The annual Schroders Adviser Survey seeks the views of advisers on a broad range of topics. Over 250 advisers from more than 200 firms across the UK completed a survey between 20 October and 6 November 2023. The responses provide a degree of reassurance that the views of advisers and their clients are much as you might expect in many areas. But as always, there are also areas that reveal more unexpected and thought-provoking views.
Reassurance
1. Cash discussions
95% of advisers are having conversations about long-term investing vs cash deposits. The question of ‘should I invest in cash?’ is not straightforward and this is an area where advisers can provide real value to clients. Advisers can help to ensure that their clients’ money is deployed in the right place to meet their long-term goals and that clients do not miss out on potential opportunities as markets rebound. Schroders has crunched the numbers, reviewing historic returns on cash and stock market investments over a range of timeframes extracted from 96 years’ data. This shows that the likelihood of cash savings beating inflation has been about 60:40 for the majority of all timeframes. In contrast, for every 20-year timeframe in the past 96 years, equities have delivered inflation-beating returns.[1]
2. Preserving capital
Advised clients continue to identify capital preservation as their key financial priority and have less of a focus on inflation and interest rates. Many advised clients are in or near retirement, the stage in life when preserving a pension pot and other assets to fund later life is of particular importance. As many are likely to be mortgage free it makes sense that interest rates are seen as less of a concern.
3. Cost of living crisis
89% of advisers report that they have adjusted some of their client plans due to the cost of living crisis. The key reason is rising household expenses. 35% of advisers further report that some of their clients have stopped or reduced pension contributions. This is a concern and advisers can again add significant value through ensuring clients understand the long-term impact of making changes to their pension contributions and helping them generate additional income where needed in the most tax efficient way. For those clients who are adjusting plans to help their wider family, considerations as whether these are gifts or loans is another area that might need careful financial planning and advice.
Revelations
1. Consumer Duty
The number of advisers who think that this will have a high impact on their business has risen from 25% to 41% since our last survey. Our May 2023 survey was completed prior to the implementation deadline and clearly the work required to comply with The Duty has resulted in a change of view. Most advisers also indicated that the key priority for them for the continual implementation of The Consumer Duty in 2024 will be the ongoing assessment of fair value using customer feedback. Many advisers are looking for help and support. The implementation of The Consumer Duty is about evolution and not revolution.
2. Adviser fees
44% of advisers indicated that they feel a downward pressure on fees. However, the number of advisers charging between 0.5% and 0.75%, on an ongoing basis, has sharply increased from 37% to 53%. This has been at the expense of those charging less than 0.5% so we are not really seeing this pressure translate into change.
69% (an increase of 10% since May 2023) also indicated that The Consumer Duty would put pressure on the ongoing advice charging model. We are starting to see some subscription models and hybrid models emerge in this area so this is definitely one to review over the next few years.
3. Wealth transfer
The landscape here continues to be challenging and despite much noise on this topic, 84% of advisers still have no strategy for younger clients. The number of advisers prepared to advise clients with less than £50k to invest has reduced to an all-time low of only 25% (from 52% back in 2019). Perhaps the proposed advice guidance boundaries work being undertaken by the FCA will help to address this?
Furthermore, 90% of advisers have no strategy for advising or retaining women. A separate survey by Schroders recently indicated that only 34% of widows currently inheriting wealth will remain with the adviser. And with the current lateral transfer of wealth in the baby boomer generation, this pattern of behaviour could become a challenge for some adviser firms.[2]
4. Artificial Intelligence
It's probably no surprise that this is now firmly on the radar for many advice firms, but perhaps the pace of change is more unexpected. 70% of advisers now think that AI technology such as ChatGPT presents an opportunity for their business - a significant rise from 57% in May 2023. 73% also believe that they will implement this in some way into their advice process in the next 5 years. 17% of those believing that this can be achieved in the next year! The key area where they believe this would be helpful would be to increase efficiency and automation; definitely be one to watch in 2024.
Click here to discover more insights from our latest adviser survey.
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[1] Stocks represented by Ibbotson© SBBI© US Large-Cap Stocks, cash by Ibbotson© SBBI© US (30-day) Treasury Bills. Data January 1926-December 2022. Source: Morningstar Direct, accessed via CFA Institute and Schroders.
[2] Source: Women and Financial Advice - Schroders and Ad Lucem October 2023
The views and opinions contained herein are those of Schroders’ investment teams and/or Economics Group, and do not necessarily represent Schroder Investment Management North America Inc.’s house views. These views are subject to change. This information is intended to be for information purposes only and it is not intended as promotional material in any respect.
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