In the early months of 2026, the asset management sector saw the emergence of a sense of unease (which could be summarized as the “Altruist” effect”) that resulted in significant stock market declines and a consequent compression of market valuations for many of the major players. The trigger was not a traditional macroeconomic crisis but the narrative that artificial intelligence could drastically reduce the value of traditional financial advice, eroding margins and justifying a reassessment of the multiples paid for asset managers and wealth managers.
Fees Under Pressure and the Risk of Disintermediation
The market is pricing in not only operational risk but, above all, the risk of business model obsolescence. Investors fear three main effects: compression of fees, disintermediation of distribution, and the loss of the so-called “human edge” that justifies active management. These concerns have triggered targeted selling of assets in asset management and wealth management firms, with significant declines particularly (but not exclusively) in Europe and the United Kingdom. In addition, the rapid adoption of AI tools in credit firms and fintech companies has highlighted how entire client segments and business lines can be restructured much more quickly than previously anticipated. Private credit and alternative credit operators, on the other hand, are reassessing their exposure to sectors vulnerable to technological disruption, thereby increasing investors’ risk aversion.
The economic crux: personalization, automation, and margins
The concern is not purely technological but economic. AI promises large-scale personalization, more efficient predictive analytics, and the automation of advisory processes that currently require costly human expertise. If platforms based on advanced models were able to offer personalized recommendations at much lower costs (much like what has already happened in the financial products sector with active ETFs compared to traditional mutual funds), the logic of asset-based percentage fees could be called into question. Furthermore, the perception that algorithms can replicate or surpass the added value of human advisors fuels the narrative of a structural decline in revenues.
How can industry players respond
What, then, should players do to manage what appears to be an inevitable change—if not total, then at least highly significant—in the sector’s traditional balance of power?
- Innovate the offering. Traditional players must integrate AI as a lever to improve service quality, not as a threat. Adopting tools that boost advisor productivity and enhance the customer experience can turn risk into opportunity.
- Rethink the commission structure. Hybrid models combining fixed fees, success fees, and personalized premium services can mitigate revenue pressure and make the business less vulnerable to algorithmic competition.
- Focus on trust and relationships. Financial advisory remains, above all, about relationships, managing emotions, and complex planning. Valuing these aspects and integrating them with digital solutions can create an offering that is difficult to replicate solely with software.
- Transparency and governance of AI models. Investing in the governance, comprehensibility, and control of models is essential to maintaining the trust of clients and regulators. Compliance thus becomes a competitive factor.
For investors, adaptability matters
Investors, for their part, must distinguish between fear-driven market corrections and real structural changes. Some companies may be overvalued relative to their ability to adapt, while others may turn AI into a competitive advantage. Active selection, analysis of digital strategy, and assessment of management quality are now more important than ever.
The fear that artificial intelligence will replace traditional financial advice did indeed have a tangible impact on markets in early 2026, but the sector’s history suggests that technology rarely eliminates entire ecosystems without creating new ones—likely even more “robust” ones. The real challenge for asset management is to transform AI into a value-added tool rather than succumb to its destructive logic. Those who can integrate technology, relationships, and governance will not only survive the valuation storm but emerge from it stronger.
(Article excerpted from issue no. 89 of April 2026 of We Wealth)

