Artificial intelligence has triggered a brutal repricing across financial services.
In days, the launch of an AI-powered tax tool capable of generating personalised strategies within minutes has wiped billions from listed wealth managers. Investors have moved fast. The assumption is clear: if machines can do the work, fees must fall.
Part of that assumption is correct.
AI will compress the commoditised end of advice. Routine, single-country tax planning will become faster, cheaper and more scalable. Domestic portfolio modelling will be increasingly automated. Basic optimisation will no longer justify premium pricing.
This transition is already unfolding.
Investors are right to question what part of the advice is a repeatable process and what part is genuinely strategic judgment. Financial services cannot pretend this technology is marginal. It is not. It is foundational.
However, markets are extrapolating too broadly.
Wealth management is not primarily about calculating tax outcomes inside one jurisdiction. That framing reflects a domestic lens. The reality for internationally mobile clients is far more intricate.
Global wealth has become structurally more complex at precisely the same time that geopolitics is fragmenting the international system.
Assets are spread across borders. Pensions sit in one country, businesses in another, property in a third. Residency changes. Tax treaties evolve. Capital gains treatment differs. Regulatory divergence between regions is widening.
An algorithm operating inside one tax code works within a contained framework. International wealth does not operate inside containment.
Geopolitics now plays a direct role in portfolio construction.
Trade disputes reshape supply chains. Sanctions alter capital flows. Elections trigger fiscal changes. Regulatory blocs move further apart. Currency exposure becomes political exposure. Strategic asset allocation must account for government behaviour as much as market cycles.
These forces are not theoretical. They are shaping investment decisions daily.
AI can process historical data at extraordinary speed. It can model scenarios based on defined inputs. It cannot independently interpret the political motivations behind policy shifts across multiple jurisdictions, nor sequence cross-border structuring decisions in anticipation of evolving regulation.
Governments adjust tax rules in response to debt burdens and domestic pressures. Bilateral agreements are renegotiated. Pension portability rules change. Inheritance frameworks differ. Timing matters. Jurisdictional interaction matters more.
When wealth spans multiple legal systems, advisory decisions extend beyond calculation.
This is where differentiation begins.
Firms built around domestic, process-driven advice models are more exposed to automation-led fee compression. Their core value proposition is efficiency within a single regulatory environment.
Firms structured across numerous jurisdictions operate in a different category. Their advisory framework integrates tax systems, treaty networks, pension regimes and political risk simultaneously.
Operating internationally has historically meant higher compliance cost and operational complexity. In an AI-driven cycle, that complexity functions as insulation.
AI simplifies the uniform. International wealth is not uniform.
The current market reaction reflects fear of replacement. A more accurate interpretation is segmentation.
Technology will reshape delivery models across the industry. It will streamline reporting, automate documentation and reduce friction. It will enhance advisers who use it intelligently.
It will not remove the need for experienced oversight when capital moves across borders subject to divergent legal, tax and geopolitical systems.
Indeed, the more fragmented the global order becomes, the greater the need for coordination.
Consolidation now looks inevitable. Smaller operators reliant on narrow domestic models will face margin pressure. Scale, regulatory depth and international breadth will carry increasing weight.
Investors will separate commoditised advice from globally integrated advisory capability. Clients will do the same.
Financial services is entering a new competitive hierarchy.
The repricing is not signalling the decline of advice. It is marking the revaluation of what advice truly means in a world defined by artificial intelligence and geopolitical complexity.
AI changes process economics.
Geopolitics changes portfolio architecture.
Firms positioned at the intersection of both forces will gain share as the industry adjusts.
The reckoning is real. The outcome will favour those already built for complexity.