Surveys
Geopolitics Weighs On Wealth Sector Professionals' Minds – Data

A report says that the lion's share of wealth sector figures find that international politics, conflicts and developments are causing concern. In other findings, the wealth sector is seen as being slow at adopting AI in its practices.
A survey of 250 wealth sector professionals worldwide by MSCI, the market index and data
provider, finds that the overwhelming majority – 86 per cent –
say their clients worry about geopolitical uncertainty.
And in a sign of a geographic asset allocation tilt, 61 per cent
expect to put more money into developed markets outside the
US.
The report, World Wealth Trends 2026, shows how volatile
markets create potential to make money as well as add to the need
for risk-mitigation strategies. When broken down by location,
half of those surveyed are in the US, 26 per cent are in Europe
and 24 per cent are in Asia. The respondents work at multi-family
offices, investment houses, boutique wealth advisors, private
banks and independent registered investment advisors.
“This year’s survey reveals a decisive realignment. Advisors are
moving away from highly concentrated US equities and towards a
more globally balanced definition of risk and return,” the report
said. It noted that just under a third (31 per cent) expect to
increase their US equity exposure. Some 48 per cent predict that
they will increase emerging market exposure.
Such findings chime with the idea that while the US stock market
has long outperformed those of rival peers, high valuations, and
the often highly concentrated nature of US stock indices, home to
the Big Tech “Magnificent Seven,” has prompted a move to
diversify. Also, last year’s jolt from the “Liberation Day” US
tariffs and fears about fractures in the western military
alliance has encouraged a shift into European equities.
“It’s possible the shift away from US equities is tactical,
reflecting tariff-related forces specific to 2025, marking the
beginning of a broader challenge to the long-standing US growth
premium,” the MSCI report said. “But the movement into non-US and
private market assets appears more strategic than defensive.
Advisors are using global diversification to hedge geopolitical
concentration risk while pursuing opportunities in markets
traditionally underrepresented in client portfolios.”
The report may also indicate how an understanding of and
awareness about politics – even if it can be dismissed as “noise”
– is important for the wealth management sector, and can drive
asset allocation decisions both on the strategic and tactical
side. (This news service is also looking into whether people with
a deep understanding of national and regional politics are
increasingly sought after in this industry.)
AI lagging?
On other topics, the report said there are signs that wealth
managers are still unclear about the best way of embedding
AI into their practice. While almost all firms intend to boost
investment in AI tools, 44 per cent think the wealth segment’s
adoption rate of AI lags behind broader financial services.
“Much of advisors’ AI focus is on tasks intended to maximise
efficiency such as automating proposals, personalising portfolios
and simplifying reporting – all powered by off-the-shelf
solutions. Adoption, consequently, may feel incremental rather
than transformational,” the report said.