Skip to content
International Adviser
  • Contact
  • Subscribe
  • Regions
    • United Kingdom
    • Middle East
    • Europe
    • Asia
    • Africa
    • North America
    • Latin America
  • Industry
    • Tax & Regulation
    • Products
    • Life
    • Health & Protection
    • People Moves
    • Companies
    • Offshore Bonds
    • Retirement
    • Technology
    • Platforms
  • Investment
    • Equities
    • Fixed Income
    • Alternatives
    • Multi Asset
    • Property
    • Macro Views
    • Structured Products
    • Emerging Markets
    • Commodities
  • IA 100
  • Best Practice
    • Best Practice News
    • Best Practice Awards
  • Media
    • Video
    • Podcast
  • Directory
  • My IA
    • Events
    • IA Tax Panel
    • IA Intermediary Panel
    • About IA

ANNOUNCEMENT: Read more financial articles on our partner site, click here to read more.

ANALYSIS: The dangers of wealth management consolidation

By International Adviser, 5 Aug 15

Wealth management and financial advice firms have been snapping up their peers at some rate in the post RDR world, but in recent months this has been kicked up a gear.

Wealth management and financial advice firms have been snapping up their peers at some rate in the post RDR world, but in recent months this has been kicked up a gear.

Something that seems to be underpinning the takeover rush is an emphasis on becoming ‘nationwide’. Wealth managers have traditionally either been London based and focused, or have carved out a particular regional slice of the market to target. We could be seeing the beginning of the end for the latter business model.

It makes a lot of sense for a wealth manager to be able to serve the whole country rather than one region. Apart from the simple numbers- a bigger catchment area brings you more potential clients- there is the fact that people move home and may value a ‘bricks and mortar’ presence nearby them.

Also it is hard to dispute that being a national player rather than regional rightly or wrongly brings increased status and credibility in many eyes.

You can have too much of a good thing however.

There is a danger that the bandwagon will roll out of control as firms collectively take the view that that must buy, be bought, or will be forced out of business by bigger competitors.  

It would be premature to say that is where we are now, but if the deals keep coming any firms not active in the market may increasingly fear that they will be left behind, and so rush to action.

Pages: Page 1, Page 2, Page 3

Tags: Wealth Management

Share this article
Follow by Email
Facebook
fb-share-icon
X (Twitter)
Post on X
LinkedIn
Share

Related Stories

  • How to save the pan European pension dream

    Latest news

    IFGL Pensions connects to Pensions Dashboard

    Companies

    Rose St Louis to leave Scottish Widows in March 2026

  • FCA building and logo

    Industry

    FCA launches consultations on UK crypto rules

    Rathbones

    Industry

    Rathbones’ fund managers reveal their 2026 outlooks


NEWSLETTER

Sign Up for International
Adviser Daily Newsletter

subscribe

  • View site map
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact

Published by Money Map Media – part of G&M Media Ltd Copyright (c) 2024.

International Adviser covers the global intermediary market that uses cross-border insurance, investments, banking and pension products on behalf of their high-net-worth clients. No news, articles or content may be reproduced in part or in full without express permission of International Adviser.