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Getting the House in Order: Consolidating Investment Platforms in the Wake of the Department of Labor Conflict of Interest Rule

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2016/07/27

Abstract

Operational efficiency has been an objective of banks and brokerage companies for some time, but the opportunity costs of maintaining multiple back office systems have made infrastructure investment a priority. These costs, which follow from the manual processes required to operate these legacy systems, carry negative implications from a servicing, scale, and risk management standpoint.

In the report Getting the House in Order: Consolidating Investment Platforms in the Wake of the Department of Labor Conflict of Interest Rule, Celent explores the degree to which the imposition of a uniform fiduciary standard upon retirement accounts and the emergence of robo advisory platforms have magnified the platform proliferation problem for incumbents.

The existence of multiple and often overlapping investments technology platforms for large firms has long been a drag on efficiency. Integration allows firms to downsize platforms that are burdensome from a compliance perspective, and invest in those that offer more favorable economics and greater internal control.

Transition is not just about products and systems, of course; it implies a whole new mindset. The ubiquity of consumer-facing technology and a shift in the regulatory pendulum from balancing the needs of investors to advocacy has made the client king. Relationship-based pricing, a simplified onboarding protocol, and real-time reporting have become wealth management table stakes. Firms must embrace this development, as well as the benefits that consolidation offers them.

“Collapsing multiple product lines and their technology underpinnings into a coherent whole reinforces client segmentation and helps expand the business to encompass new geographies, client populations, and product sets. Because the benefits of deploying a single technology chassis are not wedded to any particular platform, they are highly scalable,” says William Trout, senior analyst and author of the report.