The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

World’s rich question high fees with wealth hitting US$74 trillion

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PARIS: Even before this year’s market crash, the wealth-management industry’s richest clients were frustrated about fees.

A third of those with more than Us$1mil of investable assets were uncomforta­ble with them in 2019, according to Capgemini SE’S World Wealth Report 2020.

Such discomfort will likely rise in today’s volatile markets. The survey of more than 2,500 individual­s found that about one in five plans to switch their primary wealth management firm in the next year, with high fees the top reason.

It’s the latest sign of the pressure the industry is under as clients balk at costs and digital competitor­s emerge.

The majority of investors weren’t satisfied by the quality of personalis­ed informatio­n they receive and about three-quarters of those surveyed said they would consider offerings from non-traditiona­l providers like the big tech firms.

The report estimates that the net worth of wealthy individual­s climbed to US$74 trillion at the end of 2019, up 8.7% from 2018 and US$46 trillion in December 2012. The population of millionair­es reached almost 20 million, including 183,400 with a net worth above Us$30mil, versus 18 million in 2018 and just 12 million in 2012.

For the first time since 2012, the AsiaPacifi­c region didn’t lead wealth growth last year – it was North America. The US alone had 5.9 million millionair­es at the end of 2019, up from 5.3 million in 2018 and more than any other country. Japan followed, with 3.4 million millionair­es, followed by Germany, China and France.

The wealthy favoured equities in the first two months of 2020. They allocated 30% of their assets to stocks, compared with 17% to fixed income, 15% to real estate, 13% to alternativ­e investment­s and 25% in cash.

The survey did flag some promising growth areas for wealth managers.

Those under 40 were far more likely to be willing to pay for value-added services such as real estate investment advice and tax planning.

Sustainabl­e investing is another bright spot, especially for the richest investors.

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