A multinational bank (one with a U.S. wirehouse and a global
asset management business) is shelling out $1.4 billion to buy one of the largest independent roboadvisors. That price tag translates into a valuation that's both above what asset managers usually get and below what this robo and others once had.
| David Fortunato Wealthfront CEO | |
Yesterday,
Ralph Hamers, group CEO of
UBS, and
David Fortunato, CEO of
Wealthfront,
confirmed that Zurich-based UBS has agreed to
buy Redwood City, California-based Wealthfront for $1.4 billion in cash. Wealthfront has more than $27 billion in AUM and more than 470,000 clients (translating into an average account size of $57,447). It will become a wholly owned UBS subsidiary, operating under UBS' wirehouse: UBS Global Wealth Management Americas. (
GWM had $3.198 trillion in client assets at the end of Q3 2021, including $1.736 trillion in the Americas alone.)
The two sides framing the deal as a way to boost UBS' U.S. digital capabilities and reach with millennials and Gen Z.
The deal is expected to close in the second half of this year.
Qatalyst Partners advised Wealthfront on the deal, while UBS used its own investment banking arm.
Fenwick & West gave Wealthfront legal counsel, while
Sullivan & Cromwell did so for UBS.
That $1.4-billion price tag translates into 5.19 percent of Wealthfront's AUM, well above recent asset manager valuations in recent deals. By comparison, last year Victory
paid 2.67 percent of AUM for 100 percent of WestEnd Advisors, AMG
valued Parnassus at between one and two percent of AUM when buying a majority stake, and private equity
valued what is now Allspring at between 0.39 percent and 0.68 percent of AUM when buying a majority stake.
Wealthfront does have a $1.5-billion-AUM
mutual fund, and roboadvisor work is generally a kind of managed account (i.e. asset allocation) service served through an online interface, making it an asset manager of kind (akin to an ETF strategist). Yet Wealthfront also offers
banking features and some
self-direction (to
compete with discount brokerages, perhaps?).
The price tag looks different when comparing Wealthfront to roboadvisors (including its past self). The UBS deal also puts Wealthfront's valuation ahead of the 4.06 percent of AUM valuation that
Betterment, another big roboadvisor, got when it
raised funding last year. On the flip side, Wealthfront itself was
valued at between 5.56 percent and 11.11 percent of AUM when it
raised funding back in 2018.
Looking further back, it seems that roboadvisor valuations have come down substantially, at least as a percentage of AUM, perhaps reflecting some of the firms' maturation. A 2014 round
valued Wealthfront (
fka KaChing) at a massive 47 percent of AUM; other robos in 2014 and 2015 raised funding at valuations of between 13 and 332 percent of AUM! 
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