HomeNewsTechnologyHow ICICI Securities’ advisors built an in-house financial advisory platform using MATLAB

How ICICI Securities’ advisors built an in-house financial advisory platform using MATLAB

Servicing a base that exceeds 4.6 million investors, ICICI Securities have brought down the manual computational process drastically.

January 23, 2020 / 18:57 IST
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Amongst the largest retail brokerage and investment firms in India, ICICI Securities Limited is a robust and fast-growing business. Its financial advisors spend long hours with data and growth curves to be able to deliver clear and well-articulated ways to their clients, to enable them to reach their investment goals. These advisors help investors in meeting their investment needs- varying between extremely personal and long planned investments like retirement, children’s higher education, or purchase of a home or business. To be in a position to offer sound advice, the financial advisors also need to collect information about the investors’ financial history - current investments, savings, expected income, and expenditures.

Collating all this base information, analysing it and deducing investment muscle and psychometric factors such as risk preference, requirements and the best suited plans- is a long and tenuous process. Poring over spreadsheets, manually entering data about various schemes, plans and options- it took days of study and accurate calculations to get best suited investment information for clients. Despite a good financial background and technical knowledge, they lacked a robust system that would enable them to provide better financial advice to clients and as they are not coders, creating a platform that was completely customised for their needs would be a challenge. However, there was no way out if they were to grow and provide better financial advice to more clients.

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Build, experiment and modify

The critical ask was that the team wanted to develop the platform in-house, so that they would be able to make rapid changes. Says Abhishake Mathur, Sr. Vice President, Investment Advisory & Customer Service, ICICI Securities,” Financial analysts and investment advisors typically do not have the programming skills to code effectively. Yet if they do not code themselves, it is difficult to experiment, develop, and back-test new methodologies.”