Holly Mackay, founder and CEO of Boring Money, has said the folding of Nutmeg into JP Morgan’s parent brand signals the end of robo-advice as a stand-alone category in the UK.
Her comments follow JPMorgan Chase’s announcement today (1 October) that it will rebrand digital wealth manager Nutmeg as part of its broader push into the UK retail investment market with the launch of J.P. Morgan Personal Investing.
A central part of the strategy is a DIY investment platform set to go live in 2026, giving retail customers the ability to buy and sell shares, bonds, funds and other asset classes directly.
Mackay said: “It was inevitable that JP Morgan would move Nutmeg under the parent brand eventually. Wall Street just doesn’t do brands like Nutmeg. I think that today’s news represents the end of robo advisers as a stand-alone category in the UK as this descriptor is relegated to the history books.
“The new challengers are not start-ups with quirky brands but established brands with big ambitions. Tomorrow’s players will offer full DIY investment platforms, supported by AI and taking advantage of new targeted support regulation.”
Nutmeg was one of the UK’s original robo-advisers when it launched in 2012. By Q4 2015, it had £150m in assets under administration and around 6,250 clients. A decade later, those figures have grown to more than £8.5bn and 265,000 clients, making it one of the UK’s 10 largest digital wealth providers.
Its integration into JP Morgan underscores the shifting dynamics of the retail investment market, where established financial services groups are increasingly absorbing or outcompeting smaller fintech challengers.