May 27, 2026

Outdated, patriarchal wealth management frameworks no longer work for rising generation of wealthy women

6 min read

As more women become primary stewards of significant wealth, 2025 FPI Financial Planner of the Year Nicola Langridge writes that wealth management must evolve to reflect the realities of modern leadership, particularly within ultra-high-net-worth family systems, where capital, control and complexity intersect.

Last month, I listened to a powerful presentation by Vicky Robinson of Investec Private Bank, whose work during South Africa’s State Capture investigations placed her in some of the country’s most demanding intersections between state, law enforcement and civil society. She shared a story about being called into an urgent, high-stakes meeting in Stellenbosch while simultaneously needing to collect her children from school and arrange childcare at short notice.

It was a small but deeply resonant reminder that wealth is rarely managed in isolation from life.

For many women, particularly those leading businesses, families or both, wealth exists alongside overlapping responsibilities as executives, entrepreneurs, mothers, partners and stewards of both capital and family systems.

At the ultra-high-net-worth level, this complexity is amplified because wealth is no longer just a portfolio to be managed, but a living system of people, obligations and competing time horizons.

A structural shift in wealth leadership

The profile of wealth leadership is changing both locally and globally. According to a McKinsey report, women currently control about one-third of all retail financial assets in the European Union and United States, and this share is expected to rise to 40%–45% by 2030.

While South Africa is an emerging economy with its own set of nuances, at Private Client Holdings we are increasingly seeing that more ultra-high-net-worth families are not simply becoming more inclusive of women; they are often being directly led by women. Through entrepreneurship, executive leadership, inheritance, widowhood, divorce and intergenerational transfer, women are increasingly becoming primary stewards of significant family wealth.

Yet, many wealth management frameworks were historically designed around a more traditional patriarchal structure, often assuming a male principal decision-maker or family office head. These models were built primarily for asset optimisation, but today’s reality demands better alignment optimisation.

Not better, but different

This evolution is not about suggesting wealth should be managed differently based on gender, nor that investment fundamentals themselves should change. It is about recognising that when the primary wealth steward changes, the context in which decisions are made changes, too.

Communication frameworks, governance structures, strategic priorities and legacy conversations may all require a more nuanced and adaptive approach. The distinction is subtle but critical: not better, but different.

At this level, the greatest risk to long-term wealth preservation is rarely market volatility. More often, it is misalignment: between spouses, generations, values and vision.

Wealth planning in ultra-high-net-worth families is therefore not simply about portfolio construction. It is about governance, continuity, succession and ensuring capital serves the broader purpose of the family it supports.

The cost of exclusion in family wealth

This is where inclusion moves from principle to necessity. For many women, historic narratives around wealth might have subtly implied that financial complexity belonged elsewhere, in boardrooms, spreadsheets or someone else’s domain of expertise. As women increasingly become principal wealth holders, those narratives are evolving.

Behavioural finance reminds us that lived experience shapes financial priorities. In many cases, this translates into a broader framing of wealth, one that integrates not only growth but also security, continuity, education, lifestyle sustainability, philanthropy and relational legacy.

These are not competing priorities to traditional wealth creation. Properly integrated, they can materially enhance long-term outcomes by strengthening alignment and decision-making across the family system.

The objective, therefore, is to broaden wealth conversations, not to separate them.

From wealth management to family governance

The strongest wealth structures are rarely defined solely by performance. They are defined by the quality of decision-making across time.

In modern ultra-high-net-worth families, particularly those led or significantly influenced by women, the wealth conversation increasingly extends beyond asset allocation into questions of governance – such as how decisions are made, who is included, how differing priorities are reconciled and what success mean across generations.

This is where the role of the adviser becomes significantly more sophisticated – moving beyond an investment manager or product specialist. They become a strategic partner, responsible for facilitating alignment across stakeholders, structuring governance frameworks and helping families navigate both financial complexity and human dynamics.

The adviser as behavioural architect

Research such as Vanguard’s Advisor’s Alpha highlights that a significant source of adviser value lies not in outperforming markets but in improving decision quality. And, ironically, this approach tends to positively influence net returns by as much as 3%.

At the ultra-high-net-worth level, advisers add value by helping families avoid emotionally driven decisions, miscommunication, reactive strategy shifts and long-term strategic drift. They act not as decision-makers but as behavioural architects, introducing structure, discipline and perspective into complex situations.

The future of wealth is systemic, inclusive and intentional

As more women shape, build, inherit and lead significant wealth, the future of wealth management is not about creating gender-divided advisory frameworks. It is about building more adaptive, inclusive and sophisticated models that reflect the realities of modern family wealth, by understanding who leads it, how decisions are made and how best to align wealth with the long-term purpose, values and legacy of the family it serves.

Nicola Langridge, CFP®

Wealth Manager

Private Client Holdings

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