Advisor Growth in 2016: How Do You Compare?

Schwab's Bernie Clark at the firm's annual IMPACT conference.
Schwab’s Bernie Clark at the firm’s annual IMPACT conference.

In a release almost as long as the study itself, Schwab announced the results of the latest Independent Advisor Outlook Study (IAOS). The study—released Thursday in Boston at Schwab’s annual IMPACT conference—reveals widespread optimism against the backdrop of the market downturn of the third quarter. Half of all advisors who participated in the study expect their firms to grow between five and 10 percent in the coming year, with 32 percent anticipating growth between 11 percent and 20 percent.

“Advisor optimism around RIA firm growth continues unabated, and with their clients needing the lowest levels of reassurance since 2007, even in the face of intense market and geopolitical volatility, it’s evident that advisors continue to act as trusted partners and that this will provide a foundation for continued firm success,” Bernie Clark, executive vice president and head of Schwab Advisor Services, said in a statement. “The RIA industry continues to grow at an incredible rate and the future opportunities are significant, including $23 trillion in assets outside the independent channel in households with $500,000 or more in investible assets.”

Volatility hasn’t diminished advisor confidence in the markets

Looking back over the past six months, nearly all advisors (92%) reported the need to provide reassurance to at least some clients that their investment goals will be met, though it was generally a small number of clients (18% on average) – and represented the lowest level since wave two of this study in the fall of 2007.

Independent advisor confidence in the S&P 500 Index is at its highest point in three years, and 67 percent of advisors predict the S&P 500 will increase in the next six months. While confidence in the S&P 500 is high, advisors strongly agree that there will be continued market volatility (97%) and that geopolitics and global markets will adversely influence U.S. markets (80%) over the next six months.

Technology tipping point

Technology continues to grow in influence and importance at RIA firms. Close to two-thirds (61%) of advisors say changes in technology are having a greater impact on their firms than changes in client demographics when they are asked about the two together. For larger firms – those with AUM of more than $500 million – the split is more pronounced with 67 percent of firms saying changes in technology trump changes in client demographics.

The majority of advisors (68%) see technology adoption as central to their operational strategy, allowing them to spend more time with clients and achieve firm growth. Client expectations also influence technology adoption, with 43 percent in the study citing this as a driver, while 31 percent cite competitive necessity as a driver of technology adoption.

Technology-led change is having an impact on firm talent and client relationships. When examining the shift in staff time allocation over the past five years, firms with projected growth rates of five percent or more report staff are spending more time implementing and learning to use new technology (58%). However, staff are also spending more time interacting with clients (52%) and less time doing manual data entry or generating reports (43%).

“Technology is no longer simply equated to productivity or back-office data management. When envisioned and implemented strategically, technology is a growth enabler,” said Clark. “Moreover, technology innovations, such as the Institutional Intelligent Portfolios™ program sponsored by Schwab Wealth Investment Advisory, Inc., can help advisors meet multiple goals from streamlining operations and creating scale, to enabling them to forge relationships with the coming generations of wealth.”

With respect to automated investing specifically, among advisors who would recommend automated investing, the majority would recommend it for clients who don’t meet the firm’s asset minimums (70%) or clients with relatively simple investment needs (67%); half of advisors (54%) would recommend automated investing for children of existing clients or as a strategy to capture intergenerational wealth (24%). More than one third (37%) of advisors consider that up to 10 percent of their new client assets in the next year are likely to be appropriate for automated investment management, and an additional 21 percent say more than 10 percent of new assets are likely to be suitable.

Optimism goes head-to-head with challenges and change

While firm growth is broadly anticipated, it is not without challenges. When asked to cite the growth challenges they face, advisors ranked a more complex compliance environment (41%), technology integration (39%) and establishing internal processes and balancing client services needs with business operational needs (both at 37%) as the top contenders.

“This is a growing, maturing industry so the changes and challenges advisors face are good ones to have,” said Clark. “Awareness of the underlying opportunities is also key, as is responding strategically and proactively. Doing so can enable RIA firms to continue to thrive and forge new best practices as the industry and their firms become increasingly sophisticated.”

Advisors are experiencing change inside and outside their firms. Talent management (19%), an aging client base (18%), and technology (18%) are cited as the top three factors having the biggest impact inside RIA firms, followed closely by next generation firm leadership (15%). External forces such as the need for differentiation from other advice firms (22%) and regulation (21%) are reported as having the greatest impact outside firms. With respect to regulation, smaller firms – those with AUM of less than $500 million – feel the greatest regulatory impact (25%) as compared to 10 percent of larger firms.

Hands-on experience for future leaders

As changes unfold, three quarters of firms (74%) have identified the next generation of leaders and are actively preparing them to take the helm in the future by giving them hands-on exposure to business operations, technology and new client development learning experiences.

“Today’s volatile investing climate, the sea changes in technology, and shifting investor demographics provide a robust and multi-faceted training ground for tomorrow’s leadership talent,” said Clark. “Now is the time for firms to be both forward-looking and practical in their leadership development and succession planning efforts, and by doing so their firms will be rewarded over the long term.”

Firms that are preparing next generation leaders are doing so on a number of fronts, including increasing their client-facing role with major clients (56%), allowing them to participate more in new business meetings or representing the firm with centers of influence or at third-party events (48%), providing more transparency about firm operations and finances (45%), assigning greater responsibility for development/management of junior staff (43%) and building out a new firm capability or rolling out a new technology (39%).

John Sullivan
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With more than 20 years serving financial markets, John Sullivan is the former editor-in-chief of Investment Advisor magazine and retirement editor of ThinkAdvisor.com. Sullivan is also the former editor of Boomer Market Advisor and Bank Advisor magazines, and has a background in the insurance and investment industries in addition to his journalism roots.

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