India Eyes 55% Rise in Millionaires by 2029 : BCG Report
FinTech BizNews Service
Mumbai, June 25, 2025 - Global financial wealth surged to a record $305 trillion in 2024, propelled by an 8.1% rise in financial assets amid strong equity market performance. Yet beneath this headline growth, the industry’s underlying engine, namely organic expansion, needs renewed strategic focus.
New proprietary analysis by Boston Consulting Group reveals that just 28% of wealth manager asset growth over the past decade came from existing advisors, falling to 22% in mature markets. Instead, firms leaned heavily on external levers such as M&A, market performance, and advisor recruitment—all of which can no longer be relied on to increase revenue.
“India’s wealth management market is undergoing a seismic shift, with the number of dollar millionaires expected to grow by over 55% from 2024 to 2029—far outpacing the global average of 21%. From 2014 to 2024, organic growth varied sharply by region, with wealth managers in APAC achieving rates of 50% —more than double that of their peers in EMEA and North America. driven decisively by emerging markets like India. A generational wave of first-time wealth creators, especially millennial entrepreneurs and corporate leaders, is reshaping the industry. As India rises as a wealth management powerhouse, sharp customer segmentation and the end-to-end integration of AI and GenAI—from prospecting to advisory to service—will be critical to staying ahead”. Says Mayank Jha, Managing Director & Partner, BCG
Key India Findings:
· India’s financial wealth rose by 10.8% between 2023 and 2024—surpassing the Asia-Pacific average of 7.3% and underscoring the country’s growing economic muscle. With Asia-Pacific projected to grow at 9% annually through 2029—well ahead of North America’s 4% and Western Europe’s 5%—India is poised to be a key engine powering this global shift in financial wealth.
· India’s wealth management market is undergoing a fundamental transformation. The number of individuals in the top wealth brackets—those with more than a million dollars in financial wealth—is set to grow by over 55% from 2024 to 2029. This rapid expansion marks a significant shift in the financial landscape and signals unprecedented opportunity for advisors and institutions ready to serve this emerging demand
· Organic growth of AUM from 2014-24 varied sharply by region, with wealth managers in APAC achieving rates of 50% —more than double that of their peers in EMEA and North America, driven largely by emerging markets like India. A generational surge in first-time wealth creators, especially millennials, has enabled both new and established advisors to attract fresh clients and assets
· GenAI-powered prospecting engines are now leveraging external data to map detailed client archetypes—like business owners, expats, and high-income professionals—and track the digital signals that often precede investable wealth. What makes them powerful is not just identifying names, but prioritizing them. Early movers have already seen fivefold increase in leads and double the conversion rates
“What defines winners today is no longer exposure to market performance or the ability to poach senior bankers, but their ability to grow from within,” said Michael Kahlich, managing director and partner at BCG. “Firms that deliberately invest in advisor enablement, brand identity, and next-gen client strategies are outperforming peers—not just in revenue, but also in valuation multiples.”
These are among the key findings of BCG’s Global Wealth Report 2025: Rethinking the Rules for Growth:
Strategic Imperatives
The report identifies four high-impact levers for firms looking to elevate their organic growth engines:
“The rules of the game are shifting. Firms that embrace AI-enabled prospecting, personalized onboarding, and digital tools that boost productivity will be the ones to capture the next wave of growth,” said Daniel Kessler, managing director and senior partner at BCG and co-author of the report. “Wealth is being created globally, but the challenge for wealth managers will be to capture it.”