Ultimate magazine theme for WordPress.

Ranks of these investors are poised for fast growth in coming decade

[ad_1]

Prasit photo | Moment | Getty Images

The U.S. wealth management industry is poised to grow by about 5% annually over the next five years, while certain segments of the investor population are positioned to see the biggest boost, according to a new report from McKinsey & Company.

Three investor subgroups, in particular, are showing signs of “significant and lasting growth,” the report found.

This includes women, new investors who opened brokerage accounts for the first time during the Covid-19 pandemic and hybrid affluent investors who are working both with traditional financial advisors and self-directed accounts.

More from Personal Finance:
These scams may cost you this tax season
Here are 4 ways to slash your grocery bill
Inflation eroded pay by 1.7% over the past year

That’s as 2021 was a mixed year for the U.S. wealth management industry overall, with record-high client assets of $38 trillion but the slowest two-year revenue growth since 2010, at a rate of 1%.

“While we would say the industry has been resilient, we would also say it’s not been unscathed,” said Jill Zucker, a senior partner at McKinsey and one of the authors of the report.

“Really, the message for wealth managers is this is certainly not a moment to be complacent,” she said.

Women to take ‘center stage’

Active traders to continue to grow

[ad_2]

Read More:
Ranks of these investors are poised for fast growth in coming decade