St. James’s Place Shares Slip Again: Why £1.5 Billion of Inflows Did Not Calm Investors

St. James’s Place Shares Slip Again: Why £1.5 Billion of Inflows Did Not Calm Investors

May 1, 2026

London, May 1, 2026, 19:04 BST

Shares of St. James’s Place Plc slipped to 1,209.5 pence in London on Friday, down 0.74%. The move wrapped up a volatile two days for the wealth manager, which had announced £1.53 billion in first-quarter net inflows but also flagged a decline in funds under management to £216.94 billion. The stock tumbled on Wednesday, clawed back some ground Thursday, and finished the week lower.

This is key for SJP, which is under pressure to show its overhaul is delivering. Investors are tracking client retention closely after the firm reworked its fee model and rolled out a bigger transformation under Chief Executive Mark FitzPatrick.

SJP’s funds under management dropped from £220.01 billion at the quarter’s open, dented by £4.60 billion in negative investment returns. Net inflows—new client cash after outflows—came in lower than last year’s £1.69 billion, despite gross inflows inching up to £5.23 billion from £5.14 billion.

“A good first quarter,” FitzPatrick said, highlighting a 95.3% annualised retention rate. Market volatility and geopolitical uncertainty put pressure on FUM, he acknowledged, but added that stretches like this “underscore the enduring value of high-quality financial advice.” St. James’s Place

Pensions lagged. SJP saw pension net inflows drop to £1.01 billion, down from £1.26 billion the previous year. By contrast, the unit trust, ISA and discretionary fund management business pulled in £0.52 billion, climbing from £0.30 billion. Investment bond net flows held steady—unchanged from last year’s £0.13 billion.

Some analysts called the early selloff an overreaction. Jefferies’ Julian Roberts pointed out that net flows beat forecasts and gross inflows were the highest ever for the group’s first quarter. He argued the 7% share drop “cannot be explained” by only a 1% FUM miss, and questioned, “Are people misreading the evidence?” Proactiveinvestors UK

Abid Hussain at Panmure Liberum zeroed in on retention, pointing out there’s been “no signs of outflow accelerations” even after the fee shake-up. He noted it was encouraging to see retention steady in what he referred to as the first clean quarter under the revamped structure. Investors’ Chronicle

UK wealth management’s showing remains uneven. In April, listed rival Quilter pulled in a record £3.1 billion for the first quarter. Yet Liontrust Asset Management, according to Reuters, saw £836 million walk out the door over that stretch. With numbers like these, adviser-driven shops are feeling the pressure to keep clients on board when the market jolts.

Here’s the risk: as declines drag on, even solid client retention might not keep FUM from sliding, and sluggish pension inflows could throw SJP’s main revenue driver into doubt. Investors are still weighing the firm’s progress on fees, cost cuts, and its ongoing review of service standards, following earlier regulatory attention on its charges.

Shareholder payouts aren’t off the table. At Thursday’s annual meeting, SJP shareholders signed off on a final dividend of 12.00 pence per share. Then, a Friday filing revealed the company bought back 249,168 shares for cancellation on April 30, paying an average of 1,204.0052 pence each.

Things have improved from last year. SJP posted 2025 gross inflows at £21.9 billion, with net inflows landing at £6.2 billion, and finished the year with FUM totaling £220.0 billion. IFRS profit after tax climbed to £531.4 million.

SJP’s stance right now is straightforward, if hardly effortless: clients kept bringing in fresh cash, adviser retention ticked higher, and advisers remain at the core of its proposition. Still, the market’s pressing the question—will that hold up if pension inflows slow and investment returns start hitting the balance sheet?

Marcin Frąckiewicz

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the CEO of TS2 Space and a longtime technology entrepreneur focused on telecommunications, satellite communications and digital innovation. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he writes about space technology, artificial intelligence and publicly traded technology companies. His analysis covers major market trends, emerging technologies and the businesses shaping the future of the global economy.

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