Investment platforms support advisers by bringing together a client’s investments in one place and providing tools for administration, reporting, and oversight. This enables an adviser to view the client’s holdings across wrappers and products, assess asset allocation, concentration, risk exposure, and performance in a consolidated way, and then monitor ongoing suitability more efficiently. Platforms typically help with valuation reporting, transaction processing, rebalancing support, portfolio analytics, and consolidated statements, which reduces manual paperwork and operational friction. This creates efficiency for the adviser and improves the client experience through clearer reporting and easier portfolio management. The other options are not the core platform function in an advice context. Making services directly available to investors is more aligned to direct-to-consumer distribution. Discretionary management is a separate regulated service and not inherent to a platform. Robo-advice is an advice delivery method and may exist on some platforms, but it is not the standard reason platforms assist an IFA. The key benefit tested is the consolidated, holistic portfolio view and supporting administration.
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