FAs rethink pricing models as new wave of clients crashes in

As boomers move into the decumulation phase, wealth firms must cater to a new generation’s needs

FAs rethink pricing models as new wave of clients crashes in

For financial advisors, planning for the future is par for the course. Usually that means helping their current clients achieve long-term goals — but as a new study shows, that means setting their sights on a new group of clients.

A new survey from TD Ameritrade Institutional found that financial advisors expect that millennial and Gen-X individuals will increase from 30% of their clients today to 41% in five years, reported WealthManagement.com. By contrast, baby boomers and seniors will fall from 46% to 43% of clients, and from 23% to 14%, respectively.

“When you think about this next generation, they’re the accumulators now,” Kate Healy, managing director of Generation Next, TD Ameritrade Institutional, told the site. “Many advisors are … seeing a lot of their clients be in that decumulation mode, and for their firms to grow, they really want to start to cater to the accumulators.”

Around a quarter of those surveyed said they had no strategy in place to compensate for the assets they stand to lose as older clients retire. On the other hand, 47% of advisors are tweaking their fee structure to lure next-gen clients: 33% are offering a flat fee for financial planning or coaching, 23% are lowering asset minimums, and 14% are adjusting their pricing.

According to Healy, millennials and Gen Xers are willing to pay as much as older generations — not necessarily for asset management, but for full-on financial planning. “[Advisors] need to make sure they’re able to counsel clients on more than just investments,” she said. “They need to have debt management to talk through student loan debt because that’s a big piece of a millennial’s portfolio.”

Aside from student debt, millennials are seeking guidance on life milestones like whether to take a certain job, return to school, or whether they should buy or rent a house. Issues like tax planning and managing inheritances should also be considered under ancillary services.

Healy said advisory firms should consider another factor in sustaining their practice: hiring new talent. She suggested that firms struggling to get new recruits should think about hiring younger talent from places other than financial-planning programs. Career changers, women re-entering the workforce, and people in ancillary degree programs like education and psychology — those considered as “helping professions” — are also possible candidates, she added.

Among the survey respondents, 30% were hiring younger advisors, 25% were recruiting and training mid-career changes and former military personnel, and 24% were taking on college interns.

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