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The private banking and wealth management market has been under pressure for several years now. Regulatory scrutiny, the global fight for tax transparency, the challenging macro economic environment and the digitalisation are fundamentally changing the landscape for private banks and independent wealth managers. Whilst the client assets held by banks in Switzerland have recovered to pre-financial-crisis levels, the market (still) is in a consolidating movement. We currently see the following M&A trends:
The institutional asset and fund management market has become highly competitive. Ever growing regulatory scrutiny, the convergence of traditional and alternative asset managers, increasing fee pressure and further growing power of distributors are challenging the operating models and offerings of asset managers. The resulting trend to large ETF and index fund platforms, however, also creates opportunities for players that can – sustainably – outperform the market. We currently see the following main M&A trends:
The Swiss retail and commercial banking market is very fragmented. However, it is dominated by a couple of countrywide or regionally active players, such as the two big universal banks, the Raiffeisen group, the larger cantonal banks, but also PostFinance. Despite various attempts to diversify their revenue streams into commission-earning service models, most retail banks are still heavily dependent on the interest margin business. The product and service offerings are very similar whilst differentiating strategies are rather rare. The onshore business has seen very robust financial metrics over the last years, despite negative interest rates. We currently see the following main M&A trends:
The insurance sector is an important pillar of the Swiss financial services market. Whilst there are still more than 200 supervised insurance companies in the country, the concentration in the sub-sectors is quite high, in particular in the life insurance space, where the largest five players represent more than 80% of the booked gross premiums. The whole market is stagnant and competition is steadily increasing. Growing regulation and solvency requirements further increase the insurers cost base. On the other hand, new competition from insurtechs and potential new entrants from other industries as well as the (current) negative interest environment put additional pressure on income and premiums. We currently see the following main M&A trends:
Switzerland has a leading and diverse fintech and insurtech market, including promising companies in the areas of online wealth management, personal finance, blockchain, mobile payments, crowdlending and -funding as well as insurtech. The market is predominantly represented by start-up companies but also by larger entities that already started their business a couple of years ago. The young businesses grow within and profit from a healthy and evolving ecosystem in one of the richest countries world-wide featuring a long tradition of global financial services. We currently see the following main M&A trends:
Private equity (“PE”) is an established industry sector within financial services, pursuing its own strategic objectives while also playing a key role in the development of other financial sub-sectors, as well as non-financial industries. Private market managers have enjoyed robust growth fueled by different factors, including reduced risk appetite amongst banks and investors’ search for yield in a prolonged cycle of low interest rates in the public / liquid markets. M&A is central to the business model of PE, as investment portfolios are built and realized over time, and PE-owned portfolio companies themselves often pursue buy & build strategies of their own. Consolidation is ongoing both at the parent level among PE firms, and at the level of their respective portfolio companies:
Apart from the large banking and insurance sub-sectors, there are plenty of smaller financial services lines, including consumer finance and leasing, fiduciary and trust, IT and process services providers and insourcers, debt structurers and collectors etc. All these sub-sectors have their own market structures and are subject to challenging changes, predominantly driven by technology and digitalisation, and partially by legislation and regulation.