Alt Investments
Tech Helps Firms Meet Clients' Demand For Private Market Access

Wealth management firms must adapt to enable clients to gain more access to private market assets, and technology is a big part of how this is done.
This news service has noted how various businesses are trying
– so they say – to widen access to previously difficult-to-enter
asset classes such as private equity. We have reported on the
activities of businesses such as CAIS and iCapital Network, for
example (both are headquartered in the US). Taking a further look
at the space is fintech firm Delio, a UK-based business with
offices worldwide. The author is Gareth Lewis, who founded Delio
in 2015, and is its chief executive.
The editors are pleased to share these views and invite readers’
responses. The usual editorial disclaimers apply. To respond,
email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com
Traditionally, Investing in private markets has been seen as the
preserve of ultra-high net worth or institutional investors.
However, the tide is turning.
Over the last decade, client demand for private markets has
accelerated rapidly. This has forced many financial institutions
to modernise their traditional and long-standing approach to
alternative assets. As a result, they have had to transform how
they present unlisted investment opportunities to their clients -
and technology has been central to this transformation.
Investors turn to private investments
Before focusing on how firms can broaden client access to private
markets, it is important to note why alternative assets are
thriving. The most obvious answer is that private markets have
been generating impressive and consistent yields during recent
periods of economic instability. Over the longer term, private
equity has remained the highest-returning asset class since
2006.
As a result, alternative investment opportunities that were once
seen as too high-risk have now become highly sought-after.
Investors have adopted a longer-term approach to how their
capital is deployed and have a greater risk appetite than they
did a decade ago, which goes some way to explaining why in the UK
alone, private equity investment rose to its highest level in
five years, according to KPMG .
The market itself is showing no sign of slowing down. PwC
predicts that global private markets AUM will rise by up to $5.5
trillion between now and 2025. Depending on the rate of economic
recovery post-COVID, this could see the total value of private
markets AUM hit $15 trillion in the next three years.
These factors mean that investors have begun to view private
markets as an important way of diversifying their portfolios.
With their longer-term focus, alternative investments are
perceived to be more resistant to external factors like COVID-19
and inflation when compared with public markets. While they are
not immune to global, political and social instability, the
consequences are generally far less severe due to investors’
longer-term commitment to them. Yet despite promising returns and
growing demand, many financial firms have been slow to react in
developing a client offering in this space.
Soaring demand prompts financial institutions to
adapt
It is fair to say that private markets are soaring. Nonetheless,
many financial firms have failed to modernise their traditional
operating models, which has meant that they do not have the
staffing and resources to meet the growing client demand for this
type of investment.
Historically, a firm’s private markets' offering was likely to be
driven by personal relationships, paper-based processes and
one-to-one meetings. Common operational challenges include
implementing robust governance processes for deal distribution,
accurately profiling investors, and overcoming antiquated
document and data management systems which make it difficult to
audit processes effectively. In fact, nearly two-thirds of firms
highlighted regulatory compliance as one of the main obstacles
for offering a private market proposition to clients.
It is vital that firms find a solution to these challenges, given
that demand for private markets is only expected to rise further,
and regulators are already responding to this shift. Last year,
the US Securities and Exchange Commission widened the
definition of an “accredited investor” to include investors who
previously would not have qualified. Similarly, the FCA recently
decided to take forward proposals of a new UK open-ended
authorised investment fund which would enable sophisticated
investors to have greater access to private equity assets.
As a result, firms need to look at digitising their private
market offering. Not only does automating certain aspects of the
investment process improve operational efficiency, but it also
helps to create consistency and mitigate risk. When combined,
these procedural gains will allow financial institutions to scale
their private market offering beyond the ‘usual suspects’ -
exclusive groups of ultra-high net worth investors.
Digitisation is fundamental to scaling private
markets
The push towards digitising the private investment sector shifted
rapidly as a result of the pandemic, with nine out of 10
financial institutions reporting that they had accelerated their
digitisation strategy as a result.
Additionally, globalisation has meant that wealthy clients are
now rarely based in one specific location. As busy entrepreneurs
and professionals, they are often on the move and increasingly
require 24/7 access to their portfolios, which means that digital
engagement is vital.
The increasing use of technology also frees up advisors and
relationship managers to provide additional services that cannot
be dealt with through automation. If deployed effectively, this
can allow staff to add value for clients and conduct more
fee-generating work, while the ‘administrative heavy lifting’ is
dealt with in a more streamlined way. For both clients and
businesses, this approach offers a more efficient, pragmatic and
rational approach to the challenge of democratising private
markets.
While the improvements that digitisation offers from an
operational perspective are apparent, better use of technology
has the potential to provide game-changing advantages in
enhancing advisor-client relations. Thanks to real-time analytics
and more transparent data, previously inaccessible client
insights can be generated which will create significant value
from a commercial perspective. This can range from clients’
engagement with specific types of investments to identifying
potential blockers that prevent clients from committing to an
investment opportunity. In short, one true view of client data
helps advisors to understand their investment preferences and
behaviour at a level never seen before.
Now is the time to modernise
Given the increasing and consistent demand for private markets
over the last decade, financial firms can no longer shy away from
modernising their client offering. Regardless of whether their
focus is to promote investment opportunities more effectively or
to strengthen their regulatory processes, digital tools will be
key to how firms improve access to alternative assets.
While there has undoubtedly been an acceleration in the number of
firms adopting technical solutions, a lot remains to be done.
Some financial services, such as banking and insurance, have
undergone a technological revolution in the last decade; however,
the process of digitising private markets (and the wealth
management sector more broadly) remains in its infancy.
This evolution is already underway. Financial firms that aren’t
modernising their approach risk losing ground to their
competitors and alienating their clients. As private markets
become more and more accessible, institutions need to embrace the
role that technology is playing to ensure that they are able to
cater for this demand. If they don’t, the chances are that
clients will quickly begin to look elsewhere for the private
markets opportunities that they crave.
About the author
Gareth Lewis is the chief executive and co-founder of Delio, a
rapidly scaling fintech operating in the private markets space.
The firm works with more than 90 clients, including some of the
world's leading financial institutions. Lewis is a Chartered
Accountant and was recognised by ICAS as one of the UK's Top
Young CAs in 2019. Prior to establishing Delio, he worked for EY,
IBM and Convex Capital, a boutique M&A advisory firm. Delio
has offices in Cardiff (its HQ) and London, Geneva,
Singapore, Dubai and New York.
Footnotes
https://home.kpmg/uk/en/home/media/press-releases/2021/07/uk-private-equity-activity-soars.html
https://www.pwc.com/gx/en/private-equity/assets/pwc-prime-time-for-private-markets-2021.pdf
https://www.deliogroup.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Private-Markets-in-Wealth-Management-Delio-Report.pdf
https://www.deliogroup.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/Regulatory-governance-in-private-markets-spreads.pdf