting relationships. As China begins to
develop its own wealth management industry, it can build
effectively on some of the lessons which have been learnt
empirically over many years in the West.
There are a number of key attributes that are essential in
establishing the right culture and framework for a successful
wealth management industry. Let’s start with the attributes
needed for looking after those who have significant capital
wealth - so-called high net worth individuals (HNWIs), and we
will then consider the needs of both the super-rich and those of
modest means.
1. The first attribute is: understanding what it means to
be wealthy
Scott Fitzgerald and Ernest Hemingway supposedly agreed that the
rich were different: they have more money than the average
citizen. If you work in the wealth management sector, one of the
challenges is that you may find yourself advising someone who has
been more successful than you are and is richer. Why should they
take advice from you - an employee, even if a very hard working
one, a salaried individual, not an owner nor an entrepreneur?
There is of course no short cut to solving this dilemma. Time,
wisdom, experience and professional qualifications eventually
help you out. But the key skill set is to be good at putting
yourself in other people’s shoes; to try and see things from
others’ perspectives; to spend time getting to understand their
goals, their background, their families, their likes and
dislikes, their passions, their weaknesses.
It was Mme de Staël in 19th century France who said that “to
understand all is to forgive all”. In wealth management “to
understand all is to advise well”.
2. The second attribute is: empathy
Wealth managers who hope to be appointed as a trusted advisor to
their clients need to start by showing that they care. Nobody
cares what you think until they think that you care.
Showing that you care can manifest itself in many different ways:
it might be spending time getting to understand a client’s
particular interests, understanding the way their family
thinks about next generational planning or the legacy of their
family business, or it might simply be about showing that you
care about a favourite wine that they drink or a piece of music
that means a lot to them. Showing that you care about them
and their life goals is often a much more important starting
point than the traditional product led strategies of many wealth
management houses.
The third attribute is: integrity.
Not so very long ago integrity would have been synonymous with
what was expected from a financial services professional. “My
word is my bond” was a motto famously used in the City of London
over many centuries to characterise the trust embodied by the
City’s financial community.
Today in the post “great crash” era, banks need to re-establish
their professional credentials and their moral integrity. This
will be a slow job, but a necessary one and it is an essential
pre-requisite for success as a wealth management firm. For it is
integrity that builds trust and it is trust that sustains wealth
management relationships for the long term. And it is this
sustainability that creates the virtuous circle of profitable
service provision for customers and clients, based on their needs
- not the needs of the financial services provider.
But what is integrity exactly? There will be many views as to
what it really is or indeed how to define it. As someone who
believes in the benefit of pursuing life-long learning as a habit
acquired at school and university, I wonder if the importance
that academic communities attach to the freedom to search for the
truth may not be a part of it. Being open and honest and truthful
about the needs of your client and your ability to serve them is
certainly a good start. As John Milton, the English poet and
alumnus of my own college at Cambridge put it: “let her and
Falsehood grapple; who ever knew Truth put to the worse in a free
and open encounter”
4. And the fourth attribute is: professional competence
and behaviour
Wealth Managers look to advise their clients on both sides of
their personal balance sheets. So they need to be extremely well
qualified. Those offering banking services need to have sat and
passed the relevant banking exams.
Those offering financial planning and investment services need to
have sat and passed the relevant chartered financial planning and
securities exams. All need to have a good understanding of the
professional standards that are expected of them.
In the UK we have a number of organisations (e.g. the Banking
Standards Board, the Personal Investment Management and Financial
Advice Association (PIMFA)) which look to set the standards of
competence and behaviour that are expected in our market, and
against which financial services professionals can expect to be
measured and held accountable.
Is wealth management just about looking after wealthy
people?
One of the challenges for the wealth management industry has been
whether the advice-led model and the attributes required for
success for HNWIs are applicable for all levels of wealth. The
needs of the super-rich, it is claimed, are very different to
those who have mere millions. And it is regularly stated that the
very high costs of delivering the personalised HNW model to those
of modest means effectively renders it uneconomic to deliver the
HNW model to less wealthy people who may lack the means to pay
for it.
In the case of the super wealthy, it is true that often much of
the financial/wealth planning advice that is provided as part of
the wealth management package for HNWIs is either in-sourced to a
single family office, or outsourced to a multi-family office or
to discrete single service providers. The wealth manager in these
circumstances becomes more akin to an institutional product and
service provider, focusing on the particular investment or
structural financing needs of the client, and often utilising the
resources and capabilities of an in-house investment bank. But
the validity of an advice-led wealth management model has not
changed; it is simply that the packaged integrated service gets
unbundled and delivered by a range of different specialist
providers. There are a few cases around the world of integrated
multi-family offices who provide a holistic service - but
scalability and the logistics and costs of delivery prove
challenging.
In the case of mass affluent and retail sectors the challenge
remains how to deliver an advice-led model at a price point that
is bearable for the consumer and profitable for the provider. And
in many ways, solving for this conundrum is the most pressing and
relevant issue for the global wealth management sector.
It is no less critical for an individual or a family of modest
means to get good advice on how to save, how to spend their
income, and how to use their resources to plan for the future. In
fact, for an individual of modest means, it will often be
relatively more important to get good advice and to make the
right choices than for those with greater resources. The working
assumption is that the knowledge engineers and data scientists
working in fintech (or perhaps outside fintech) will find an AI
solution to enable true robo-advice. To date what some industry
practitioners have termed “robo-advice” is in fact simply a
digitised way of enabling strategic asset allocation and fund
manager selection to take place online in a convenient way for
consumers. As far as it goes it’s a good innovation, but it’s
really focused on just one side of a client’s balance sheet and
on arguably the most commoditised component of that balance
sheet.
The real prize is to be able to offer a digitised solution for a
comprehensive financial planning service that probes client needs
and gives relevant personalised advice, based - as in other
segments - on individual life goals.
Many say that this cannot be done and that the intervention of a
human advisor will always be necessary.
But it may be the case that millennial knowledge engineers will
indeed find a true “robo” solution - either entirely AI-based, or
part AI, part human. It feels like an exciting area where
innovation and data science will combine to solve a much demanded
consumer need and which will provide governments and the industry
with a solution to a much demanded social need. China’s
commitment to AI, its significant scale population with long-term
financial planning needs, and determination to progress quickly
to a technology-led economy will give her a potentially strategic
advantage here.
A wealth management road for China
So what advice might one give to the leaders of the China Wealth
Management industry as they set about the great task of convening
private client capital as a strategic imperative to support OBOR
and as a social good to bring advice-led wealth management
services to the greatest number of people?
For wealthy individuals, one important starting point is to
understand how individuals make their wealth in the first place.
Here there are essentially two basic profile types: those who are
accumulating capital and take the full spectrum of a working life
to accumulate it; and those who suddenly acquire capital, for
example by selling a business - a so-called monetisation event -
or perhaps by inheriting money from a family member.
The needs of a client who is accumulating capital are different
to the needs of a client who has an immediate capital investment
sum. So the advice they get has to be different and the products
and services they require will be different too.
If you are a bank, the good news is that you should have the
balance sheet capacity to lend your clients money as they are
accumulating their wealth, as well as the ability to develop
planning and investment services to advise them once they have
made and realised a capital sum.
For less wealthy individuals it will also be important to develop
a range of services which are based on how income is generated,
the extent to which savings can be made now and in the future,
and the scope and appetite to take on debt - but above all
understanding and caring about the goals, hopes and fears of the
client and their family.
At a high level, my recommendations would
be:
a. At country, industry and individual service provider level
conduct a detailed customer survey to ensure that you truly
understand customer needs and how they generate income and
accumulate capital.
b. Be certain that you understand their attitude towards risk.
They may have a very different attitude towards risk once they
have made their money as opposed to the attitude they had when
they were making it in a business in which they were expert.
c. Make client profiling a skill set that everyone in the
organisation, from the CEO downwards, practises every day. Become
the financial services equivalent of the local doctor. Be sure
that you understand your clients’ goals, dreams and fears: and
update your knowledge often. Let them see that you care.
d. Develop appropriate value propositions for the different
levels and complexities of client balance sheets. The way you
reach out to billionaires and family offices will be different to
the way you reach out to HNWIs and retail and mass affluent
clients. But the first engagement point of a clear plan that
supports long term goals and objectives will be the same starting
point for each segment. It’s just the delivery that is
different.
e. Put in place a comprehensive educational programme, starting
at school for all pupils so that they understand the importance
of saving, planning and managing their own personal balance
sheets from the moment they enter the workforce. Understanding
the need to have a personal financial plan alongside a personal
health plan is likely to be a critical component of a long and
happy life.
f. Aim to make technology and the knowledge engineers your
friends. They are writing the next chapter of the wealth
management business, both in terms of the ability to solve the
provision of the advice gap to less wealthy households, but also
in terms of ensuring that our personal data remains secure,
accurate and privat.
Conclusion
In summary, build a wealth management culture which will stand
the test of time based on long-term relationships and advice, not
short-term transactions. China has a renowned reputation for
thinking strategically and planning for the long term. Wealth
management is a slow-burn business, but it’s very sticky once you
get it. Building a sector on solid foundations with care paid to
individual needs will serve both to convene private client
capital and to serve the public good.