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Recent announcements from major financial institutions stepping back from standalone robo-advisory solutions have led institutions across the spectrum to question their investment in similar technologies. The closure of UBS's Advice Advantage, powered by SigFig, and similar moves by JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs highlight the challenges faced by pure robo-advice platforms. However, banks, credit unions, and broader financial institutions must understand that their strategic positions differ fundamentally from traditional wire houses, and continued investment in brokerage and robo-advice solutions remains critical.
Meeting Evolving Customer Expectations
Today's investor landscape encompasses diverse preferences: Some clients seek low-cost, automated execution, while others require comprehensive, personalized guidance. Younger, tech-savvy investors especially view digital experiences as fundamental, not optional. A 2024 study by CFB Board showed that approximately 82% of millennial investors currently prefer hybrid or digital-only advice models, highlighting the demand for digitally enhanced advisory services.
For instance, Valley National Bank successfully integrated robo-advice into their digital banking platform, significantly boosting their appeal among younger members and driving consistent member growth. Self-directed investing within digital platforms is making a real difference for clients, providing more control, confidence, and a smoother, more personalized experience.
The Power of Hybrid Models
The shift away from pure robo models does not reflect a rejection of digital tools. Instead, the industry is increasingly embracing hybrid frameworks — combining automated portfolio construction with human advisory support. Hybrid models now dominate the market, capturing nearly 64% of global robo-advice revenue as of 2023.
Vanguard’s success with its Personal Advisor Services underscores investors' continued preference for human interaction during key financial decisions, validating hybrid solutions as particularly effective. Similarly, Regions Bank reported higher client retention and satisfaction rates after adopting a hybrid solution, underscoring the tangible benefits of combining technology with personalized advisory.
Revenue Diversification and Scalability
Financial institutions, traditionally reliant on narrow margins and faced with increasing competition, must diversify revenue streams. Robo-advisory tools — particularly hybrid models — provide scalable, incremental fee-based income opportunities.
The market reached approximately $1.8 trillion in assets under management in 2024, experiencing annual growth rates of 25%–30%. Automated model portfolios significantly lower operational costs, making investment services economically viable even as client bases expand.
Trust, Integration, and Holistic Experiences
Banks and credit unions uniquely benefit from deeply-rooted client trust and longstanding relationships. By integrating intuitive solutions like robo-advisory platforms into existing digital channels, these institutions can offer holistic financial management experiences, enhancing engagement and expanding functionality to serve the entire spectrum of wealth clients.
Modular, API‑first fintech partners like FusionIQ enable banks to launch good‑better‑best experiences without maintaining multiple tech stacks. The same core engine can power a $500 starter account and a $1 million advisory relationship. This future‑proofs the institution’s capabilities as clients' needs evolve, and helps them meet entry‑level investors where they are while remaining sophisticated enough for high‑net‑worth households.
Regulatory and Competitive Advantages
Emerging regulatory frameworks increasingly favor digitally robust compliance systems. Robo-advisory solutions inherently provide better compliance oversight through automated record-keeping and real-time risk profiling, significantly reducing compliance risks and associated costs. This ensures institutions remain compliant in a rapidly evolving regulatory environment, safeguarding their operations and reputation.
Investment in robo and brokerage technologies is also an essential defensive strategy against fintech disruption. Fintech platforms currently attract a significant share of younger investors — 42% of fintech users are under 40, compared to only 11% at traditional advisory firms. Institutions lacking robust digital advisory offerings risk customer defection. Collaborating with innovative fintech providers empowers institutions to proactively address this competitive threat, preserve market share, attract younger demographics, and harness valuable data insights for growth.
Generational Wealth Dynamics
The "Great Wealth Transfer," with $84 trillion set to pass to heirs by 2045 (63% moving from baby boomers to Gen X, millennials, and Gen Z), is a defining trend in wealth management. Critically, 81% of next‑generation millionaires intend to switch advisors, often citing the lack of digital capabilities and modern service models.
This statistic is not a prophecy that the ultra‑wealthy will spontaneously pivot to community or regional institutions with a cool app. Rather, it signals a window of opportunity. If banks and credit unions proactively showcase a seamless hybrid offering — digital convenience plus human expertise — before inheritances land, they can establish a foothold early in the client’s wealth journey. Visibility and education are as important as the tech itself.
Institutions that invest now can position their brand at life‑transition touchpoints: helping a college‑age beneficiary open a micro‑investing account, guiding a mid‑career professional through a first home purchase, or offering modular planning for a liquidity event. Over time, consistent engagement cements loyalty so when large assets transfer, the relationship (and balance sheet) stays in‑house.
A Differentiated Path Forward
UBS's retreat illustrates the flaws of viewing robo‑advisory merely as a feeder for high‑margin human‑advisor services. Financial institutions across the spectrum must instead embrace robo‑advice as integral to their broader strategic approach.
Digital tools should be treated as an always‑on relationship layer, not a temporary on‑ramp. The winning formula is to let clients toggle fluidly between DIY, algorithmic, and full‑service advice as life complexity grows. Institutions that market this flexibility will outshine competitors that force clients into rigid service tiers.
Rather than replicating traditional wire‑house strategies, financial institutions have a clear opportunity — and imperative — to carve differentiated paths. By integrating hybrid robo‑advisory solutions thoughtfully, these institutions can strengthen customer relationships, diversify revenues, and maintain their roles as trusted financial partners.
Eric Noll is a highly-respected financial services leader with over 20 years of executive experience across capital markets, financial technology, and private equity. As chair and CEO of FusionIQ, he is dedicated to democratizing wealth management and driving the adoption of wealth technology across a wide range of industries.
Sloan Shanahan is a seasoned sales executive with extensive experience driving growth and innovation in the financial technology and consulting sectors. As chief revenue officer at FusionIQ, she leads efforts to scale revenue operations, develop high-performing teams, and help financial institutions succeed in a rapidly-changing wealth management environment.
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