WM Market Reports
Market Falls Hit 2022 HNW Individuals' Wealth; Firms Must Raise Digital Game – Capgemini
One of a cluster of annual measures of how well – or not – the global wealth sector is faring, the Capgemini report noted how falling markets hit HNW wealth in 2022, and also highlighted how firms should take the affluent segment more seriously.
Wealth management firms talk often of how digital technology and
other approaches can boost advisors’ productivity and ability to
find and keep clients, but the annual Capgemini report on wealth
trends suggests that they have a steep mountain to climb.
Separately, the World Wealth Report showed how falls in
global markets during 2022 dented total assets of high net worth
individuals.
The report, which covers 71 markets, surveyed 3,171 high net
worth individuals in 23 markets, while its 2023 Global Affluent
Insights Survey questioned 3,203 affluent individuals in 11 major
markets.
The study is one of a number of reports from groups such as
Knight Frank
and Boston
Consulting Group that track the ebb and flow of HNW wealth
and the industry that serves this market.
For the purpose of this report, “high net worth” individuals have
at least $1 million of investable assets; affluent persons have
at least $250,000. (This news service has remarked on
how inflation affects the parameters of what counts as being
“rich”.)
Some 67 per cent of relationship manager time is spent on
administrative, non-core activities, and 18 per cent of affluent
segment investors are satisfied with their wealth
management service provider, the report said.
The global HNW individual population dropped by 3.3 per cent to
21.7 million in 2022, while the value of its wealth fell by 3.6
per cent to $83 trillion. According to the report, this marks the
steepest drop in 10 years (2013 to 2022) triggered by events such
as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the rises in
global interest rates, and concerns over China’s relations with
the West, among other factors. In all, the equity market slump
cost HNW individuals a total of $3 trillion in 2022. For example,
the US S&P 500 Index of equities dropped almost 20 per cent
in 2022.
Affluent appeal
The report said that wealth firms must grasp how the affluent
segment of individuals outnumbers their HNW peers by 2.5 per
cent, and they oversee almost $27 trillion (or 32 per cent of
total HNW wealth), representing a big growth opportunity. But
wealth firms don’t serve 95 per cent of the affluent segment and
34 per cent don’t plan to do so because they are worried about
profitability.
The study said that as HNW populations get squeezed, the affluent
segment offers a “unique opportunity to create value” by serving
a “highly digitised setup” and concentrating on high digital
maturity across the wealth management value chain. They can also
build “wealth-as-a-service" capabilities and use retail banks to
connect and serve the affluent segment.
Capgemini gave this relatively downbeat prediction and
accompanying words of advice in its executive summary: “Wealth
management firms will likely face sluggish economic growth, low
return potential from many assets, and an evolving competitive
landscape for the foreseeable future.” It added: “Careful cost
management, new value pools, investment in new technologies and
relationship manager productivity, and a recalibration of the
customer mix through new segments like the affluent will all be
required to enable and sustain long-term growth.”
Elsewhere in the 44-page report, it notes that while HNW
individuals remain interested in ESG ideas (see an article that
notes some reluctance in certain quarters
here), wealth managers need more data on impact to assure
clients. Falls in markets during 2022, and the gains in certain
energy stocks (such as of firms involved in fossil fuel use)
have caused controversy in countries such as the US over
whether ESG can be at odds with fiduciary duties. (See
an article here.)
Some 41 per cent of HNW survey respondents said investing for ESG
impact was a top priority and 63 per cent of them said they had
sought ESG scores for their assets. However, not many wealth
management firms said they regarded ESG data analysis (52 per
cent) and traceability (31 per cent) as a top priority. Of the
relationship managers surveyed, 40 per cent said they required
more data to understand ESG impact, and nearly one in two said
they need more ESG information to engage effectively with
clients.
Give firms the tools or
they're fired
The report said a lack of digital tools constrains relationship
managers from delivering timely financial advice and value-added
expertise. It also hurt the bottom line. On average, only one in
three executives ranked their firm’s end-to-end digital maturity
as “high.” Furthermore, 45 per cent said the cost per
relationship manager is rising, driven primarily by wealth value
chain inefficiencies.
The report finds that lagging digital readiness and poor
omni-channel platforms increased the relationship managers’ time
spent on non-core activities, leaving only a third of their time
available for pre-sales efforts and client interaction. The
strain is being felt on all sides. Some 56 per cent of HNW
individual respondents said value-added services influenced what
wealth management firm they would choose. Only one in two of them
said they were satisfied with their relationship manager’s
ability to deliver on what was promised. Strikingly, almost a
third (31 per cent) said they’d probably switch providers in the
next 12 months.
Wealth management firms must arm relationship managers with an
integrated one-stop-shop interface and create a superior client
experience if they want more revenues and happier
clients. “Wealth management firms are at a critical
inflection point as the macro-environment is forcing a shift in
mindset and business models to drive sustainable revenue growth.
Agility and adaptability are going to be key for high net worth
individuals as their attention gears towards wealth
preservation,” Nilesh Vaidya, global head of banking and capital
markets, Capgemini, said.
Affluent appeal
Capgemini said the affluent segment was a “new frontier” because
this population continued to grow in size and financial weight.
Regionally, North America (46 per cent) and Asia-Pacific (32 per
cent) held the largest share of global affluents in wealth value
and population size. Despite holding nearly $27 trillion in
assets (almost 32 per cent of total HNW wealth), 34 per cent of
firms are not exploring this segment.
Affluents are heavily (71 per cent) interested in seeking wealth
advisory services from their banks in the next 12 months.