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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Region’s investment management industry must evolve: ICAEW

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Muscat, JAN 27 - New savings and investment products that are easy to understand and available to everyone are urgently needed, according to a new report by ICAEW, the global organisation that promotes, develops and supports over 150,000 chartered accountants worldwide.
In ‘Audit Insights: Investment Management’, the accountancy and finance body warns that indecipherable statements, high fees and a perception of exclusivity mean many feel alienated from the investment management industry when they need it most.
Based on the collective insights of investment management audit specialists from BDO, Deloitte, EY, Grant Thornton, KPMG and PwC; the new ICAEW report says people find investing too complicated, or see it as just something for the wealthy, and this is contributing to a savings time-bomb.
“Despite its simple business model, most people find investment management complicated and so they don’t engage with it, and even when they do they can be left feeling frustrated that they don’t have a clear picture of where their current saving or investing levels will leave them in the future,” said Philippa Kelly, ICAEW’s Head of Financial Services.
“We need easy-to-understand savings products now more than ever. Increasing life expectancy, decreasing state provision and outdated pension schemes in most of the countries in the MENA mean many now face an uncertain retirement.”
According to the GCC Wealth Insight Report 2018, more High-Net-Worth Individuals (HNWIs) are keeping their assets closer to home and are increasing their exposure to regional markets.
“Seeing this trend from GCC HNWIs is great news for the investment management industry. It will translate to more customers requiring investment management services. But it also means investment management firms have to evolve and update their old business models. Old ways of operating are no longer sufficient,” said Michael Armstrong, FCA and ICAEW Regional Director for the Middle East, Africa and South Asia (MEASA). Offering a series of case studies, the ICAEW report explains how investment management can be used by everyone to help avert a potential global “savings gap” of £25 trillion by 2050. It highlights the need for the investment management industry to offer products that are “valuable, affordable, appropriate and increasingly personalised.”
Philippa said: “People often think investment means wealth management for the well-off. But the investor of tomorrow is everyone. The good news is that digital platforms, robo-advice and AI are putting investing within reach for almost everyone. At the moment the cost of individualised services means this kind of investing is just too expensive for many. But exploiting emerging technologies can help change this.



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