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Over 40% of U.S. Financial Advisors See Wealth Transfer as an Existential Threat to Business, Natixis IM FindsAs the oldest of 1.1 billion Baby Boomers globally reach their 80th birthday in 2026, advisors are one step closer to navigating the largest transfer of wealth in history. Today, Natixis Investment Managers ("Natixis IM") launches its wealth transfer report, which analyses the key investor preferences that will dictate which advisors will be successful in navigating this shift in assets. Over 4 in 10 (41%) of U.S. advisors see this transition as an existential threat to their practice, with 22% saying they've already lost significant assets through generational attrition. This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260414093924/en/
Will today's strategies work tomorrow? More than $84 trillion1 is projected to be transferred to spouses, heirs and other beneficiaries over the next 20 years. Natixis' 2025 Global Survey of Individual Investors found that 74% of U.S. investors with at least $100,000 in assets expect to leave an inheritance, and 54% say it is a primary financial goal. However, nearly half (47%) of U.S. individual investors who expect to inherit assets say they do not plan to keep their parents' or spouse's financial advisor when managing that wealth. The report shows that investors are split when it comes to who should manage their inherited wealth. Baby Boomers (66%) are the most likely to have already moved, or plan to move, assets to a new advisor. In contrast, 57% of Gen X and 60% of Millennials say they intend to keep their benefactor's advisor. Men are slightly more likely to stay with a benefactor's advisor (60%), while 54% of women say they plan to switch. Asset retention ultimately comes down to trust, relationships and results. Among the 53% of U.S. investors who plan to keep their benefactor's advisor, 32% cite trust and familiarity, and 23% point to strong money management. Among those who plan to leave, the most common reasons are already having their own advisor (37%) or lacking a personal connection (25%). As such, 92% of U.S.-based advisors say that building long-term relationships across the client's family helps them retain assets amid wealth transfer. "The great wealth transfer isn't a distant event. It's happening now, and it's reshaping the advisor-client relationship in real time," said Dave Goodsell, Executive Director of the Natixis Center for Investor Insight. "As trillions of dollars move across generations, success will depend less on legacy ties and more on forming meaningful connections with the next generation of investors. Advisors who fail to engage spouses and heirs early risk losing assets, while those who connect and adapt to evolving investor expectations have a significant opportunity to strengthen relationships and grow their practice."
How Generational and Gender Differences Shape What Investors Want from Advisors
The interests of younger investors surveyed lean towards specific asset classes and product structures, most notably in terms of private assets, cryptocurrencies and active ETFs. As such, advisors will need to be well-versed in the workings of each and have clear strategies for integrating new asset classes into client portfolios.
Beyond generational differences, gender also shapes advisor preferences. Women are more likely than men to describe themselves as conservative investors (42% vs. 31%) and to say the world feels unstable and makes them worry about their investments (72% vs. 66%). They are also more likely to want advisors who help them understand investing (43% vs. 32%) and less likely to feel comfortable taking risks to get ahead (42% vs. 63%).
AI-Powered Advice May Enhance - Not Replace - Human Advisors
However, even as next-generation investors lean into AI and digital advice, they still do not put the same level of trust in machines as they do in real-life investment professionals. Millennials still place the greatest trust in their own advisor (93%), followed by themselves (87%) and advisors in general (79%). Trust in one's own advisor is similarly high among Gen X (96%) and Boomers (98%), suggesting AI is more likely to complement human guidance than replace it. View and download a full copy of the report: https://im.natixis.com/en-us/insights/investor-sentiment/2026/the-great-wealth-transfer
Methodology
About the Natixis Center for Investor Insight
About Natixis Investment Managers
Headquartered in Paris and Boston, Natixis Investment Managers is part of Groupe BPCE, the second-largest banking group in France through the Banque Populaire and Caisse d'Epargne retail networks. Natixis Investment Managers' affiliated investment management firms include AEW; DNCA Investments;3 Flexstone Partners; Gateway Investment Advisers; Harris | Oakmark; Investors Mutual Limited; Loomis, Sayles & Company; Mirova; Naxicap Partners; Ossiam; Ostrum Asset Management; Seventure Partners; Vauban Infrastructure Partners; Vaughan Nelson Investment Management; VEGA Investment Solutions and WCM Investment Management. Additionally, investment solutions are offered through Natixis Investment Managers Solutions and Natixis Advisors, LLC. Not all offerings are available in all jurisdictions. For additional information, please visit Natixis Investment Managers' website at im.natixis.com | LinkedIn: linkedin.com/company/natixis-investment-managers. Natixis Investment Managers' distribution and service groups include Natixis Distribution, LLC, a limited purpose broker-dealer and the distributor of various US registered investment companies for which advisory services are provided by affiliated firms of Natixis Investment Managers, Natixis Investment Managers International (France), and their affiliated distribution and service entities in Europe and Asia.
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View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260414093924/en/ |

