AI in banking

The $124T Question: Why Universal Banks Keep Losing Heirs

01 June 2026
5
mins read

Most wealth managers frame generational transfer as a relationship problem. The RM did not engage the children early enough. The family was not brought into the conversation. The next generation never formed a connection with the bank.Β 

That diagnosis is not wrong - but it mistakes the symptom for the cause. In most universal banks, even an RM who wanted to engage the heirs early would have no systematic way to find them. This is not a relationship management failure, but a data architecture failure that produces one.

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The private banking client's children are in the retail app every day - transacting, saving, building their financial lives at the same institution that holds their parents' wealth. The operating model never surfaces that connection, and by the time the inheritance happens, the bank is starting from zero with a client it has served for years.

The heirs are already there

The children of private banking clients are not prospects the bank needs to acquire. In most cases, they are already customers - retail accounts, mortgages, everyday banking relationships built up over years. The bank has their transaction history, their savings patterns, their financial behavior across a decade or more of adult life.

What the bank does not have is a way to surface the connection. The retail system and the private banking system hold separate views of separate clients with no shared identity layer between them. The parent is a private banking client, but the child is a retail client. The operating model never registers that they are the same family, and nobody is positioned to act on that relationship before the wealth changes hands.

Why 70% of heirs leave

The statistic is striking but the mechanism behind it is straightforward. Heirs do not leave because they had a bad experience with the bank. Most of them had no experience with the bank in the context of wealth - because the bank was never present in that context during their formative financial years.

What fills that gap is whatever platform the heir used when they first started investing. This could be a neobroker they onboarded at 28, a direct-to-consumer platform they started using during a period of market volatility, or a digital wealth manager that found them through a targeted campaign at exactly the moment they were thinking about their financial future.

By the time the inheritance arrives, those platforms are not alternatives the heir is considering. They are the incumbent. The bank that holds the parent's wealth is the one that has to make the case for staying - to someone who has no prior reason to trust it with their own.

The window to act is this decade

$124T transfers between generations before 2048, with the heaviest concentration in the next ten years as the wealthiest post-war generation moves through its seventies and eighties. For universal banks, this is not a future strategic consideration. It is a current operational reality.

The heirs are already in their systems, already transacting, already within reach. The question is whether the operating model can see those relationships clearly enough to act on them before the wealth changes hands. The banks that cannot will keep losing 70% of inherited assets - not to a competitor that outperformed them, but to platforms that were simply present when the bank was not.

Read next: The Coordination Tax: Why the Universal Bank's Biggest Advantage Is Invisible to Its Own Operating Model

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About the author
Backbase
Backbase pioneered the Unified Frontline category for banks.

Backbase built the AI-native Banking OS - the operating system that turns fragmented banking operations into a Unified Frontline. Customers, employees, and AI agents work as one across digital channels, front-office, and operations.

Backbase was founded in 2003 by Jouk Pleiter and is headquartered in Amsterdam, with teams across North America, Europe, the Middle East, Asia-Pacific, Africa and Latin America. 120+ leading banks run on Backbase across Retail, SMB & Commercial, Private Banking, and Wealth Management.

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