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Home » Choreo’s SpaceX Win: $5 Billion in Employee Wealth at 0.5% and What Every RIA Must Learn
SpaceX employees negotiating a collective wealth management deal with advisors in a conference room as a rocket launches outside the window
AI Wealth Management

Choreo’s SpaceX Win: $5 Billion in Employee Wealth at 0.5% and What Every RIA Must Learn

ABDELALI EL KHADMAOUIBy ABDELALI EL KHADMAOUIJune 16, 2026No Comments
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On June 9, 2026, CNBC reported that a group of more than 100 current and former SpaceX employees had negotiated a collective wealth management arrangement with Choreo, a $28 billion Chicago-based RIA, targeting up to $5 billion in assets at fees starting below 0.5% and declining as the group’s wealth grows. Morgan Stanley, Creative Planning, and Corient were among the firms that lost the bid. The deal is structured as a group mandate, with employees pooling their negotiating leverage to extract institutional pricing that none of them could secure individually. It is the most visible test of collective bargaining applied to wealth management advisory fees, and it creates a template that other pre-IPO employee groups are already examining.

Key Takeaways

  • A group of 100+ SpaceX employees negotiated a sub-0.5% wealth management fee from Choreo by treating their combined $5 billion in anticipated post-IPO wealth as a single institutional mandate — a model no major wirehouse could match on price.
  • At $5 billion and 0.5%, Choreo earns roughly $25 million per year from this cohort, compared with $50 million at the 1.0% rate a typical RIA would charge an equivalent number of individual clients — a direct test of whether volume can offset margin compression.
  • Morgan Stanley’s conflict of interest (investment banking relationships with SpaceX) and its inability to offer collective pricing gave independent RIAs a structural competitive advantage in this deal.
  • RIABiz on June 16, 2026, flagged the likely downside: 100+ first-generation wealthy clients with no prior relationship with professional wealth management present behavioral and operational challenges that a 0.5% fee may not adequately compensate.
  • The SpaceX model is replicable: Stripe, Klarna’s recent IPO cohort, and other unicorn employee groups are watching. RIAs that build a playbook for group mandates now are better positioned for the next wave.

How a Group of SpaceX Employees Changed the Wealth Management Negotiation

One hundred coins merging into a single gold ingot representing SpaceX employees pooling assets for collective bargaining on advisory fees

The standard approach to acquiring HNW advisory clients is built on individual relationships: one adviser, one client, a fee schedule tied to that client’s assets. An employee with $5 million in SpaceX equity arrives as a prospect, and the fee is set on that $5 million — typically 1.0% to 1.25% for a first-generation client of that size at a major independent firm.

The SpaceX group reversed that logic. By organizing more than 100 employees and alumni into a collective, they brought $1 billion to $5 billion in eventual assets to the table as a single negotiating unit. The resulting fee — below 0.5% with a declining rate as assets grow — is closer to what a sovereign wealth fund or endowment pays for institutional investment management than what a typical HNW advisory client receives.

This is collective bargaining, applied to wealth management for the first time at meaningful scale. The group created a buying consortium and used it to force competition between some of the largest advisory platforms in the country.

The outcome matters for several reasons. First, it demonstrates that fee compression in wealth management can come from the demand side, not just from technology or platform consolidation. Second, it gives any sufficiently large employee group at a pre-IPO company a blueprint for how to negotiate advisory relationships before the IPO liquidity event. Third, it puts on notice every RIA that prices its services as if individual clients have no alternative to individual fee schedules.


Why Did Morgan Stanley, Creative Planning, and Corient Lose This Deal?

Each of the three named competitors faced structural constraints that limited their ability to win on the SpaceX group’s terms.

Morgan Stanley had a disclosed conflict of interest: the firm has an investment banking relationship with SpaceX. Even if that conflict was properly disclosed, it created a credibility problem. A group of sophisticated engineering employees — people accustomed to running stress tests and identifying failure modes — is unlikely to hire an adviser whose parent company is also advising the company whose stock they are being told to hold or diversify away from. Morgan Stanley also has fee minimums and internal pricing frameworks that make sub-0.5% collective rates structurally difficult to approve.

Creative Planning, which manages more than $300 billion in AUM and recently completed significant expansion moves, is a strong competitor for UHNW clients but built its model around individual client relationships. Its standard fee schedule for clients at the $5 million to $50 million level starts above 0.5%. Creating a carve-out at institutional pricing for a group of 100 new clients with no prior relationship to the firm is a difficult internal governance decision.

Corient, which was acquired by Mubadala Investment Company last year and now manages over $222 billion in AUM, serves genuinely ultra-high-net-worth clients — families at the $25 million and above level. The average SpaceX employee in this group, at roughly $10 million to $50 million in anticipated IPO proceeds, may have been at the lower end of Corient’s target client profile, particularly given the complexity of first-generation wealth.

Choreo, by contrast, operates at a size ($28 billion AUM) where a $5 billion mandate is transformative — adding 18% to assets in a single deal. At that scale, offering institutional pricing is financially rational. The firm also had no investment banking conflict, no minimum client wealth floor, and the organizational flexibility to build a dedicated advisory unit for this cohort.


The Business Math Behind 0.5% on $5 Billion

A balance scale weighing gold bars against fragile glass figurines representing the margin and risk of serving first-generation millionaires at 0.5 percent

The straightforward revenue calculation is appealing for Choreo: 0.5% times $5 billion equals $25 million in annual advisory fees from a single client relationship. That is roughly equivalent to what 500 individual $1 million clients pay at 0.5% each, condensed into a group that required one negotiation.

But the operating economics are more complicated.

The SpaceX group has 100+ members. Assume the eventual assets settle at $3 billion (the midpoint of the $1 billion to $5 billion range), divided among 100 clients. That’s an average of $30 million per client — a meaningful relationship, but not the $100 million or above that most private banks and UHNW-focused RIAs use as the floor for dedicated relationship coverage.

At 0.5% on $30 million per client, Choreo earns $150,000 per client per year. That revenue figure needs to cover:

  • A dedicated advisory team for the group (assuming one senior adviser per 25-30 clients = 4 senior advisers minimum, each with a support team)
  • Comprehensive financial planning for first-generation wealth holders (estate planning setup, tax coordination, insurance review, equity compensation advice — all of which take more time per client than ongoing portfolio management for experienced investors)
  • Ongoing client education and behavioral coaching (a function many wealth managers underestimate for first-generation millionaires who have never navigated a concentrated equity wind-down)

At $150,000 per client with those service requirements, the per-client margin is lower than it looks on the headline number. A comparable AUM relationship with an established UHNW family paying 0.75% on $30 million ($225,000/year) and requiring primarily portfolio oversight and periodic planning check-ins is simpler to service at higher margin.

The question is whether the volume and the long-term relationship economics justify the initial margin compression. If the SpaceX group retains Choreo for 20 years, and those clients’ assets grow through continued earnings, inheritance, and reinvestment, the lifetime value per client is substantial. Choreo is making a bet on client retention at a discounted upfront rate.


The Devil’s Bargain: What Serving 100 First-Generation Millionaires Really Costs

RIABiz described the Choreo agreement on June 16 as potentially a “devil’s bargain.” The framing is pointed: wealth management firms have spent decades building service models optimized for clients who already understand how wealth works.

First-generation wealthy clients — people who spent their careers as engineers, technicians, or operations staff at SpaceX — arrive with a very different profile. They built their wealth through equity compensation in a private company, not through investment portfolios. They understand rocket propulsion, not Monte Carlo simulations of withdrawal rates. They may have strong views about holding SpaceX stock even after it becomes publicly liquid. They are accustomed to making decisions collaboratively (as the formation of their collective demonstrates) rather than delegating entirely to a trusted financial adviser.

The behavioral challenges these clients present are real: – Concentration risk resistance: Employees who watched SpaceX go from a startup to a multi-hundred-billion-dollar company by betting on it are not naturally inclined to sell. An adviser recommending diversification will face pushback from clients whose entire financial experience tells them that concentration in a single high-conviction bet was exactly the right decision. – Fee sensitivity: Having just negotiated a collective below-0.5% mandate, these clients are highly aware of costs. Any additional service charges, platform fees, or managed account minimums will be scrutinized. – Velocity of decisions: SpaceX operates with an extremely high-intensity decision-making culture. Clients who come from that environment may expect their advisers to respond and execute at a pace that strains a traditional advisory relationship.

None of these challenges are insurmountable, but they require dedicated attention — and dedicated attention costs money that a 0.5% fee may not fully cover unless Choreo manages service scope carefully.


What Does This Mean for the Way RIAs Price Their Next HNW Mandate?

The immediate implication is narrow but the second-order implication is not. For a single deal involving 100 SpaceX employees, the pricing concession Choreo made affects its own economics — not the industry’s. But the replication risk is real.

Once an employee group at a pre-IPO company knows that Choreo agreed to sub-0.5% on $5 billion, the next group knows where the floor is. Klarna’s recent IPO created a similar cohort of newly wealthy employees. Stripe, which has been preparing for a public offering, has thousands of employees with multi-year equity packages. Reddit went public in 2024. Employee groups at every one of these companies now have a data point.

The traditional response from wealth managers would be to dismiss this as exceptional — SpaceX is unusually large, unusually prestigious, and unusually concentrated among potential HNW clients. That’s partially true. But the underlying mechanism — collective organization for fee negotiation — requires no minimum company size or prestige to replicate. Any group of 50 professionals with $500 million in combined assets can use the same playbook.

For RIAs that have built their growth around the advisor movement and breakaway deal economics that have defined the last several years, the Choreo deal introduces a different kind of competitive pressure: not the competition for talent, but the competition for client price expectations.

The RIA M&A market’s seller-side premium — where DeVoe reports the average selling firm in Q1 2026 had $1.16 billion in AUM and commanded 12 to 14 times EBITDA — is built on revenue that assumes fee schedules haven’t moved materially. Group mandates that price below the floor erode the revenue basis of those valuations, at least at the margin.


Who Else Could Replicate the SpaceX Model?

The conditions that made the SpaceX collective deal possible are more common than they appear:

Concentrated equity in a single company. SpaceX employees all own the same underlying asset — SpaceX equity — which creates natural common ground for organizing. Employee groups at Stripe, Figma, and other late-stage private companies share the same characteristic.

A pending liquidity event with a known approximate timeline. The deal was structured around the anticipated SpaceX IPO. Groups forming before the IPO have time to negotiate, whereas post-IPO employees typically scatter to multiple advisers immediately after the lock-up period ends.

Sufficient aggregate scale to attract institutional pricing. The $1 billion to $5 billion range is well above the minimum required to negotiate meaningfully. A group of 30 employees with $300 million in combined assets could plausibly run the same process.

Organizational capacity to self-organize. SpaceX attracts highly educated, analytically capable employees who knew what they were doing when they formed the collective. Not every employee group could execute this process, but a larger number than the market currently assumes could.

For RIAs, the practical question is whether to build a proactive offering for pre-IPO employee groups or wait to be solicited. Choreo apparently responded to an inbound inquiry — the employees came to them with the collective already formed. A firm that builds a dedicated pre-IPO group advisory practice, complete with specialized equity compensation planning, lock-up period strategy, and vesting schedule analysis, has a reason to be in those conversations before they turn into a competitive bid process.


Three Questions Advisors Should Ask After the Choreo Deal

1. Do we have a pricing framework for group mandates, or are we quoting individual rates and hoping for the best when a corporate employee cohort comes to us? The SpaceX deal exposed an asymmetry: employees with organized leverage got institutional pricing; individuals without it would have paid 1.0%+. Advisers who can’t answer this question quickly are likely on the losing side of the next group mandate.

2. If a pre-IPO employee group contacted us tomorrow with $500 million in anticipated proceeds, what would our specialized offering look like — equity compensation advice, lock-up strategy, concentrated position management, financial planning for first-generation wealth holders? Choreo’s service model for this group is now under public scrutiny per the RIABiz analysis. The firms that win future versions of this deal will have the service model mapped out before the group arrives.

3. How does first-generation wealth management differ from the client relationships we have built over the past decade — and do we have the staffing and training to serve it profitably at 0.5%? This is the “devil’s bargain” question at its core. Margin compression is manageable if the service model is matched to the economics. It becomes a problem when a $50 million new-millionaire client expects the same service depth as a $50 million established family — and gets it, while being charged half as much.

Sources: CNBC (June 9, 2026; June 12, 2026); RIABiz (June 16, 2026); InvestmentNews (June 16, 2026); GururFocus / Cityware Pro Buyer (Choreo AUM data); DeVoe & Co. Q1 2026 RIA M&A Report.

About Me

abdelali el khadmaoui
ABDELALI EL KHADMAOUI
Business Analyst | Financial Analyst ~  More PostsBio ⮌

Associate Editor of financial news at Market signals where he writes and edits original analysis in and around the wealth management, as well as other parts of the financial markets and economy. He has more than five years of experience editing, proofreading, and fact-checking content on current financial events and politics.

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Associate Editor of financial news at Market signals where he writes and edits original analysis in and around the wealth management, as well as other parts of the financial markets and economy. He has more than five years of experience editing, proofreading, and fact-checking content on current financial events and politics.

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