Wealth Management is Ripe for an Open Finance Makeover

Open Finance builds on the foundation and legacy of Open Banking, which has shaken up the world of current accounts and payments by opening up data for regulated providers, like Moneyhub, to access and share data, subject to customer consent.

Open Finance extends those data-sharing principles to a consumer’s entire financial footprint, including their mortgages, savings, pensions, insurances, investments and more.

Open Finance: A competitive advantage

The wealth sector is beginning to understand how Open Finance can enable greater personalisation of services, can cut processing costs and improve the suitability of propositions. And it’s not just about financial products: the data Open Finance surfaces is increasingly seen as a vital component of digital transformation and differentiation in a competitive environment.

Consumers can now access their financial data through trusted third parties, and as a result those third parties - which could be an adviser or wealth management firm will be armed with a full picture of a client’s assets and liabilities and be able to offer a never-seen-before level of personalisation for their products and services.

Open Finance opens up new markets

A new generation of investors are due to inherit around £5.5 trillion from their parents and have largely dismissed traditional wealth services as being out of touch with their digital-first, user-friendly and environmentally conscious needs.

Moneyhub supports advisers that are trying to reach a younger audience, through budgeting tools, rent recognition and sustainable investing and more.  

Open Finance in practice

One of our clients wanted to offer its clients deeper insights on the holdings in their investment funds, including fees, returns and ESG ratings.

That is a great ambition but in practice is hard to achieve because fund data feeds don't always include ISIN codes. We developed a way to identify funds by taking certain key data points, such as unit price, and cross referencing against Morningstar data to disambiguate. This enabled us to identify the key holdings within a fund and the ESG profile to highlight the green-ness of a portfolio or specific investment.

Open Finance: A win-win for consumers and wealth managers

This is a big win-win: Consumers benefit from holistic and insight-driven services and providers gain in terms of lower customer acquisition costs; lower cost business processes and compliance dividends.

There are plenty of other wins with Open Finance. Just take onboarding of new clients, for example: instead of the manual data collection processes of old, wealth managers can set up an Open Banking authorised request to pull client contact and identity information from banks.

Then there’s data gathering for advisors, gone are the days of trying to collate and make sense of client data scattered across multiple advisors and systems. Through Open Finance - and with their client’s explicit permission - advisors can access all of their client’s investment portfolios in one place.

By gathering income, expenditure, assets and liabilities together, wealth managers can accurately assess the client’s capacity for loss, the suitability of products and have a system to continually monitor any changes in circumstances.

Open Finance: Increasing your customers’ investing potential

Investing capacity depends upon people having available money. At Moneyhub, we call this available money Potential. It’s the money left after non-discretionary spend is subtracted from income.

Through Open Finance, you can offer your customers a complete view of their financial world alongside tools and content to help them increase their potential, and boost your bottom line.

But Open Finance is just the start!

Whilst Open Finance is important, the breadth of data and the depth of value that can be derived to the benefit of the customer and the firm, is not yet widely appreciated. Open Finance is only part of a wider Open Data movement that is transforming how we think, behave and act.