FinTech Innovation

FinTech Innovation
From Robo-Advisors to Goal Based Investing and Gamification
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Artikel-Nr:
9781119226987
Veröffentl:
2016
Erscheinungsdatum:
26.08.2016
Seiten:
192
Autor:
Paolo Sironi
Gewicht:
362 g
Format:
236x156x25 mm
Serie:
The Wiley Finance Series
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

PAOLO SIRONI is a global thought leader for Wealth Management and Investment Analytics at IBM, where he is responsible for promoting quantitative methods, Goal Based Investing (GBI) and digital solutions for financial advisory. His expertise combines financial services and technology and spans over a number of areas, including wealth management, asset management, risk management and FinTech innovation. Prior to IBM, he founded a FinTech startup that provided GBI portfolios to wealth managers. This venture subsequently became a part of IBM following the acquisition of funding partner Algorithmics, a world leader of risk management and investment analytics. Paolo possesses a decade-long risk management expertise; he was previously head of market and counterparty risk modeling at Banca Intesa Sanpaolo. He is the author of Modern Portfolio Management: From Markowitz to Probabilistic Scenario Optimisation, and contributing author to The FinTech Book.
A survival guide for the FinTech era of banking
 
FinTech Innovation examines the rise of financial technology and its growing impact on the global banking industry. Wealth managers are standing at the epicenter of a tectonic shift, as the balance of power between offering and demand undergoes a dramatic upheaval. Regulators are pushing toward a 'constrained offering' norm while private clients and independent advisors demand a more proactive role; practitioners need examine this banking evolution in detail to understand the mechanisms at work. This book presents analysis of the current shift and offers clear insight into what happens when established economic interests collide with social transformation. Business models are changing in profound ways, and the impact reaches further than many expect; the democratization of banking is revolutionizing the wealth management industry toward more efficient and client-centric advisory processes, and keeping pace with these changes has become a survival skill for financial advisors around the world.
 
Social media, big data analytics and digital technology are disrupting the banking industry, which many have taken for granted as set in stone. This book shatters that assumption by illustrating the massive changes already underway, and provides thought leader insight into the changes yet to come.
* Examine the depth and breadth of financial technology
* Learn how regulations are driving changing business models
* Discover why investors may become the price-makers
* Understand the forces at work behind the rise of FinTech
 
Information asymmetry has dominated the banking industry for centuries, keeping the bank/investor liability neatly aligned--but this is changing, and understanding and preparing for the repercussions must be a top priority for wealth managers everywhere. Financial Innovation shows you where the bar is being re-set and gives you the insight you need to keep up.
Preface xiii
 
Acknowledgments xix
 
About the Author xxi
 
PART ONE Personalize Personal Finance
 
CHAPTER 1 The Theory of Innovation: From Robo-Advisors to Goal Based Investing and Gamification 3
 
1.1 Introduction 3
 
1.2 A vibrant FinTech ecosystem 5
 
1.3 Some definitions, ladies and gentlemen 8
 
1.4 Personalization is king 9
 
1.5 The theory of innovation 11
 
1.6 My Robo-Advisor is an iPod 13
 
1.7 What incumbents should consider when thinking about FinTech innovation 15
 
1.8 Conclusions 17
 
PART TWO Automated Long-Term Investing Means Robo-Technology
 
CHAPTER 2 Robo-Advisors: Neither Robots Nor Advisors 21
 
2.1 Introduction 21
 
2.2 What is a Robo-Advisor? 22
 
2.3 Automated digital businesses for underserved markets 25
 
2.4 Passive investment management with ETFs 26
 
2.5 Algorithms of automated portfolio rebalancing 29
 
2.6 Personalized decision-making, individual goals, and behaviour 30
 
2.7 Single minded businesses 31
 
2.8 Principles of tax-loss harvesting 33
 
2.9 Conclusions 36
 
CHAPTER 3 The Transformation of the Supply-Side 39
 
3.1 Introduction 39
 
3.2 The investment management supply-demand chain 40
 
3.3 How intermediaries make money 42
 
3.4 Issuers of direct claims (debt owners) 44
 
3.5 The institutionalization of the private banking relationship 45
 
3.6 The digital financial advisor 51
 
3.7 Asset management is being disintermediated 54
 
3.8 ETF providers and the Pyrrhic victory 57
 
3.9 Vertically integrated solutions challenge traditional platforms 59
 
3.10 Conclusions 60
 
CHAPTER 4 Social and Technology Mega Trends Shape a New Family of Taxable Investors 61
 
4.1 Introduction 61
 
4.2 Generational shift (X, Y, Z, and HENRYs) 62
 
4.3 About transparency, simplicity, and trust 65
 
4.4 The cognitive era 67
 
4.5 Conclusions 70
 
CHAPTER 5 The Industry's Dilemma and the Future of Digital Advice 71
 
5.1 Introduction 71
 
5.2 Wealth management firms: Go digital or die 72
 
5.3 Asset management firms: Less passive, more active 75
 
5.4 Robo-Platforms: Less transactions, more portfolios 76
 
5.5 Digital-Advisors: Empowered customization 77
 
5.6 Robo-Advisors: Be human, be virtual, take care of retirement 79
 
5.7 Conclusions: Clients take centre stage, at last 81
 
PART THREE Goal Based Investing is the Spirit of the Industry
 
CHAPTER 6 The Principles of Goal Based Investing: Personalize the Investment Experience 85
 
6.1 Introduction 85
 
6.2 Foundations of Goal Based Investing 89
 
6.3 About personal needs, goals, and risks 91
 
6.4 Goal Based Investing process 96
 
6.5 What changes in portfolio modelling 97
 
6.6 Personal values 100
 
6.7 Goal elicitation 100
 
6.8 Goal priority 102
 
6.9 Time horizons 102
 
6.10 Risk tolerance 103
 
6.11 Reporting goal-centric performance 105
 
6.12 Conclusions 108
 
CHAPTER 7 The Investment Journey: From Model Asset Allocations to Goal Based Operational Portfolios 109
 
7.1 Introduction 109
 
7.2 Main traits of Modern Portfolio Theory 113
 
7.2.1 Asset diversification and efficient frontier 114
 
7.2.2 The Mean-Variance model portfolio 117
 
7.2.3 Final remarks about Mean-Variance 118
 
7.3 Main traits of Black-Litterman 118
 
7.3.1 The equilibrium market portfolio 119
 
7.3.2 Embedding
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