Wealth managers may now introduce more of their end-investors to the world of private investments via a newly-launched institutional service on digital securities exchange ADDX.
Corporate treasuries and family offices may also “take part in the space via a corporate service to diversify their portfolios through private market products.”
Both services fall under “a new product line for businesses, called ADDX Advantage.”
Among some of the first institutions to come on board as partners “include StashAway, Southeast Asia’s fastest growing digital wealth manager, and CGS-CIMB, a leading securities brokerage in Asia.”
Wealth managers utilizing this institutional service may provide their customers with fractional access to private market products, which “better enhances portfolio diversification away from public markets exposure.”
As noted in an update shared with CI, this service is “designed for brokerages, private banks, external asset managers and multi-family offices.”
Via a B2B2C model, the service ultimately “benefits the wealth manager’s end-clients, who may be individual accredited investors or corporate investors.”
At present, wealth managers looking to offer private market products to their end-clients have “to negotiate deals with each issuer separately – a time-consuming process.”
Being on ADDX “means an instant plug-in to a full suite of deals across multiple asset types.”
As mentioned in the announcement, the use of blockchain and smart contracts on ADDX also “enables the fractionalization of opportunities down to a minimum of US$10,000, from the $250,000 to $5 million typically required when going direct to private market issuers.”
The lower barrier to entry “makes it possible for end-clients to manage risk by spreading their capital across a variety of products.”
Depending on the regulatory licenses the wealth managers hold, they can “choose between two types of institutional services.” They can either “execute trades and perform fund transfers on behalf of end-investors, or create sub-accounts in their end-clients’ names and allow the clients to take control of their own activity on ADDX.”
CGS-CIMB Group CEO Carol Fong said:
“We believe that investments should be made more affordable to a wider group of investors. This means collaborating with platforms such as ADDX that allows more investors to access previously out-of-reach private investments with fractional ownership. This is a start to ‘democratize’ the private equity market to make it more inclusive.”
ADDX’s corporate service operates under a B2B model and “is designed for institutional investors, as well as businesses investing their own capital, such as corporate treasuries and family offices.”
For instance, corporate treasuries with excess cash on hand may now “benefit from short-term investment instruments that pay a higher return than bank fixed deposits.”
A 3-month commercial paper with a yield of 2.3% p.a. by the SGX-listed ValueMax “is currently listed on ADDX.”
Family offices, on the other hand, often “have longer horizons and more sophisticated investment strategies.” They may “prefer a wider range of products, including opportunities with higher risk-reward profiles.”
For them, the lower minimum investment sizes on ADDX can “help them build optimal portfolios, narrowing the handicap they traditionally face due to their smaller pool of investable capital vis-à-vis large institutional players like sovereign wealth funds and pension funds.”
ADDX CEO Oi-Yee Choo said:
“ADDX was founded with a vision of democratizing private markets for individual investors. Our B2C experience has shown us how investors now have the platform to accumulate a diversified private markets portfolio powered by our technology. We would like to expand our approach to tailoring private markets for more efficient access to our partners in the wealth management space.”
Choo added:
“Corporate investors and family offices too face serious pain points in the market. We had the solutions to these problems, having built an efficient platform for individual investors with a steady stream of deals. The last mile was building the technology to serve institutional and corporate investors, which required time and investments, as their needs are more complex – ranging from API connections to multi-user access.”
She also noted:
“For ADDX, this latest move represents an important strategic pivot that strengthens the competitiveness of our exchange by expanding and diversifying our investor base. This will better equip us to attract high-quality issuers to list on ADDX, knowing there will be sufficient investor demand. As an exchange, our goal is to ensure a critical mass of both issuers and investors at the table, so that capital can find worthwhile investment projects, and vice versa. In launching private market services for wealth managers and corporate investors, we have made a long stride towards this goal.”
Established in 2017, ADDX uses blockchain and smart contract technology “to automate manual processes that have thus far made it inefficient for private market securities to be distributed to a large number of investors.”
The efficiencies from tokenizing these securities “enables ADDX to reduce minimum investment sizes to US$10,000.”
Asset classes available on the ADDX platform “include private equity, venture capital, private debt, real estate, hedge funds, cryptocurrency funds, and structured products.”
ADDX has “listed 26 deals to date, working with blue-chip names such as Partners Group, UOB, Investcorp, CGS-CIMB, as well as Temasek-owned entities Mapletree, Azalea and SeaTown.”