AssetMark acquires Voyant in $145 million deal

AssetMark acquires Voyant in $145 million deal
The deal positions the turnkey asset manager to build its own financial wellness platform, similar to a strategy announced by TAMP powerhouse Envestnet last week.
MAR 01, 2021

AssetMark Financial Holdings Inc. announced Monday its acquisition of financial planning software Voyant in a deal that positions the turnkey asset manager to build a financial wellness platform.

AssetMark will acquire Voyant for $145 million in a cash and stock transaction funded with $120 million in cash and $25 million in AssetMark stock, according to the announcement. The acquisition is expected to close in mid-2021. 

Voyant, a software as a service company, provides financial planning tech to more than 20,000 advisers across enterprises and small adviser firms in the United Kingdom, Canada, Ireland and the United States. Voyant will continue to operate as a separate subsidiary with access to AssetMark’s sales and marketing tools to increase the fintech’s U.S. market share. 

For AssetMark, the acquisition allows the TAMP to take ownership of Voyant’s proprietary financial planning software to integrate into its existing tools like the AssetMark PortfolioEngine and AssetMark WealthBuilder, according to the announcement. 

Moreover, the acquisition is expected to be accretive to AssetMark’s adjusted earnings per share, adding two to three cents per share in 2021 and about 10 cents per share on the full year basis for 2022, said incoming Chief Executive Officer Natalie Wolfsen. 

The acquisition news comes about a week after the firm announced AssetMark CEO Charles Goldman stepped down from his post as President and CEO and as a member of the Board of Directors. Goldman will assist in the transition by serving as a consultant to the company for one year. 

Wolfsen, who has been with AssetMark for seven years, most recently as chief solutions officer, will lead alongside Michael Kim as its new President. Both appointments are effective March 3. 

The timing of Goldman’s departure and the acquisition are not connected, Wolfsen said.

Moving forward, Wolfsen is focusing on closing the transaction with Voyant while pushing AssetMark’s “financial wellness vision,” she said. The goal is to connect a user’s cash flow and budgeting applications to develop long-term goal-based financial planning, similar to TAMP powerhouse Envestnet

“Technology is generating conversations and connection points between the adviser and the investor,” she said. "That's the next generation, the next iteration of financial planning — this idea of financial wellness.”

Choosing to acquire Voyant instead of opting for another integration made sense to add another diversified revenue stream for AssetMark as Voyant subscription-based revenue is not market or interest rate sensitive, according to the announcement. 

“We'll have our proprietary financial planning offering, which is Voyant, and that'll be, integrated into our financial wellness vision,” Wolfsen said. “But we're also integrating. We've just integrated with MoneyGuidePro, and will continue to integrate with other financial planning systems, because it's the right thing to do for our clients that have already made a financial planning choice. 

Also, we like to have competition, it just makes everyone better.”

AssetMark’s plans to pursue a “financial wellness vision” via the Voyant acquisition comes on the heels of Envestnet’s announcement to ramp up investments into a digital financial wellness ecosystem that connects multiple aspects of a user's financial journey. 

Envestnet revealed last Thursday it added $30 million to its operating expenses this year partly dedicated to building a digital “financial wellness ecosystem,” according to the company’s fourth quarter earnings.

Yet, a little friendly competition in the TAMP space is good for the industry overall, Wolfsen said. “I don't believe there'll be any sort of ‘winner takes all’ financial wellness endgame here,” she said. “I think we all will grow together and serve investors needs, and it's only good for the industry.” 

AssetMark ranks third largest TAMP with $67.3 billion in AUM right behind SEI at $69.4 billion AUM and Envestnet at $229 billion in AUM. 

Latest News

Dump investment banks, buy alternative asset managers, says Oppenheimer
Dump investment banks, buy alternative asset managers, says Oppenheimer

"Shares of alternative assets managers have lagged this year as investors grow wary of private-credit exposure."

Carson Group deepens Colorado presence with Arvada advisor deal
Carson Group deepens Colorado presence with Arvada advisor deal

The Omaha, Nebraska-based RIA's latest acquisition expands its Rocky Mountain footprint after two prior Colorado deals last year.

Slow advisor transitions are costing RIA firms money and talent, and the industry is starting to act
Slow advisor transitions are costing RIA firms money and talent, and the industry is starting to act

Operational drag between an advisor signing and accounts going live is emerging as a competitive liability for wealth management firms.

M&A on course for second-highest year ever as megadeals surge and AI complicates the deal equation
M&A on course for second-highest year ever as megadeals surge and AI complicates the deal equation

Bain says companies face a "winner's paradox" as AI transformation collides with complex integrations.

Rumor confirmed: Corient expands with European acquisition
Rumor confirmed: Corient expands with European acquisition

Deal lifts global assets to roughly $523 billion under management.

SPONSORED Who builds the income when the pension disappears?

Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income

SPONSORED Why direct indexing stopped being optional

Direct indexing is on pace to outgrow ETFs and mutual funds. Northern Trust's Ken Lassner explains why the advisors who get it wish they had started sooner.