12 minute read 23 Jan 2024

Firms should aim to be “the best versions of themselves” in what promises to be another challenging year. 

Overhead view of people doing yoga at city park

Top 10 resolutions for wealth and asset management success in 2024

Authors
Hermin Hologan

EY EMEIA Wealth & Asset Management Leader

Wealth and asset management advisor. Champion for anti-racism and DE&I. Father. Keen golfer.

Elliott Shadforth

EY Asia-Pacific Wealth & Asset Management Sector Leader

Leader and educator in financial services. Avid amateur athlete. Proud husband and father of three.

Mark Wightman

EY UK Wealth & Asset Management Transformation Leader

Leveraging technology and cultural change. Driving the future of Wealth and Asset Management. Global traveler. Thought leader. Educator. Father.

12 minute read 23 Jan 2024

Firms should aim to be “the best versions of themselves” in what promises to be another challenging year.

In brief
  • The start of the year is often a time for economic, market or technology forecasts — and for personal resolutions.
  • We combined both elements in this countdown of the top 10 resolutions for WAM leaders to make in 2024.
  • Faced with continuing market uncertainty and growing earnings pressure, resolving to "get in shape" has never been more important. 

January brings predictions and resolutions. Predictions for the year ahead typically address the outlook for markets, industries or politics. In contrast, resolutions tend to cover personal goals and initiatives — getting fit, starting new projects, or making other positive changes.

This year we’re using New Year’s resolutions to highlight key imperatives executives should consider in 2024 for the global wealth and asset management industry. Faced with an outlook of profound global uncertainty, increasing disruption and growing margin pressure, wealth and asset managers need to "get in shape" and build differentiated strategies for sustainable, long-term, profitable growth.

Here are the top 10 resolutions that industry leaders should be taking — or at least considering — as they aim for success in 2024 and beyond:

10. Involve investors in expanding and integrating services

As an organization or leader, we resolve to broaden our service capabilities, to develop holistic and integrated offerings and to strengthen this process through greater client involvement and co-creation.

Why:

Wealth and asset management customers across segments increasingly expect a holistic, bespoke service that is adapted to their needs and meets their requirements. Amid severe market uncertainty, they also seek greater guidance and reassurance.

What:

Firms are working to become more client-centric, to listen better to investors and to give them greater agency and control. In the wealth management arena, they are also broadening their service capabilities to develop a full financial wellness offering that manages clients’ investments, banking, health care and household needs. Increasing client involvement and using co-creation strengthens investor engagement, helps firms to be present at key moments in clients’ journeys and enhances loyalty and satisfaction.

How:

  • Re-evaluate client personas and segments (such as female investors) to better customize and scale delivery, remembering the importance of wealth transfers – between spouses and generations — to boost client retention.
  • Partner with other organizations to provide more holistic and non-traditional services (e.g., tax, trust, estate and health care) and use digital transformation to step up virtual connectivity.
  • Involve investors in co-developing services — nurturing a “teach-me, join-me” dynamic — and allow them to select their preferred level of involvement.

9. Broaden investor access, increasing engagement and inclusion

As an organization or leader, we resolve to enhance investor access to a full range of products, advice, and education — increasing investor engagement and providing better outcomes to a larger pool of clients.

Why:

Changing investor demographics (owing to aging, urbanization, migration, increasing female economic power and growing personal responsibility for retirement) are creating more complex patterns of demand. A growing pool of prospective clients offers tremendous growth potential but brings far more differentiated needs.

What:

Wealth and asset managers are widening their prospective client pool and broadening investor choice while also trying to educate clients on the products and services becoming available to them. They are working to democratize access to investments, including alternative assets; for example, by tapping into the last decade’s growth in private markets. This gives firms new sources of revenue growth, while creating additional value via stronger engagement and outcomes — all for a larger group of investors.

How:

  • Offer products traditionally limited to wealthy clients to mass affluent and retail investors, such as providing access to alternative asset classes and direct indexing capabilities.
  • Develop the use of interval funds, business development companies, European long-term investment funds (ELTIFs) and long-term asset funds (LTAFs) as primary vehicles.
  • Evaluate preferred commingled product vehicles, and the future potential of providing digital wrappers via tokenization.
  • Implement tools and platforms to enhance financial education around complex products.
We are focused on how to ensure our clients understand the complexity of new products that they now have access to and a greater interest in, such as private capital.
C-Suite Executive, top tier North American headquartered global wealth management firm

8. Collaborate – and innovate – on regulation

As an organization or leader, we resolve to make better use of technology and innovation — and to partner with other market participants — to increase regulatory engagement, efficiency and quality.

Why:

Faced with varied regulatory regimes across different markets — and global investors with footholds across several jurisdictions — wealth and asset managers not only need to comply with a multitude of rapidly evolving rules, but they are also expected to handle regulatory complexities on behalf of their clients.

What:

Wealth and asset managers are developing a more consistent approach to regulation. At one level, firms are working to make better use of technology, data and innovation to increase flexibility, address growing compliance burdens, and meet both global and specific local requests. At another level, players are increasingly collaborating to develop industry-wide solutions.

How:

  • Collaborate with peers and competitors to pool strengths and build collective frameworks, enhancing confidence in the ability to comprehensively comply with an evolving regulatory landscape.
  • Take a transparent approach to new technology, including ethical artificial intelligence (AI); accelerate the adoption of digital wrappers, tokenization and distributed ledger technology; and advance environmental, social and governance (ESG) imperatives as an industry.
  • Transform regulatory compliance through greater consistency and strategic innovation, instead of meeting evolving requirements through incremental additions.

7. Show transparent leadership on sustainability

As an organization or leader, we aim to develop a consistent, comprehensive and transparent approach to sustainability, optimizing investor alignment and taking an enterprise-wide view of implementation.

Why:

Wealth and asset managers face expectations to commit to more active participation in re-orientating global financial flows toward a more sustainable economy. In particular, the climate transition will become an ever-increasing area of focus. More broadly, firms need to ensure purpose-driven thinking in their activities and market investments, becoming active stakeholders and exhibiting leadership across ESG categories.

What:

With approximately 85% of assets under management (AUM) currently not green,1 firms are expanding their focus on climate to include the wider green and blue (marine) economies, as well as renewing their commitments on themes like food security and economically inclusive cities. Transparency is key to making tangible progress in partnership with asset owners, while avoiding allegations of “greenwashing” or politicization.

How:

  • Develop a greater choice of thematic funds and increasing allocations to themes such as diversity, transition investing, biodiversity and the blue economy.
  • Embed climate and environmental risks into strategy, governance and operations, and into investment products and portfolios — setting clear ambitions, scaling up sustainable finance and taking an iterative implementation approach.
  • Understand how to have a real-world impact — not only in mature economies but also in developing markets. Blended finance, which entails blending public capital or funding by development financiers with private capital, will be critical to increasing wealth and asset manager's role in the climate transition, by taking first loss risk and facilitating at-scale mobilization of capital.
  • Manage the whole firm in line with sustainability principles, including timely, accurate and transparent reporting to investors and regulators.

6. Optimize the value of talent

As an organization or leader, we resolve to maximize the value of new and existing talent through a strategic program of reskilling and upskilling — readying our people for changes in client demand, technology, products and industry practices.

Why:

Widespread talent shortages, coupled with rising expenses and competition from technology-enabled new entrants, are increasing the need for upskilled wealth and asset management executives. Attracting staff in emerging areas such as AI, and rapidly growing ones, like private credit, is important, but enterprise-wide talent enhancement is even more vital.

What:

Wealth and asset managers are trying to recruit people with specialist skills in areas such as AI and other advanced technologies. At the same time, they are seeking to empower staff and advisors so they are ready to work with new products, new technology and new business models and confirm that end clients understand the solutions, investment risks and potential outcomes.

How:

  • Focus talent strategies on enhancing access to, and training for, key roles and more standardized positions by reskilling and upskilling existing talent.
  • Realign talent based on their interests and strengths, with a continuous process to identify future skills needs and better leverage technology such as AI co-pilots and automation.
  • Consider use of centers of excellence (CoE) and offshore delivery capability (which is no longer just a cost play but increasingly a capability play, too).
  • Support staff members by offering a technologically-integrated work environment that streamlines operations and improves work-life balance.
  • Be proactive about communicating the firm’s culture, values and purpose, particularly pertaining to ESG policies; prioritize empathy and human-centeredness.

5. Use AI intelligently

As an organization or leader, we resolve to be proactive, transparent and targeted in our use of AI. That includes effective governance, a focus on efficiency, unified data and robust model testing.

Why:

As AI and GenAI become more capable and pervasive, wealth and asset managers will need to understand and embrace the technology in order to improve efficiency and meet investor expectations. In contrast, the careless or irresponsible use of AI will pose a growing potential risk.

What:

To become AI-enabled organizations, firms are accelerating investments in their data resources, technology platforms and training their talent, people and staff. Adopting a holistic approach to AI that unifies data, platforms and ecosystems can augment and enable firms’ capabilities. The need for efficiency, value and results means that cost optimization and targeted implementation are vital. It’s also evident that robust governance and the ethical use of AI are indispensable.

How:

  • Ensure a transparent and ethical approach to AI, with controls and testing over output, alongside strong cyber controls over the security and privacy of data.
  • Harness AI to transform middle-office operations, improve asset valuations, strengthen internal next-best-action frameworks, generate code, enhance investment research and automate workflows.
  • Train and scale internal staff for fast adoption of AI and Gen AI.
AI and GenAI will not necessarily cut jobs but they will disrupt the jobs of those who do not want to use AI.
C-Suite Executive, top tier European headquartered global asset management firm

4. Integrate in-house technology and external ecosystems

As an organization or leader, we resolve to harness the power of internal and external ecosystems — using partnering and integrated technology platforms to enhance performance, scalability, transparency and profitability.

Why:

Wealth and asset managers face growing pressure from cost expansion and margin contraction, as well as rapidly increasing investor expectations for speed, efficiency and seamless experiences. They need the ability to customize offerings — creating new revenue streams while providing frictionless client service.

What:

Wealth and asset managers are working to develop technology platforms that can unify the brand experience and quickly meet changing client needs. Internally, firms are further integrating their front, middle and back-office systems, standardizing their operating models and rethinking end-to-end workflows. Externally, application programming interfaces (APIs) and data interoperability are unlocking the power of ecosystems provided by technology vendors and service providers.

How:

  • Evaluate cloud-based flexible and modular infrastructure that can unlock secure communication between internal and external ecosystems.
  • Integrate data strategy across lines of businesses and the extended enterprise, enhancing data interoperability and making greater use of APIs.
  • Enhance management information systems for faster, better reporting to stakeholders.
  • Consider ecosystems provided through technology vendors and service providers and/or competitors to improve collaboration and manage scale.
  • Assess long-term readiness to harness the emergence of quantum computing-based technology.

3. Modernize data

As an organization or leader, we resolve to continually modernize our data infrastructure to maximize the availability, usability, adaptability and security of public and private data.

Why:

Wealth and asset managers are increasingly reliant on extracting value from a range of internal and external data — the sources, volume and velocity of which are continually increasing. As AI becomes more commonplace, more clients will expect firms to adopt large language models (LLMs) and other smart tools.

What:

Firms are working to develop modern data infrastructures that provide a single, reliable source of truth. Many are re-evaluating existing data strategies and partners. A holistic data framework integrating public and private data is key to overcoming pain points and delivering a wide, seamless range of products and services to investors. As use cases for AI and GenAI evolve, an adaptable data architecture is becoming key to supporting large language models and providing other AI-led services.

How:

  • Integrate a data management strategy across the enterprise and lines of business, with an eye to future applications and emerging threats.
  • Enhance the cyber security of the firm’s own data infrastructure and its broader operating ecosystem.
  • Capture data seamlessly across the value chain, mining client-focused information to previously unplumbed depths for better investor insights and experiences.
  • Leverage opportunities around data as a service to reduce cost, drive innovation and create data ecosystems.
As new infrastructure and tech emerges, we are constantly evaluating our data strategy and products to ensure we are mitigating risks, maintaining secure usage and protecting privacy.
C-Suite Executive, top tier Asia Pacific headquartered global asset management firm

2. Build a scalable platform for profitable growth

As an organization or leader, we resolve to develop strategies for sustainable, profitable growth for the benefit of all stakeholders — using a scalable platform for future expansion, adaptability and partnering.

Why:

Industry revenues and operating margins are under pressure from global volatility, increasing competition, changing product interest, slowing growth in AUM, net outflows and rising cost-to-income ratios.

What:

Wealth and asset managers are seeking avenues of sustainable growth and profitability to drive long-term-value-creation. Firms are no longer able to gain scale through acquisition alone; instead, they are pursuing top line growth while also seeking to enhance margins. That calls for transformation that establishes a sustainable framework for growth. Scalable infrastructures can reduce overheads and make cost bases more flexible, optimizing operating models and driving out inefficiencies.

How:

  • Formulate an organizational model based on a differentiated, targeted strategy that will be sustainable in the long term.
  • Take a strategic approach to outsourcing, nearshoring and offshoring based on an assessment of core competencies, mission critical activities and areas of competitive advantage.
  • Use new operating models, integrated platforms, automation and external ecosystems to reduce costs and build an efficient infrastructure.
  • Ensure robust governance frameworks to track return on investment and inform decision-making around transformation programs.
  • Create a platform that enables inorganic growth, team lifts and future M&A plans through standardization, integration and simplification of capability delivery.
  • Focus on clients’ needs throughout higher personalization and augmented client experience journeys.

1. Build a strong brand identity

As an organization or leader, we resolve to differentiate our unique value proposition, our distinctive brand and a strong sense of organizational purpose in our chosen markets.

Why:

Clients are drawn to wealth and asset managers that deliver better financial performance and are aligned with their vision and values. Firms need to clearly define their core purpose and use a strong brand strategy to defend their competitive advantages.

What:

Firms are aiming to set out unique, differentiated strategic visions, underpinned by a purpose-driven worldview. They are also working to back up this vision with a distinctive offering in which their firm-specific DNA is well represented. That is, pushing leaders to eschew trend-following and take tough strategic decisions around which markets they want to operate in, which client segments they want to engage with, which distribution channels to focus on — and why.

How:

  • Develop clear, distinct strategies based on a robust assessment of long-term trends and competitive advantages.
  • Evaluate distribution strategies and channels, including direct, intermediated, digital and ecosystems.
  • Optimize communication channels and align internal and external messaging with firms’ values for more authentic, transparent brand building.

Summary

Wealth and asset managers aiming to get fit for the future can put themselves on a positive path by making the right resolutions for success in 2024.

About this article

Authors
Hermin Hologan

EY EMEIA Wealth & Asset Management Leader

Wealth and asset management advisor. Champion for anti-racism and DE&I. Father. Keen golfer.

Elliott Shadforth

EY Asia-Pacific Wealth & Asset Management Sector Leader

Leader and educator in financial services. Avid amateur athlete. Proud husband and father of three.

Mark Wightman

EY UK Wealth & Asset Management Transformation Leader

Leveraging technology and cultural change. Driving the future of Wealth and Asset Management. Global traveler. Thought leader. Educator. Father.