M and A
RIA Mergers, Acquisitions Hold Up Despite Chill Winds; Optimistic Tone – Study

A report examines the forces shaping mergers and acquisition activity in the North American wealth management space, noting that the tougher economic climate of 2023 did not cause a major falling off in M&A.
While RIA dealmaking slowed in 2023, it held up relatively well
considering economic uncertainties and rising borrowing costs,
according to a study from Advisor
Growth Strategies.
“RIA M&A activity experienced only a modest decline in
transaction volume. While valuations remained stable, the tone
for market participants was cautious optimism,” according to the
2024 RIA Deal Room report from the management consulting and
transaction advisory firm. This report was sponsored by BlackRock.
As reported
and commented upon earlier this year, M&A activity for
independent advisory firms declined for the first time in a
decade, dipping 5 per cent to 251 transactions (source: DeVoe &
Company’s RIA Deal Book). Another firm advising on
M&A in the space, ECHELON Partners,
has reported a decline of 6 per cent, but recorded 80 more
deals.
The resilience of M&A in the wealth sector has struck the
Advisor Group Strategies' report authors, Brandon Kawal (partner)
and John Furey (managing partner).
“The test of any relationship is surviving the first big fight,
and 2023 brought the most significant turbulence RIA M&A has
seen in over a decade,” they wrote. “The relative calm surface
masked some reshuffling among buyers and sellers that will chart
new ground in 2024 and beyond. Buyers adopted a more diversified
strategy for deals in 2023. Breakaway teams, carveouts and
lift-outs, and target-rich complementary services such as tax and
insurance proved channels for acquirers to grow organically.”
The authors noted that acquirers had “clear buying
preferences.” Overall, the most popular acquisition targets
ranged from $200 million to $500 million in assets under
management and focused on financial planning. The least popular
acquisition targets had low net-of-organic market growth (less
than 5 per cent) or focused on a hybrid model that included
commission business (greater than 20 per cent of revenues).
Previous analysis shows that acquirers pursue less than 20 per
cent of deals they evaluate.
Multiples
In other areas, the report said deal multiples are highly
correlated to the size, and multiples rose as the target firm’s
AuM, revenue and earnings increased.
In terms of specific sectors, the report noted that independent
broker dealers (IBDs) became buyers – Raymond James,
LPL Financial,
and Commonwealth,
among others. It also noted that Canada’s CI Financial –
a big
RIA buyer in recent years – recapitalized with highly
structured capital, and delayed previous plans for an IPO of CI’s
US wealth business. It also noted how Focus
Financial’s decision
to go private was a hit to the public equity market.
Other trends: RISE Growth Partners and Constellation Wealth
Capital joined groups such as Wealth Partners Capital Group and
Merchant Investment Management as specialist investment
management. Not all plans worked out: United Capital Financial
Advisors, an early adopter of RIA M&A, was bought by Goldman Sachs, but
Goldmans later sold UCFA to Creative Planning.
Structures
Deal structures increasingly prioritize equity, reflecting a
trend that began in 2022, with buyers seeking risk alignment and
partnership-oriented deals while sellers explore creative
monetization options such as minority stakes.
Sellers continued to enjoy a fruitful market in 2023, with demand
remaining stable and a diverse range of acquirers entering the
fray, the report said.