The Impact of AI on Asset Manager & Asset Owner IT Architecture

Bruce Russell, Laura Kayrouz, Kevin Faulkner, Chris Rushworth

The technology architecture of asset managers and asset owners alike has followed a remarkably consistent playbook for the past decade. Consolidate on an enterprise investment management platform. Build a centralized Investment Book of Record. Outsource and/or augment technology capabilities. Keep internal teams small and focused on configuration rather than creation.

This playbook was rational. Enterprise platforms offered breadth of capability that most internal teams couldn’t replicate. Centralized data stores promised a single source of truth. Vendor partnerships meant firms could focus on their core purpose of generating returns for clients and members. For many organizations, this approach has delivered exactly what it promised: operational resilience, regulatory confidence, and a stable platform for growth.

The AI inflection point of 2026 has forced each of these assumptions to evolve, opening new strategic options for firms to build on the foundations they have already established.

The opportunity is substantial. AI has the potential to compress the cost of building investment technology, dramatically accelerate research workflows, enable real-time portfolio simulation, and automate operational processes that currently consume significant human effort; however, several structural constraints must be navigated: fragmented data architectures, strict governance and explainability requirements, heavy existing investment in legacy platforms, and cultural resistance from investment teams accustomed to established ways of working.

This paper examines the implications of these shifts for the IT architecture of asset managers and owners, aiming to offer a framework for understanding how AI changes the strategic options available while delivering a practical guide for navigating the transition.

About the Authors

Bruce Russell
Senior Partner, Head of Asset Owner Segment

Bruce Russell is a Senior Partner and Alpha’s Global Head of Asset Owner Client Segment. He possesses an extensive background in management consulting, having served in a variety of leadership roles in the space. Bruce has driven several successful client transformations during that time, acting as a trusted advisor to executive leaders across the industry.

Laura Kayrouz
Senior Partner, Global Co-Head of Investments

Laura Kayrouz is a Senior Partner and Alpha’s Global Co-Head of Investments. She brings over 20 years of experience in front office and technology transformation, with expertise in agile delivery and business process redesign. Her background includes significant program delivery roles supporting investment platform implementations.

Kevin Faulkner
Partner, Head of Investments APAC

Kevin Faulkner is a Partner based in Sydney, and Alpha’s Head of Investments for APAC. With a technology background, Kevin has 25+ years' experience across the asset management industry, Big 4 consulting and platform transformation. As APAC Investments Practice Lead, Kevin is tasked with leading the transformation of our clients' platforms and operating models.

Chris Rushworth
Director, Data Practice Lead

Chris Rushworth is a Director at Alpha FMC based in London, where he advises asset managers, asset owners, and asset servicers on data strategy, target operating model design, and technology-led transformation. His work focuses on helping investment operations leaders cut through the complexity of legacy environments, simplifying data architectures, reducing total cost of ownership, and building operating models that are fit for a cloud-native future.