Beyond AML: Innovation Drives Shaping the Future of Investment

The festive season is behind us, and we hope the year has started well for you, spent with family and friends.

Over the past few episodes, we have explored a wide range of topics across financial crime, regulation, onboarding, and documentation trust. In our most recent episode, we focused on documentation trust and examined the growing role of AI — discussing both its opportunities and its limitations, and how these may shape the investment industry in the years ahead.

In this new episode, we are joined by John Allan, Head of Innovation and Operations at The Investment Association, and a leading voice in shaping how the UK investment industry adapts to emerging technologies and regulatory change.

 

John is in conversation with Pierre-Yves Rahari, Co-Founder of Reseo, for a deep-dive into innovation in the investment management industry. Together, they explore the major forces currently reshaping the sector — from tokenisation and AI to operational resistance, fund modernisation, and the accelerating pace of change.

The discussion looks beyond theory to address how firms can navigate these shifts in practice, and what it really takes to apply innovation in real time.

Guest
John Allan, Head of Innovation & Operations, The Investment Association

Host
• Pierre-Yves Rahari, Co-Founder, Reseo

Producer & Editor
• Melanie Lopes, Sales & Marketing Associate, Reseo

Thanks for listening to the Reseo State of the Art podcast – you can find us here and on Spotify.

When documents fail: The Tech revolution in AML

Thank you for tuning in to another episode of Reseo State of Art. In our previous episode, we explored how regulation, technology, and trust are reshaping client onboarding and lifecycle management across the investment landscape.

In this new episode, Reseo Co-Founders Luuk Jacobs and Pierre-Yves Rahari examine the growing collapse of documentation trust and what the industry can do about it. They discuss the dual role of AI: a powerful enabler but also a potential accelerant for document falsification. Finally, they consider how the industry can strengthen its defences and safeguard itself against future fraud.

Guest
• Luuk Jacobs, Co-Founder, Reseo

Host
• Pierre-Yves Rahari, Co-Founder, Reseo

 Producer & Editor
• Melanie Lopes, Sales & Marketing Associate, Reseo

Thanks for listening to the Reseo State of the Art podcast – you can find us here and on Spotify.

Redesigning Onboarding in the Age of Financial Crime

In the latest episode of State of the Art, Reseo’s podcast on innovation, regulation and trust in investment management, host Pierre-Yves Rahari speaks with Heidi Gunkel, Managing Director and Head of Client Experience at RBC BlueBay Asset Management, about why onboarding has become one of the most critical and fragile moments in the investor relationship.

This article looks at how rising expectations are reshaping investor experience, why onboarding is now a competitive differentiator, and how firms can rethink their operating models in an era of global financial crime

Onboarding as the First Real Test

Servicing, onboarding and operations were brought together to support investors across Europe and APAC throughout the life of the relationship. The ambition is simple to describe, but harder to deliver the entire client journey from the first email to the last day.

Within that journey, onboarding stands out as the first real proof point. It is the moment when the manager stops pitching and starts asking questions; when documents are exchanged, risk appetites are probed, and working styles are exposed. Heidi calls it the “honeymoon phase” because both sides are getting to know each other and forming impressions that will last.

If the process feels smooth, transparent and respectful of the client’s time, it creates confidence. If it is slow, opaque or repetitive, that frustration lingers. Because investors compare experiences across providers, any perceived delay or additional request is quickly challenged: Why is this firm asking for more than others? In that sense, onboarding has become far more than a compliance requirement. It is a competitive arena in which managers are judged not only on performance, but on how easy they are to do business with.

Complexity at the Most Delicate Moment

The challenge is that this “honeymoon phase” now coincides with a period of unprecedented regulatory complexity. AML and KYC rules have tightened globally, with European frameworks layered on top of local interpretations, ESG-related disclosures and fund-specific requirements. The direction of travel is clear: More scrutiny, more documentation, more expectations on firms to know their clients and the sources of their capital.

Most institutional onboarding journeys span several jurisdictions. A London-based asset manager may be offering a Luxembourg or Irish UCITS to an investor in North America, Asia or continental Europe. Each of those locations brings its own rules, norms and supervisory expectations. It is common to have two or three regulatory regimes involved in a single relationship, just at the point when the parties are still learning to work together.

This is also where the ecosystem nature of modern fund structures becomes obvious. In a pooled fund, the asset manager is only one actor amongst many. Administrators, transfer agents and management companies all play their part in the onboarding process. The client receives a substantial information pack and then enters a back-and-forth with the administrator, while the manager tries to support the relationship. The starting point is clear, the end point, less so. An account may open in a few days, or take weeks or months, depending on the structure of the client and the assessment of beneficial ownership.

For investors, this can feel like a series of disconnected hurdles rather than a coherent journey. For managers, it is a situation in which they own the relationship but not the infrastructure, and that tension sits at the heart of many onboarding frustrations.

The Experience Gap: What Technology Promises and What It Delivers

Outside work, most investors are used to seamless digital experiences. They open bank accounts on their phones, sign documents electronically, track deliveries in real time and rarely must enter the same information twice. Against that backdrop, institutional fund onboarding can feel very frustrating.

Heidi’s vision of a better model is straightforward: A single digital front door through which the investor uploads documents, signs forms, monitors progress and later accesses reporting and servicing tools. Behind that front end, the administrator and other service providers can do their work, but the investor’s interaction remains simple and unified. In an ideal world, she suggests, the client would not need to know who the administrator is at all.

The reality in most organisations is patchier. Different parties use different systems. Workflows are not always connected end-to-end. Status updates can be hard to obtain and even harder to interpret. The result is that friction accumulates in precisely the place where clients expect clarity and ease.

Technology can address a large part of this, but only if firms are willing to make coordinated choices. Shared workflow tools that span asset managers and administrators, well-designed portals that present a single view to clients, and smarter use of data to avoid asking for information that is already publicly available can all reduce the burden. Heidi believes technology could realistically cover much of the heavy lifting, leaving people to focus on judgement, nuance and communication. But that requires agreement across the ecosystem, not just within a single firm.

Moments That Matter and Walkaway Moments

One of the walkaway moments is the AML/KYC phase during onboarding. If the investor experiences repeated, poorly explained requests for documentation or feels that the left hand and right hand of the organisation are not coordinated, the damage is difficult to repair. Another point is reporting accuracy later in the relationship: A single error might be forgiven, but repeated mistakes with the same client can be decisive.

The lesson is not that every element of the client journey can be perfect, but that some moments carry far greater weight than others. Firms that invest in understanding these pressure points and in redesigning processes, systems and responsibilities around them are more likely to build resilient, long-term relationships.

A Question for Boards: How Easy Are We to Deal With?

Looking three to five years ahead, Heidi expects to see more integrated portals, more consistent global processes and better use of workflow tools, particularly among larger managers with the scale to invest. Smaller firms may find it harder to keep up with both regulatory expectations and technology demands. Client experience cannot be left solely to the sales teams. AML/KYC analysts, operations, trade support, administrators and governance bodies all contribute to how a client experiences the firm.

For Boards and senior leaders, that means framing client experience as a strategic and measurable question, not just a soft concept. One question, in particular, should be asked regularly: How easy is it to do business with us? The answer should increasingly be based on data and structured feedback, rather than anecdotes.

In a world where financial crime is global, regulation is tightening and investors have more choice than ever, ease of doing business is no longer a nice-to-have. It is becoming a defining feature of trust.

Click here to listen to the full podcast based on this article.

 

New episode: Onboarding Under Pressure- KYC in the Age of Heightened AML

Welcome back to another episode of Reseo’s State of the Art podcast. In our previous episode, we explored financial crime and reflected on the implications of the forthcoming European Anti-Money Laundering Authority (AMLA) for the investment industry.

In this conversation, we turn to client onboarding under growing regulatory pressure. Our guest, Heidi Gunkel, Managing Director and Head of Client Experience EMEA and APAC at RBC BlueBay, joins Pierre-Yves Rahari, Co-Founder at Reseo, to discuss how regulation, technology, and trust are reshaping onboarding and client lifecycle management across the investment landscape. Heidi also serves on the board of the Luxembourg ManCo at RBC BlueBay.

Together, they explore:

  • How firms are adapting onboarding workflows under heightened AML and KYC requirements.
  • The role of AI and intelligent automation in improving efficiency and reducing friction.
  • How client experience teams and boards can make strategic decisions that balance risk, compliance, and service quality.

 Guest
• Heidi Gunkel, Managing Director, Head of Client Experience EMEA & APAC, RBC BlueBay

Host
• Pierre-Yves Rahari, Co-Founder, Reseo

Producer & Editor
• Melanie Lopes, Sales & Marketing Associate, Reseo

Thanks for listening to the Reseo State of the Art podcast – you can find us here and on Spotify.

New podcast on innovation: A collaboration between Multifonds and Reseo for AML-KYC onboarding

Welcome to the new episode of the Reseo State of the Art podcast, the platform for conversations about all things innovation for the Investment Management industry.

In this episode, we are talking about a real life application of innovation. This is the collaboration that Reseo is undertaking with Multifonds, one of the most prominent system providers in the Funds industry.

Joining our discussion is James Abram, a Multifonds specialist with a background in business analysis within the fund administration and, more specifically the Transfer Agency space and Pierre-Yves Rahari, Co-Founder and Director, A-Lab Solutions (Reseo). Pierre-Yves is particularly passionate in helping industry players service investors and fund distributors, and like James, also has a background in Transfer Agency.

The collaboration has gone from brainstorming an initial idea, to developing a prototype into an integrated solution, with both parties working together to explore ways in which they can find benefits for the players in the funds industry and delivers value.

Reseo and Multifonds have looked at two aspects of a difficult but often overlooked issue in the industry when opening an account in an investment fund; on one side the account opening process, and on the other the AML-KYC verification process.

Thanks for listening.

Guests
James Abram, Principal Presales Consultant, Multifonds
Pierre Yves-Rahari, Co-Founder and Director, A-Lab Solutions (Reseo)

News: Reseo e-Business ID solution launches into the Investment Management industry

April 10, 2024: London-based investment technology startup A-Lab Solutions, today launches its ground breaking AI-enabled corporate investor centric Reseo e-Business ID solution (Reseo) into the market for the B2B Investment Management industry.

Initial rollout of Reseo is set to cover Luxembourg, Dublin, and UK -based funds and their global investors. As such, Reseo will support global distribution for UK, EMEA, LatAm, and Asia.

“Reseo is an industry first universal onboarding acceleration solution and we are delighted to launch into the market. Reseo sits between the Investor, Asset Manager, and Administrator, and is designed to work with existing onboarding platforms across the Investment Management industry. While Reseo acts as the universal travel adapter, seamlessly powering and accelerating onboarding, the Reseo e-Business ID, unique to each client, is the unique passport for funds.” said Pierre-Yves Rahari, Director and Co-Founder, A-Lab Solutions.

It is an accepted truth the industry spends too many hours on paper-based onboarding. Reseo is set to take the pain out of lengthy onboarding processes for the entire investment industry, by catapulting the process into the digital world.

“Reseo, significantly reduces risk while saving valuable time and money. There are many benefits, not least because it is available for industrywide use. We see existing onboarding as a significant yet overlooked challenge for the Investment Management industry and we solve the numerous issues with Reseo. We combat the messy paper headache with a digital solution accessed via an intuitive dashboard.” said Luuk Jacobs, Director and Co-Founder, A-Lab Solutions.

The elimination of paperwork saves time, money, and speeds up account opening times. The Reseo cloud-based solution leverages the latest AI technologies, and by doing so, reduces the document verification timeline from a matter of weeks to a matter of minutes.

To find out more about Reseo

Investment Management industry professionals wanting to contact Reseo to find out more or book a demo should get in contact here:

Pierre-Yves Rahari by phone: + 44 (0) 7454 006638 or by email: psrahari@reseo.global

Ends

About Reseo:

Reseo, the first product from the privately owned London-based startup A-Lab Solutions and, is set to catapult Investment Management servicing into the digital universe. A-Lab Solutions is built on the shared vision, mission, and values of its founders, team and Board of Directors.

A-Lab Solutions is united by trust, with diversity of thought at its core and dedicated to sustainable innovation.

Reseo is a trade mark of A-Lab Solutions Limited, registered in England and Wales.

Registered office: 40 Monkton Street, London SE1 4TX.

Registered company number: 10355088

Press Enquiries:

Eva Keogan

ekeogan@reseo.global

+44 0 7790 841538

 

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