India’s wealth management sector is undergoing a massive structural transformation. Driven by an unprecedented rise in affluent households, a booming IPO market, and a significant shift in how citizens save, the industry is attracting an array of new players. Everyone from century-old conglomerates like the Godrej Group—which recently launched Godrej Wealth with a target of ₹1 lakh crore in assets by 2031—to nimble fintech startups like Nexedge Capital are racing to secure a seat at the table.
Key Drivers of the Wealth Explosion
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The Rise of “Lower-Pyramid” Millionaires: Wealth creation is moving beyond billionaires. According to the Mercedes-Benz Hurun India Wealth Report 2025, India’s millionaire households (net worth exceeding ₹8.5 crore) nearly doubled from 4.58 lakh in 2021 to 8.71 lakh in 2025.
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The IPO Wealth Engine: Over 360 IPOs hit the market in 2025 alone, unlocking nearly ₹2 lakh crore in liquidity. This has minted a brand-new class of first-generation, tech-savvy entrepreneurs requiring advanced estate planning and global diversification.
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Geographic Democratization: Wealth is no longer confined to Mumbai and Delhi. Manufacturing, logistics, and real estate booms are minting affluent families in Tier II and Tier III hubs like Surat, Ahmedabad, Jaipur, and Lucknow.
Shift in Household Savings
The landscape of Indian savings has flipped over the last decade, moving rapidly away from traditional safety nets and directly into capital markets.
| Investment Type | Share in FY12 | Share in FY25 |
| Bank Deposits | ~58% | ~35% |
| Equities & Mutual Funds | Minimal | Rapidly Rising (Driven by SIPs) |
Industry Response: Why Everyone Wants In
Wealth management is highly lucrative because it is a high-margin, fee-based business that generates recurring revenue without requiring banks to take massive balance sheet risks.
In response, public sector giants are launching aggressive counter-offensives to protect their turf. The State Bank of India (SBI) aims to scale its wealth management assets fivefold to ₹15 lakh crore by 2030, while peers like Indian Bank and Indian Overseas Bank are building dedicated wealth verticals to stop deposits from fleeing into mutual funds.
The Human Element: Despite the rise of AI and “wealthtech” platforms, the industry remains deeply reliant on human relationships. Affluent investors still demand human advisers for major decisions, triggering an intense corporate talent war and skyrocketing compensation packages for private bankers.
