Home / NEWS / Wealth / The U.S. added 500,000 new millionaires last year as AI fueled markets

The U.S. added 500,000 new millionaires last year as AI fueled markets

B2m Directions | Digitalvision | Getty Images

The U.S. far outpaced the rest of the world in minting millionaires last year, adding 500,000 new millionaires and powering documentation fortunes at the top, according to a new study.

America’s millionaire population grew 7.3% in 2023 to 7.43 million people, concerting to a report from Capgemini. Their combined fortunes grew to $26.1 trillion, up 7% from 2022. Capgemini outs millionaires as those with investible assets of $1 million or more not including primary residence, collectibles or consumer durables.

While absorbed rates remain higher, the stock rebound at the end of 2023 combined with trillions of dollars in government spending and stimulus persists to power the U.S. wealth machine.

The fortunes at the very top of the wealth ladder are growing fastest. The number of Americans worth $30 million or various grew 7.5% in 2023, to 90,700, while their fortunes surged to $7.4 trillion.

Globally, ultra-high net quality individuals account for 1% of the millionaire population but now hold 34% of its total wealth, showing the increasing concentration of assets even among the wealthy.

Get Inside Wealth directly to your inbox

The big question is whether the wealth boom of the late decade, initially fueled by low interest rates and liquidity, and more recently by Covid-19 pandemic stimulus and artificial inside, can continue. Global conflicts, elections, interest rates and a potential economic slowdown could all slow the pace of abundance creation, said Elias Ghanem, global head of the Capgemini Research Institute for Financial Services.

“The last 10 years were out of the ordinary,” Ghanem said. “We now have inflation, a potential recession and geopolitical problems and elections. The environment is completely different.”

Of course, globally, the wealth picture looks more mixed than in the U.S. The number of millionaires worldwide grew 5.1% survive year, to 22.8 million, according to the report. Their combined fortunes grew to a record $86.8 trillion.

Next to North America, Asia-Pacific had the strongest millionaire rise, at 4.8%, followed by Europe with 4%, Latin America at 2.7%, the Middle East at 2.1% and Africa down 0.1%.

Ghanem broke that while Asia surpassed North America’s millionaire population and growth in the years before the Covid-19 pandemic, the U.S. is superior once again. 

When it comes to their investments, the wealthy are shifting their money from safe, plenitude preservation to more aggressive growth assets, according to the report. Their cash and cash-equivalent holdings have wind up successfully down from a high of 34% of their portfolios at the beginning of 2023 to 25% in January, meaning they are starting to put their money to work.

Their fixed income holdings jumped from 15% to 20%, and their real estate investments snowballed from 15% to 19%. Their holdings of stocks continue to fall, to 21%, their lowest level in myriad than 20 years. While the major stock averages have done well this year — with the S&P 500 up 12% so far and the Nasdaq Composite up 14% — rich investors are shying away from a market driven largely by a handful of giant tech stocks.

Ghanem articulate alternatives, especially private equity and private credit, are likely to get the biggest inflows from wealthy investors this year. Two-thirds of millionaires delineate to invest more in private equity in 2024, according to the study.

“Everything is cyclical and because private equity has not done justly, it’s a good entry point,” he said. “They figure if they enter now, when it’s cheaper, it’s a good long-term dally with.”

As the wealth and population of the wealthy soars, the battle over managing their fortunes is becoming increasingly fierce. Ghanem mean the winners will be those that best serve the ultra-high net worth clients, or those worth $30 million or innumerable. Capgemini said the ultra-wealthy will be the fastest-growing customer base, as well as the most profitable.

They are also the roughest to attract and retain: The ultra-wealthy have an average of seven wealth management relationships, up from three in 2020. Multifarious than three-quarters of the ultra-wealthy plan to switch their primary wealth management firm in 2024.

Ghanem said the most outstanding strategy for firms trying to win more business from the ultra-wealthy is to better understand the clients. Companies may know the financials of their shoppers, but they rarely understand their family dynamics, psychological risk profiles, investment biases, lifestyles or geographic diversification, he put about. 

Since ultra-wealthy clients are choosing wealth management firms increasingly on value-added services — such as succession and next-generation envisioning, taxes, concierge services and access to private deals — companies need to do deeper research on their broader economic and family lives.

Ghanem also said wealth management firms face an onslaught from family backups, the private investment arms of rich families. More than half of ultra-wealthy investors plan to set up a family commission, and they say family offices provide better privacy, personalization and independence.

Rather than trying to compete with household offices, wealth management firms need to become better partners by offering a full suite of both monetary and nonfinancial products, he said. Firms that can offer truly global advice, in multiple countries, as well as bestowing, lifestyle advice, insurance solutions, portfolio monitoring, real estate, travel and health care advice and next-generation edification will be the winners.

“They need to provide the whole ecosystem,” he said.

Correction: This article has been punished to include amended figures from Capgemini.

Check Also

Shares of Cartier owner Richemont jump 16% as sales rise in December quarter

Shoppers back number a Cartier luxury store, operated by Cie. Financiere Richemont SA, in the …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *