While its fate is currently somewhat uncertain, the Department of Labor’s new fiduciary rule has certainly brought front and center the question of whether financial professionals are acting in the best interests of their clients.
For any investor, and particularly a high-net-worth investor, trusting the financial advice you’re getting is paramount. Hiring a financial wealth advisor is all about being able to take a step back and have confidence that someone is managing your wealth with your future, goals and best interests in mind.
The primary intention of the DoL’s new rule is to require that financial advisors work in the best interests of their clients, and put their clients’ interests above their own. This requirement therefore includes revealing any conflicts of interest, and clearly stating all fees and commissions.
What the new rule signifies, along with new digital advice technologies within the wealth management industry, is a focus on a personalized financial advice standard.
And, regardless of the DoL’s fiduciary rule, financial management has already been trending in this direction.
Deloitte reports that one disruptive trend in wealth management we are seeing in 2017 is the idea of a “re-wired” investor–that is, an investor who expects to interact with their advisors in a different way.
“Investors no longer want to be treated as part of a segment,” the report states, “but instead as unique individuals (‘just me’), with specific goals and preferences. Instead they expect to receive advice tailored to their own circumstances.”
Rapidly disappearing are the days of more impersonal investments where the investor was largely uninvolved. Today’s investors, especially younger ones, often want to be highly involved and actively participate in their wealth management. Even baby boomer investors are taking cues from the younger generations and following suit.
What fiduciary accountability and new technology points to is better alignment between the interests of the investor AND the advisor, and these developments drive customized financial advice based on goals and personal circumstances.
The use of big data has already made a significant impact in industries such as healthcare and higher education. Wealth management is ripe for leveraging this technology as well, to deliver a more insightful and personalized investor experience.
Consider the sheer volume of data created each year–and it continues to grow exponentially. Understanding how to interpret and best utilize this data to optimize clients’ portfolios and provide needs-based advice is key in today’s advisor-investor relationship.
Additionally, unification of perhaps disparate investment data allows for a deeply analytical approach that leverages predictive intelligence around market behavior. In this way, advisors can provide their clients not just with reports from the data, but with actionable insights to inform investment decisions.
Big data and analytics simply provide another way for wealth management firms to provide more personalized client advice to high-net worth investors, thereby optimizing client portfolios based on individual circumstances.
While a rapidly rising trend, “robo advising”–which uses technology to deliver tailored investment recommendations–has its own limitations, and there remains significant room for growth. Human advisors will continue to be invaluable, but can leverage the areas in which robo advisors fall short, such as accurately judging risk tolerance or helping weather the storm during volatile market conditions. Doing so complements the technology in ways only humans can.
Technology will consistently be able to provide greater access to data and generate more precise financial models that can meet a client’s needs for both reliability and level of risk. Technological capabilities in the coming years will underscore the changing landscape of trust in and expectations for financial advisors and wealth management.
The existence of robo advisors, especially those that have been implemented at major financial companies, signifies that with or without the fiduciary rule, changes are already underway to ensure clients’ needs are met in the most appropriate way.
At Lake Street Advisors, we already practice highly-personalized wealth management for our clients. Today’s technological climate offers broad investment capabilities that consider your financial and life situations, and short- and long-term goals, and narrow them into even more precise directives to meet your needs through customized investment strategies.
Financial advice today goes far beyond asset allocation. Investors expect customized and holistic financial planning that utilizes mechanized advice, such as robo advisors, comprehensive models based on personal situations and needs, and deep consideration of the future. It is safe to say these practices are already being executed within the wealth management industry, even without the DoL’s fiduciary rule yet in place.