AI Could Transform Wealth Management, Says Survey

The wealth management industry started investing in AI technology more than a decade ago. A new survey suggests that those investments could pay off substantially within the next few years. From client demographics to sustainable investing, AI has the potential to reshape the sector within the next few years, said the participants. These changes could empower individual investors, but they could also weaken traditional wealth management companies.

Today (Feb. 27), economic research firm ThoughtLab released a report entitled “Building a Future-Ready Investment Firm.” The study, produced together with Deloitte and financial software platform FNZ, compiles findings from a survey of 2,000 individual investors and 250 professional wealth management advisors. The individuals represented a healthy mix of wealth profiles, age demographics, and geographic regions. The providers came from brokers, banks, family offices, online trading platforms, and similar institutions.

Wealth Management Expects Big AI Advancements

ThoughtLab’s study covered a wide variety of topics, from globalization to cybersecurity. However, AI was arguably the key theme, taking up a fifth of the report.

At present, artificial intelligence represents the most popular digital technology for wealth management providers, with 58% of respondents saying they would direct more resources toward it within the next three years. Compare and contrast to some of the other categories surveyed, such as data analytics at 42%, blockchain at 22%, and internet of things/sensors at only 8%.

A full 69% of wealth management executives surveyed agreed with the statement that “AI will significantly change the way their organizations work over the next three to five years.”

However, these industry players seem split about the technology’s possible ramifications. Fifty-two percent agreed that “advances in AI and related technologies will have a greater impact than any other trend over the next three years.” The executives also agreed with the assertion that AI automation and scaling has contributed to “significant performance gains” for about half (48%) of their companies.

Split Views on AI’s Usefulness

Artificial intelligence can often identify patterns that may be too subtle for the average human. Individual investors were generally in favor of using AI for this purpose, but not to the extent where it would fully replace a person.

For example, 92% of respondents were at least “somewhat willing” to let artificial intelligence research products and services for them. Likewise, 81% were willing to receive investment advice from an AI. Seventy-nine percent of individual investors trusted AI to prepare plans suited to their needs, and 78% to conduct risk analysis.