Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Q&A with: Oliver Wyman

João Miguel Rodrigues: “Wealth management firms have generated lower revenue margins. Throughout 2024 and into the first half of 2025, this trend, driven by cash sorting and rising deposit betas, has reversed the rate tailwind, with revenue margins falling by around six basis points in 2024 and a further three basis points in the first half of 2025. Three-quarters of leading wealth managers saw this margin compression, with only half managing to offset this through cost-saving measures.

“Consolidation has moved from a theory to a reality, with deal activity holding strong at approximately 210 transactions per year since 2022. This trend is actively setting the competitive agenda and puts the industry on a path to having up to 20% fewer asset and wealth managers by 2029.

“At the same time, alternative and semi-liquid investments have entered the mainstream. Fuelled by the growth of interval funds, non traded vehicles and evergreens, these semi-liquid formats have grown the market by 41% year-over-year in 2024. As such, it has made the private market more accessible as a core differentiator in retail and high-net-worth channels.

“Finally, clients with a network of $1-10 million have become a key group. This core high-net-worth group holds approximately $38 trillion in investable wealth, with roughly 6% of per annum growth. They also generate more stable revenue yield, accounting for 90 to 100 basis points, than the ultra-wealthy segment, provided that delivery is tiered and digitally scaled.”

JR: “To drive cost improvements, businesses should simplify and reduce complexity within their footprints, product and market offerings. They should also look to re-architect core platforms before modernising and automating tasks by shifting work from people to platforms. Doing this can help leaders unlock gross savings of up to 10 to 25%.

“Additionally, firms should look to build an ecosystem that supports private markets investments. These include educating advisors and clients, curating product shelfs as well as introducing engineering liquidity tools, such as gates, secondaries and prudent NAV lines, which are compatible with client portals and standardising their suitability to make allocation durable.

“To support organic growth, the sector should industrialise this strategy. Historically, only about one-third of assets under management growth came from net new money. Firms who embed next best action analytics, straight-through-onboarding, pricing guardrails and incentives for sticky inflows have tended to outperform.”

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