Selling a Financial Services Business
Sell your financial services business with advisors who understand regulatory, licensing, and institutional buyer dynamics.
The Financial Services M&A landscape in 2026
Financial services M&A involves regulatory complexity that distinguishes it from virtually all other sectors. Licensing requirements, regulatory approvals, change-of-control consents, and FCA, SEC, BaFin, or equivalent authority involvement are features of almost every transaction. Advisors who understand both the commercial and regulatory dimensions of financial services M&A are essential to running a process that does not stall on regulatory risk.
Financial services M&A is active across banking, wealth management, insurance, payment services, and fintech. The consolidation of independent financial advisors (IFAs) and wealth management businesses is one of the most active roll-up markets in the UK and Europe. Fintech acquisition activity remains strong as banks and insurers acquire technology capabilities and customer bases. Payment and transaction processing businesses attract interest from global payment networks and PE platforms. Regulatory change — open banking, digital assets, capital requirements — continues to create both M&A opportunities and complexity.
For owners preparing a Financial Services sale, useful next steps include the preparation guide, the M&A sale process, and the guide to quality of earnings. Acquirers evaluating this sector should also consider buy-side advisory, target identification, and buy-side due diligence.
Location-specific perspectives are available for Financial Services in London, Financial Services in Frankfurt and Financial Services in Zurich, which helps founders, shareholders, acquirers, and capital providers compare how buyer priorities differ by market.
Buy-side acquisition and capital considerations
The strongest outcomes in Financial Services transactions usually come from preparing for how buyers and capital providers will evaluate the company before the first approach is made. Financing questions should be assessed alongside the sale or acquisition plan through capital raising and debt advisory considerations, not treated as a late-stage afterthought.
Buyer Lens
Buyers underwrite client retention, regulated permissions, compliance culture, revenue trail visibility, and the risk that key advisers or portfolio managers leave after completion.
Capital & Debt
Lenders value recurring fee income, sticky client assets, and strong compliance records, but apply caution where revenue depends on market performance or commission volatility.
Transaction Focus
Regulatory approvals, client consent mechanics, change-of-control notices, complaints history, and conduct controls should be planned into the transaction timetable.
Who buys Financial Services businesses
Understanding the buyer landscape is the starting point for any well-run sale process. Different buyer types have different motivations, valuation frameworks, and implications for what happens after you close.
PE-backed Financial Services Platforms
IFA consolidators, insurance MGA platforms, and financial technology roll-up vehicles are among the most active buyers in mid-market financial services. These buyers understand the regulatory dimensions, have relationships with FCA and equivalent regulators, and have structured their platforms specifically for efficient acquisition and integration.
Banks and Insurance Groups
Traditional financial institutions acquiring capabilities, customer books, geographic presence, or technology. Deal timelines are longer due to board governance, change-of-control approval processes, and internal M&A capacity constraints. When fit is clear, strategic buyers can justify the highest prices.
Fintech and Technology Acquirers
Technology companies acquiring financial services businesses for regulatory licences, customer access, or financial services expertise. Reverse acquisitions — where a tech company acquires a licenced entity to accelerate its regulatory pathway — are an emerging transaction pattern.
International Financial Groups
US, European, and Asian financial groups actively acquire in each other's markets for geographic expansion. US financial services businesses are a consistent target for European and Asian acquirers; UK financial businesses attract significant US and Canadian interest.
What is a Financial Services business worth?
Financial services valuation varies dramatically by sub-sector. Wealth management and IFA businesses are valued on AUM multiples (typically 1.5–3.5% of AUM) or on EBITDA (10–15x for high-quality recurring revenue platforms). Insurance MGA businesses trade at 8–14x EBITDA. Payment businesses are valued on revenue or transaction volume multiples. Fintech businesses with SaaS revenue models are valued on software multiples. Regulatory licence premium — particularly for scarce licences in high-demand markets — can add significant value independent of financial performance. The guides to M&A multiples, working capital, and net debt and cash-free debt-free basis explain several of the adjustments that can affect proceeds and buyer confidence.
The honest answer: A multiple range on a page cannot tell you what your specific business is worth. The actual figure depends on which buyers are active when you run your process, how your business is positioned, and the competitive tension you generate. That is a conversation — and the first one is always at no charge.
Key deal dynamics in Financial Services M&A
Financial Services transactions involve deal mechanics, due diligence considerations, and structural questions that are specific to this sector. Understanding these upfront prevents surprises mid-process.
Regulatory Approval and Change-of-Control
Most financial services transactions require regulatory approval of the change of control — FCA in the UK, BaFin in Germany, SEC/FINRA in the US, and equivalent authorities elsewhere. This adds a formal approval process to the deal timeline (typically 3–6 months) and requires the acquirer to meet the regulator's fit-and-proper standards. Planning for regulatory approval timing is essential to avoiding deals that collapse after commercial terms are agreed.
Client Consent and Book Transfer
In wealth management, IFA, and insurance businesses, the client relationship is the primary asset. Client consent requirements for book transfer vary by jurisdiction and by the contractual terms with clients. Understanding the consent risk — and the actual client retention experience of comparable transactions — is central to valuing the business accurately.
Regulatory Capital and Compliance
Buyers will review the regulatory capital position of the target business, its compliance history, any regulatory investigations or enforcement actions, and the strength of its compliance infrastructure. A business with a clean regulatory record and well-resourced compliance function presents significantly less risk than one with ongoing regulatory issues.
Recurring Revenue Quality
Financial services businesses with high proportions of trail commission, fee-based advisory income, or recurring platform revenues trade at materially higher multiples than those dependent on transaction or event-based income. Understanding what proportion of revenue will transfer with the business — and what proportion may attrite — is the central underwriting question for buyers.
What Financial Services buyers are looking for right now
Active Financial Services buyers are selective about what they will underwrite. Strategic acquirers, sponsor-backed platforms, family offices, and capital providers each bring specific criteria, detailed diligence processes, and clear views on what constitutes a quality asset. Understanding those buyer priorities before a process begins is one of the most important preparation steps for a founder or shareholder.
Clean regulatory record
Any history of FCA or equivalent regulatory action, enforcement, or significant compliance failings will affect price and may affect buyer appetite. A clean record with well-documented compliance practices is a meaningful positive.
Recurring, sticky client revenue
High proportions of recurring AUM-based fees, SaaS subscriptions, or long-term contracts are the primary multiple driver. Buyers pay for predictability and low churn.
Relationship portability
The degree to which client relationships are institutionalised (tied to the firm, not the individual advisor) is a critical diligence focus. Businesses where client relationships sit with the firm rather than individual advisors command premium prices.
Scalable technology and infrastructure
Financial services businesses with modern technology infrastructure, strong data capabilities, and scalable operating platforms attract higher multiples and integrate more efficiently into acquiring platforms.
Public Market References
Sources that help frame Financial Services transactions
Public data cannot value a specific company, but it helps frame sector demand, financing conditions, regulation, and buyer priorities before the discussion turns to company-specific revenue quality, customers, margins, contracts, and leadership.
Bank for International Settlements statistics
Banking, credit, financial market, and international finance indicators.
IMF financial data
Financial stability, macroeconomic, exchange-rate, and country-level data.
OECD data and policy analysis
Economic, industry, employment, productivity, and investment indicators used for cross-market context.
World Bank Open Data
Country-level economic, demographic, and development indicators used for international comparison.
Also on Palmstone Capital
Sector-specific M&A guidance
Considering selling your Financial Services business?
A confidential conversation about Financial Services should connect sector-specific valuation drivers, buyer appetite, financing support, diligence risk, and timing. We can help you evaluate whether a sale, acquisition, recapitalization, capital raise, or continued independence is the more credible path before a process is launched.