Investment Management

March 25, 2019

WHITEPAPER | How to Value a Wealth Management Firm

Because valuation is a relative concept (one asset is only “worth” something when compared to the worth of other assets), the value of a wealth management firm is very much about context. The particular transactional purpose of a valuation is a context. The firm being valued is a context. The state of the wealth management industry is a context. Each context provides a perspective on the expected returns of an investment in a wealth management firm.

This whitepaper is intended to give a brief overview of relevant considerations of these perspectives on the value of wealth management firms. It is not intended to be an exhaustive presentation of every consideration, but as the industry has grown up, so has the understanding of most participants that simply saying firms are worth “2% of AUM” is not enough. As professional valuation practitioners, we always viewed such rules of thumb with disdain, and welcome the attitudes of those who take the financial analysis of their own firms as seriously as they do the analysis of the securities they manage for their clients.

Contents

  • The Anatomy of a Wealth Management Firm

  • When You Need a Valuation

  • Who Should Value Your Wealth Management Firm?

  • How Your Appraiser Will “Scope” Valuing Your Firm

  • Valuation Methodology

Download
Download Whitepaper

Continue Reading

When Trust Becomes Infrastructure
When Trust Becomes Infrastructure

Why RIA Consolidation Is Moving Beyond AUM

RIA consolidation is evolving beyond asset accumulation toward acquiring strategic capabilities that deepen client relationships and improve long-term retention. Trust infrastructure illustrates how specialized services can help firms become more valuable, differentiated, and useful to complex clients.
The Distribution Trap
The Distribution Trap

Why Some RIAs Become Too Profitable for Their Own Good

Strong profitability can become a hidden risk when firms prioritize distributions over investments in talent, succession planning, and growth initiatives. Long-term enterprise value is often created by balancing current returns with sustained reinvestment in the capabilities that drive future success.
The Valuation Penalty for Market-Driven Growth
The Valuation Penalty for Market-Driven Growth
Market appreciation can make an RIA appear stronger, but valuation depends on the quality and durability of growth. Firms that can separate organic growth from market-driven gains are better positioned to support premium pricing and stronger deal terms.

Cart

Your cart is empty