[stock-market-ticker symbols="FB;BABA;AMZN;AXP;AAPL;DBD;EEFT;GTO.AS;ING.PA;MA;MGI;NPSNY;NCR;PYPL;005930.KS;SQ;HO.PA;V;WDI.DE;WU;WP" width="100%" palette="financial-light"]

Have ‘robo advisers’ had the last laugh?

24 august 2022

an article written by Daniel Lanyon, Editorial Director of AltFi

One of the original fintech booms for low-cost automated financial advice has had its winners and losers but the direction of travel has been fully digital.

One of the slowest burning fintech stories is that of the humble ‘robo adviser’, later rebranded to ‘digital wealth manager’.

After the ‘neobank’ launch flurry of 2015-16, robo advisers came next with seemingly dozens of new digital wealth managers popping up. This prompted more than a little scepticism from the naturally conservative (with a small ‘c’) quarters of wealth management.

By 2018 there were about 20 standalone robo advisors or digital wealth managers mostly independent start-ups offering risk-targeted model portfolios. These were Nutmeg, Scalable Capital, Moneyfarm, Moneybox, Fiver a Day, Money on Toast, Munnypot, Moola, Wealthify, Wealth Horizon, Risksave, eVestor, Click&Invest, Netwealth, Wealth Wizards, UBS Smart Wealth,  ETFMatic, Wealthsimple, Fountain, Tiller, Exo Investing and Rosecut.

Have the digital disruptors proven the naysayers wrong? In short, yes and no. Mostly no. 

Of the above list, a vast majority – 85 per cent – have stopped trading as the model became increasingly hard to quickly monetise and the field became more crowded. 

That being said, ‘digital wealth’ taken more broadly has transformed the financial landscape. 

While many of the original robos have simply disappeared, several others have shown themselves to be highly successful and resilient businesses.

This week, Scalable Capital one of the first to launch in the UK revealed it has reached €10bn of client assets. At the start of 2021, it had €3bn. Five years ago it had c.€500m.

“In just a few years, our assets went from zero to ten billion euros. We’re delighted about this milestone, especially in view of the current challenging market environment. It shows that investors remain focused on their long-term wealth accumulation’, says Erik Podzuweit, co-founder and co-CEO of Scalable Capital.

Not only is this twenty-fold increase since 2017 impressive – half of its growth has come from a doubling of assets in the past twelve months, a period characterised by profound weakness in risk assets – it is hugely cash generative. Scalable’s growth seems exponential.

Charging 0.9 per cent on a typical wealth account, and 1.7 per cent on its managed crypto portfolios is starting to translate into serious revenue of tens or even hundreds of millions of euros per year. 

The full article here

Adauga comentariu

Noutăți
Cifra/Declaratia zilei

Anders Olofsson – former Head of Payments Finastra

Banking 4.0 – „how was the experience for you”

So many people are coming here to Bucharest, people that I see and interact on linkedin and now I get the change to meet them in person. It was like being to the Football World Cup but this was the World Cup on linkedin in payments and open banking.”

Many more interesting quotes in the video below:

Sondaj

In 23 septembrie 2019, BNR a anuntat infiintarea unui Fintech Innovation Hub pentru a sustine inovatia in domeniul serviciilor financiare si de plata. In acest sens, care credeti ca ar trebui sa fie urmatorul pas al bancii centrale?