WM Market Reports
Wealth Managers Should Expect Lower AuM This Year, Capture Revenue Opportunities – Study

Although headwinds caused by geopolitics, the pandemic and economics will likely dent assets this year, the report from Morgan Stanley and Oliver Wyman said that firms can prosper in several ways, by capturing mass-affluent/low HNW segment revenues for example, and proving that they can build value for clients more effectively than their competitors.
The war in Ukraine, high inflation, rising energy prices and
disruptions to supply chains caused by COVID-19 will likely blunt
growth in assets under management for the wealth industry this
year – the first possible drop in a decade, a report
said.
The Morgan
Stanley and Oliver Wyman Global
Wealth & Asset Management report, Time to Evolve,
predicts growth to be around 4 per cent per annum over the next
five years through 2026, slowing from the 8 per cent rate seen in
the last five years (2016 to 2021). Such a result suggests that
firms that were buoyed on a decade of ultra-cheap credit and
rising equities will have to work harder to stay competitive.
About 80 per cent of the new wealth will come from Asia-Pacific
and North America until 2026 (which also shows how Western
Europe’s contribution is relatively small).
Even so, the report said that the growth rate gap between APAC
and North America is narrowing.
The publication comes at a time when several organizations, such
as Capgemini and
Boston
Consulting Group, are bringing out reports tracking
performance and issues for the global industry (see the BCG
report
here). The Capgemini report is due out this week. This news
service has also recently pondered whether definitions of "high
net worth” need to be changed as inflation erodes the value
of money.
The prospect of an AuM decline in private wealth for 2022 comes
on top of firms’ margins having been compressed by
ultra-low/negative official interests and enthusiasm for
lower-margin “passive” asset management models such as
exchange-traded funds. In this environment, large players with
economies of scale have benefited, while smaller organizations
have had to merge, outsource functions and forge alliances to
pool costs. Clients’ demands for real-time digital engagement and
more information have also added costs.
“Pressure on smaller firms and booking centers has grown
significantly, leading to increased consolidation and footprint
rationalization, particularly in Europe where the lack of a real
banking union still hinders a fully-integrated operating and
funding model across markets. Considering the cyclical headwinds
and structural changes outlined above, we foresee that profit
pools of wealth managers are under threat unless there is a
fundamental transformation of service and operating models,” the
report said.
Ultra-high drivers
“Over the past decade, the primary focus of internationally
oriented wealth managers was on higher wealth band clients as
they drove the majority of AuM growth and, given their oftentimes
institutional needs, provided the opportunity for larger
bank-owned wealth managers to foster cross-divisional revenue
opportunities with their corporate and investment banks,” it
said.
“Many wealth managers struggled to profitably serve lower wealth
band clients given uniformly high costs to serve, and
consequently they managed cost-income ratios by off-boarding and
restricting the access of these clients.
“We expect UHNW investors with more than $50 million in wealth to
continue to drive wealth creation and to account for more than 40
per cent of total wealth growth by 2026. However, this segment
accounts for less than 15 per cent of the overall potential
wealth management revenue pool and for less than 20 per cent of
its growth,” it said.
Broader banking revenues linked to the UHNW segments, such as from investment banking, will also likely come under more pressure due to deleveraging, slowed deal activity and potential reduction in banks’ risk appetite. This growth will also come with higher uncertainty and risks compared with the last decade, where for example European collateral could finance a transaction in the US for a Chinese client.
Nevertheless, UHNWIs will remain a core segment for global
wealth managers.
There’s gold in those hills
The study said the “largest revenue growth opportunity will be in
the affluent and low high net worth client segments with more
than $300,000 and less than $5 million in wealth. This segment
looks likely to create about $45 billion of new revenues and
account for about 60 per cent of the total wealth management
revenue pool by 2026.
“Currently, we see a revenue pool of about $230 billion in this
segment, of which only 15 to 20 per cent is penetrated by wealth
managers,” it said.
"We see three priority investment areas for wealth managers to
accelerate their transition: firms must make delivery models
more flexible, differentiate from their competitors, and
keep costs down."
The cost of serving an “average client” in the traditional
UHNW/HNW bracket is $8-20,000 per client, but can fall to
$2-8,000 in a hybrid model and $0.5-2,000 in a digitally-led
model.
Organizations must also be more transparent, open and
systematic about how they generate value for clients, using tech
such as digital dashboards to give clients information in real
time.