Digital Advice's Expected Billions Not Enough for Some Firms

The digital advice market is expected to grow to nearly $500 billion in the next four years, according to Cerulli Associates.

Yet despite predictions of a booming market just around the corner, many of the largest brokerage firms are unsure whether they want to jump in.

The heads of Merrill Lynch and Wells Fargo said in recent interviews that they were looking at how to get into the market.  Meanwhile, the leaders of Raymond James and Edward Jones have sworn off robos, saying they didn't want to cannibalize their advisors.

A key factor in how firms are approaching this developing market is whether the company is already serving direct investors, experts say.

Bank of America, for example, has Merrill Lynch and Merrill Edge, its call center service for direct investors, says Sophie Schmitt, an analyst at research firm Aite Group. It's a natural evolution for the company to move towards a robo advisor or similar service.

"In the scheme of things it's not that different from what they are doing with the Merrill Edge advisory center. Perhaps it'll be a cheaper rate than what you can do currently with an advisor. For them it's another product," Schmitt says.

John Thiel, head of Merrill Lynch Wealth Management, highlighted the company's existing capabilities when discussing how they would implement a robo advisor service.

"It would be stand-alone if clients want to self-direct," Thiel says. "We have that option today in Merrill Edge. So to me, it’s very analogous to direct investing, where someone feels like the algorithm is what they are looking for in a relationship, and they don’t see behavioral advice or financial planning — what we see as very important — as important to them, at least at this moment."

STRATEGIC SENSE

Like Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Wells Fargo has multiple lines of business. Both companies are serving tens of millions of Americans on multiple levels, from credit cards to mortgages to investment accounts.

Another factor, often overlooked, is the overseas markets. For example, the Toronto-based RBC and Zurich-based UBS have retail banking services in their home markets and others, and they're facing additional competitive pressures from firms overseas that are developing robo advisors and other digital offerings, Schmitt says.

"Robo advisor is a very narrow thing, in my opinion. It's like Betterment. Some of these are not Betterment, but they are offering [digital] advice," says Schmitt, who notes that the U.K. has one of the more developed digital advice markets.

For firms such as Raymond James or Edward Jones, which have thousands of financial advisors across U.S., it may not make a lot of strategic sense to begin competing for the direct investors' dollars.

"We think we offer value in guidance and advice," says Jim Weddle, head of Edward Jones. "An 800-number and algorithm isn't going to replace our folks."

But that doesn't exclude the possibility — and necessity — of upgrading the digital services offered to clients. Weddle says that "robo advisors will push everyone, us included, forward in terms of the quality of the tools and the functionality of the desktop to benefit the advisor."

TALKING UP INVESTMENTS

Timing of technology adoption by firms will be important, notes Marlon Weems, head of consulting firm Hillcrest Strategies.

"I expect the fintech-for-wealth management story to play out in a fashion similar to the rise of algorithmic technology a decade ago," he says. "The early adopters bought many of the start-up algo shops, and retrofitted their technology into their platforms. Others made the choice to build internally. But many were in denial that a paradigm shift was underway.

"Firms that fail to recognize and adapt to the sea-change currently taking place in wealth management will be at a competitive disadvantage," Weems adds. 

Schmitt expects that in the next two years more of these traditional brokerage firms will have launched digital-based services, giving better account access to clients, aggregating data and eventually providing more robust analytics tools to advisors.

"I think analytics is going to be huge. But beyond that, it'll be, 'Let's get the information together first,'" she says. "It'll probably take longer for the analytics piece to come together and be truly valuable for advisors."

Nearly every executive interviewed recently has talked up the investments they are making or will make in their digital capabilities — even if they're avoiding duplicating the offerings of startups such as Betterment.

"Bottom line, I think everyone is working on the components of a robo advisor," Schmitt says.

Read more:

For reprint and licensing requests for this article, click here.
Wirehouses RIAs Regional banks Technology Financial planning
MORE FROM FINANCIAL PLANNING