Wealth management is a booming market in India. It’s growing at the rate of knots.
According to research, Indian wealth managers currently cater to a market of ₹100 lakh crore (almost $1.5 trillion) of wealth. This amount is almost equal to the total savings in bank deposits in the country and is expected to double in the next five years.
The challenge for wealth managers is not demand, but supply – being able to justify their clients’ trust by providing them with the right services.
Wealth managers provide services like capital gains planning, estate planning, and risk management and so on to high- and ultra-high-net-worth individuals (HNIs and UHNIs).
Factors Influencing Wealth Management
Various factors affect a wealth manager’s decision to offer customized plans to his clientele. Some of them are:
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Net-Worth
The market for wealth managers in India generally begins at a personal net worth of ₹20-25 crore. Individuals with lower-net-worth have access to boutique services, like web-based tools for those with a net-worth below ₹1 crore. However, the ones with a net worth higher than ₹20 crores are really the ones causing waves in the wealth management industry.
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Profession
New entrepreneurs and old money are the biggest contributors to this industry.
Among HNIs, film stars are conservative investors more inclined to invest in a realtor and fixed income vehicles. Sportsmen, on the other hand, are more open to risk and equity. Thus, profession also impacts the kind of services a wealth manager pitches to his clients.
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Expectations
With such disproportionately large funds come expectations. Clients expect wealth managers to be the best in the world. Alongside, they expect the wealth managers to double up as life coaches, confidantes, legal advisors, 3 am friends and even credit arrangers.
For instance, one client of a wealth management firm called one evening at 5 pm and stated that he had forgotten to pay his advance tax of ₹30 crores. He had to pay it by 6 pm and had no money in the bank. Another wealth manager mentioned that his client wanted to buy a Rolls Royce on a credit card and wanted the limit on his card increased to ₹10 crores right away.
Thus, wealth managers also must keep a track of customer expectations and idiosyncrasies to be able to cater to them better.
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Age