Financial advisors seem to be the prime target of regulations across the globe for quite some time now. Right from the Dodd-Frank Act followed by Department of Labour’s Fiduciary Rule (though halted for now) in US, the Financial Advice Market Review (FAMR) in UK to the Royal Commission recommendations in Australia, these regulations are meant to ensure the end customer gets the most appropriate advice and makes informed investment decisions.
While these regulatory overhauls are definitely needed in order to arrest the increased mis-selling of inappropriate life and retirement products (by a few advisors), the remedial measures have put enormous pressure on the advisor community as a whole. These include, among others:
In these challenging times, human financial advisors have another major concern - competing with Robo-advisors, which are services that use computer algorithms to build and manage client investment portfolios. Having started around the 2008 financial crisis times, robo-advisors have grown in popularity as low-cost advice solutions over this decade with products such as Betterment, Wealthfront, and Charles Schwab gaining significant market share.
So the key question before us is: Should the human financial advisor with years of experience in providing comprehensive financial advice to clients need to worry?
Robo-advisors Vs human advisors: An analysis based on investment lifecycle
Typically, financial planning and investment portfolio management spreads across four phases for any customer - Exploration, Accumulation, Consolidation and Crystallization, that corresponds with their age, life events and acquired wealth.
Let’s use an Investment lifecycle model that depicts the relevance of robo-advisors (RA) Vs human advisors (HA) to find some answers (See Figure 1).
Figure 1: Investment Lifecycle Model depicting the role of robo-advisors Vs human advisors
Exploration
Robo-advisors vs human advisors - Robo-advisors, which charge <= 0.50% of Asset Under Management (AUM), are very well equipped to exactly address this. However, some of the human advisors who want to gain a foothold in the advisory market and can compete on lower costs might as well operate in this phase either independently or in conjunction with robo-advisors.
Accumulation
Robo-advisors vs human advisors - At this phase, there will obviously be some need for end-to-end financial advice from a personal advisor. Still, significant proportion of customers might prefer robo-advisors due to the simplicity they provide in managing investments at lower costs as well as the investor inertia associated with approaching human advisors.
Consolidation
Robo-advisors vs human advisors - Later part of this phase would also need pre-crystallization advice (which human financial advisors are best at) as customers start timing their payouts.
Crystallization
Robo-advisors vs human advisors - For these specialized advice needs, customers at advanced ages are most likely to opt for human advisors.
Inferences from the analysis: Should human advisors worry?
Despite the foregoing facts, we cannot dismiss the fears of the advisor community as baseless. Better data gathering, analytics learning and visualization of advice patterns will enable more sophisticated robo-advisors in the coming years. They can infringe upon the perceived area of strength for human advisors - comprehensive financial planning and inclusive portfolio management, which will be available to customers at lower costs and convenience of use.
However, as long as the specialist human advisors stick on to their basic tenets – providing quality financial advice that puts the client interests above all, a well carved out investment strategy and execution, and more importantly, personal support during times of financial crisis, they will continue to excel over robo-advisors.
Human advisors: Helping customers navigate COVID-19 disruption
The COVID-19 crisis has thrown up few use-cases that demonstrate opportunities for human advisors to establish themselves as trusted partners to their clients:
Investing on trust in the new normal
In their arduous journey towards overcoming the challenges posed by COVID-19, the customers will expect quality financial advice from specialized human advisors backed up by intelligent robo-advisors. Keeping this in mind, the financial services industry has the prime responsibility to dispel the advisor community’s fears, thereby providing them the needed confidence to continue as trusted investment partners to their clients. Besides, this will also serve as a catalyst for more professionals to join the advisor community that can help address the anticipated shortfall of financial advisors globally in the coming years, even as we gear up to meet the challenges in the new normal.
Venkatakrishnan Ramachandran
Consulting Partner, BFSI Consulting, Wipro
Venkat specializes in Life Insurance & Retirements and has consulted with leading players across USA, Australia, APAC and UK. He is passionate about business-driven transformation consulting that drives IT optimization and implementation of new age technologies - thereby enabling life insurance and retirements providers derive business value and remain competitive.