Electronically reprinted from January
Transcription
Electronically reprinted from January
Electronically reprinted from January 2012 How to Play Inflation or Is It Disinflation? / Why You Should Fear the Euro R The Source for Financial Advisors Elliot Weissbluth is drawing dozens of large advisors out of the wirehouses and into HighTower, a rapidly growing national hybrid RIA. A Penton Media Publication Elliot Weissbluth is drawing dozens of large advisors out of the wirehouses and into HighTower, a rapidly growing national hybrid RIA. The exodus says as much about the state of the brokerage industry as it does about what’s happening at HighTower itself. Raiders of the Wirehouse Ark By Jerry Gleeson Photo by Chris Lake Raiders of the Wirehouse Ark Although it’s just a few blocks from raucous Times Square, the Manhattan branch office of HighTower, on the 12th floor of a Fifth Avenue skyscraper, is silent as a corporate library. But that silence belies a whirl of activity. One morning in mid-December, Chief Executive Officer Elliot Weissbluth had flown in from the company’s Chicago headquarters to meet for four hours with four wirehouse advisor teams, collectively representing $20 million in revenue, who wanted to know more about the HighTower model. Weissbluth travels to New York about twice a month; taking all his business road trips into account, he figures he logs about 130,000 miles a year. When you’re raiding big players from the wirehouse world, it’s part of the job. A hybrid registered investment advisor and broker/dealer that reports $20 billion in assets, HighTower has been reeling in some of the biggest and best advisors in the business since it opened its doors in 2008. In 2011, eight major teams representing $5 billion in assets under management joined HighTower’s partnership. Seven of them defected from three wirehouses: four from Merrill Lynch, two from Morgan Stanley Smith Barney, and one from UBS Wealth Management Americas. Of all the large independent RIAs that are recruiting from big brokerages, HighTower notched the most wirehouse deals in 2011—not bad for a firm that turned three years old just last month. It helped that HighTower added two new recruiters in late 2010, based in New York and San Francisco, and a fourth in 2011. That brings the total recruiting staff to five if you count Weissbluth, who estimates he spends half his time talking with prospects. It’s a fairly sizable recruiting team for firms in HighTower’s space, says Tim Welsh of Nexus Strategy in Larkspur, Calif.; many only have one or two, or their principals handle it. “The market can no longer dismiss us because of our rate of growth and who we’ve brought over,” says Weissbluth, who speaks energetically and has the lean physique of a cyclist. (Business travel keeps him from riding as much as he used to.) More than 90 percent of HighTower’s 67 advisors across the country hail from the wirehouse channel, a breed coveted by the RIA aggregators for their breadth of experience and their deep-pocketed clientele. Weissbluth says HighTower is on track to mark its first profitable quarter at the end of 2011; year-over-year revenue was up 250 percent (he doesn’t offer financial data for the privately-held company’s performance.) He predicts HighTower’s AUM will double in the next 12 to 24 months. The number of meetings and conference calls that he and his business development staff run every week has jumped from about 40 a year ago to between 60 and 70 today, he says. So what’s so sexy about HighTower? In some ways, it’s very much like home for wirehouse advisors. A number of the firm’s key investors and executives hail from Morgan Stanley; the operating structure is similar to that of the wirehouses and the hybrid model allows advisors to keep doing commission business; and the transition packages offered are quite generous. But there are obvious and valuable differences too: Advisors get a stake in the business, something that those disappointed by the performance of their stock options surely appreciate. And those who feel the wirehouse model is too opaque where financials are concerned likely enjoy the transparency of HighTower’s partnership structure. In addition, HighTower rarely misses an opportunity for self-promotion, particularly when it has new partners to crow about. And after three years, enough wirehouse alumni have signed up with the firm—as advisors, investors, or leading executives—that it has acquired credibility with other FAs in the space. But the emergence of HighTower as a major player in the independent space also dovetails with the changes that have shaken the wirehouse industry since the 2008 financial crash. Cerulli Associates estimates that wirehouses will lose 7.8 percent of their asset marketshare between 2010 and 2013. More than 3,000 financial advisors left the four top wirehouses in 2009 to move to an independent b/d or an RIA firm—about 6 percent of all wirehouse advisors, according to data from research firm Meridian-IQ (though the exodus has slowed substantially since then as we wrote in a November issue story). A number of advisors were forced out by their employers due to rising production quotas, but others decided the wirehouse model had too many conflicts and was not serving the best interests of their clients (indeed, many advisors say their clients made their displeasure with wirehouses plain.) Wirehouses, of course, beg to differ. For HighTower, “The view is pretty cheerful,” Weissbluth says. “We’re offering a solution inside a massive secular shift in the marketplace. Wirehouse advisors are leaving. They’re not leaving rapidly, but they’re leaving consistently. Clients, with ever increasing intensity, don’t want to be clients of these firms. Their confidence has been shattered.” Other experts argue that clients love their FAs and don’t care about the firm. HighTower is in the market for advisors with about $250 million in assets and up, generating several million dollars in revenue. The size of the book of business is less important than the reputation of the advisors themselves, Weissbluth says. “We take branding very seriously here,” he says. Marketing, too. HighTower isn’t shy about its dealmaking; while some firms are discreet about which advisor Raiders of the Wirehouse Ark teams they’ve taken on, each big advisor who signed up with executive director of Private Wealth Management Operations HighTower last year was the subject of a separate press release at Morgan Stanley. Ann Rieder, hired this year as managing to the financial media. Welsh calls such releases a top weapon director for business development, was a branch manager and for firms that want to add FAs. “Whenever the news gets senior vice president at Morgan Stanley Smith Barney. Of course, HighTower’s operating structure also bears picked up in the trade or business press, it shows momentum,” he says. “Advisors are very much toe-dippers and want to some resemblance to the wirehouse model. “They’ve built and ensure that wherever they go they are not the first one. They are evolving a wirehouse port infrastructure in an RIA wrapwant to know the firm is stable and successful, and nothing per” is how John Furey of Advisor Growth Strategies, describes shows that better than an industry article or mention showing it. HighTower lets its advisors choose their own custodians. (Fidelity and Schwab hold the lion’s share of assets, and that a large team has left a legacy firm for HighTower.” The higher profile could also help the firm become less of “from a pricing perspective, they’re equivalent,” Weissbluth a stranger to the capital markets, although it’s done pretty well says.) In addition to providing the back-office support that in that department so far. HighTower raised $65 million in so many newly-independent advisors need (including coman initial equity round in April 2008, and another $100 mil- pliance reporting, technology services, and a full-time social lion in a follow-up round about two years ago that included media expert), HighTower maintains a trading desk that hunts down the best deals for its advithe original investors, Weissbluth sors on a range of products, often says. The capital provides the firm made by the wirehouses that once with the ability to offer cash and Elliot S. Weissbluth employed the advisors. “It does HighTower equity to advisors for 2008-present: Chief executive officer, kind of replicate the wirehouse their practices, making them partHighTower, Chicago experience in terms of what an ners in the firm and sharing in the advisor can and can’t do,” Cerulli revenue and decision-making. The 2004-2007: President, US Fiduciary, a analyst Bing Waldert says. money can help advisors who have boutique financial services firm But the firm’s partnership structo reimburse the pro-rated remains 2003-2004: Director of marketing, CRA ture solves a problem that vexes of retention bonuses they received RogersCasey many wirehouse advisors, says from their wirehouse employers. 2001-2003: Director, non-traditional Furey, based in Phoenix, Ariz. A HighTower determines a value research group, CRA RogersCasey client who worked at Merrill Lynch for the advisor’s practice based on once told Furey he always wanted cash flow calculations it shares with 1999-2001: Chief executive, Lightflow Inc. to know how much profitability he the potential partner; once a deal is 1993-1999: Attorney, Sussman, Selig & was contributing to the firm, but struck, the advisor receives roughly Ross, Chicago the production credit system that half the value in cash and the rest Merrill uses to determine payouts in HighTower equity. Once he’s in 1994: J.D., John Marshall Law School could never spell it out to his satthe partnership, the advisor gets the 1989: B.A., English, Rice University isfaction. “No one can understand same payout deal as everyone else: why the revenue and production He keeps half of revenue after subtracting expenses, while the rest counts as his ongoing equity credit numbers are different,” Furey says. “It’s just so nebulous. in the company. Weissbluth says the system incents advisors I actually believe wirehouse advisor grid systems are built to to manage their expenses while driving “fair and reasonable” confuse people so they never really know what they’re making revenue. About 90 percent of the company’s revenue is fee- and how profitable they are.” In a partnership, however, the advisors have access to the firm’s financial data and can see based, he says. “From the beginning HighTower was designed to be the how their practice contributes to the bottom line, he says. Another way in which wirehouses and HighTower are catcher of the corner-office wirehouse guys,” Welsh says. “They have the ability to cherry-pick the best. They don’t distinctly separate, in Weissbluth’s view, is independence of need to take 10 guys out of an office.” The wirehouse cred- investment product. It’s a subject on which he and at least ibility of some of HighTower’s key investors is definitely part one brokerage official sharply disagree. Weissbluth says that of the appeal, he says. These include former Morgan Stanley wirehouse advisors can’t go outside of their platform and CEO Phil Purcell and Doug Brown, Morgan Stanley’s for- get the best mutual funds and other investment products at mer vice chairman of Investment Banking (ex-Schwab CEO the lowest prices. That poses a conflict of interest that serves David Pottruck also has a HighTower stake; he and Brown co- investors badly and gives some advisors pause; they feel they chair the board of directors.) The name Morgan Stanley also can’t be truthful about client concerns, Weissbluth says. “They have to say, ‘I’m doing the best I can,’ or, ‘Sorry that pops up on the resumes of several other executives at the firm. Chief Operating Officer Michael LaMena was formerly the somebody in Europe lost $2 billion on a trade.’ The advisors At A Glance Raiders of the Wirehouse Ark Advisors in High Places HighTower Advisors has drawn most of its advisors from the wirehouses. Here’s a list of who signed up in 2011, and from where. Name of practice Location Date of announcement AUM Previous firm Steve Bogner* New York Jan. 12 $80 million Morgan Stanley Smith Barney Private Wealth Management Simmons Wilkes Investment Advisors Portland, Maine Feb. 23 $500 million Merrill Lynch Masterson, Emma & Associates Naples, Fla. 1-Mar $350 million Merrill Lynch Amidei Romano Group Palm Desert, Calif. 2-May $375 million Merrill Lynch Blanke Schein Group Palm Desert, Calif. 31-May $300 million Morgan Stanley Smith Barney VWG Wealth Management (John Verfurth, Vienna, Va. 13-Jul $700 million Morgan Stanley Smith Barney Richard Weeks, Jeff Grinspoon) Pagnato-Karp Group Washington, D.C. Aug. 1 $1.3 billion Merrill Lynch Private Banking and Investment Group Margaret M. Towle Seattle, Wash. Aug. 18 $1 billion Greycourt and Minneapolis, Minn. The Leventhal Group Bethesda, Md. Sept. 19 $400 million UBS Wealth Management Americas * Tuck-in we talk to say, ‘I’m defending my firm every week to my clients and I don’t believe what I’m saying. But I don’t have a choice. What am I supposed to do?’ We hear that weekly.” His view was disputed by Christine Pollak, spokeswoman for Morgan Stanley Smith Barney. “We would say that it’s unfortunate that this individual has to resort to lies to sell his business model. Morgan Stanley is 100 percent open architecture, and there is no pressure to sell in-house product,” she says. “It’s been true for a while.” Weissbluth called Pollak’s statement misleading. He said he’s not asserting that Morgan Stanley Smith Barney requires its advisors to buy its products, but it does require advisors to buy products through its trading desks, where the prices are inflated in an opaque manner. The difference between buying through the trading desk and buying directly on the street amounts to “tens of basis points of spread, which in today’s marketplace is massive,” he says. “HighTower is not anti-Wall Street,” Weissbluth adds. “We will sharply criticize the way the advisory components of these fully integrated businesses abuse the confidence and trust of their customers, but this is not an anti-Wall Street business.” HighTower, he notes, is buying the products that Wall Street is selling. Advisors who joined HighTower this year strongly agree with its philosophy. Mark Masterson and David Emma, who left Merrill Lynch in March to sign up with HighTower, say it became difficult to manage their multi-family office within the confines of Bank of America’s corporate structure. “To get things done, each business seemed to have its own silo, its own structure. It became annoying, it became frustrating,” Masterson said. “The wirehouse model, for a lot of reasons, is really dying. The public is tired of the conflicts Source: HighTower Advisors of interest that litter the landscape.” Merrill Lynch did not respond to a request for comment. Dissatisfaction with the wirehouse model will continue to fuel growth in the independent channel, says Shirl Penney, chief executive at Dynasty Financial Partners, a service provider to large independent RIAs. He sees room in the market for 10 more firms such as HighTower and aggregators like Focus Financial Partners and United Capital Financial Partners. “Because the industry is very fragmented. And the more players that come in, and we continue to grow more critical mass in the independent movement, the better collectively everyone in that space will do,” he says. Weissbluth sees HighTower offering new services to its clients in the years ahead, depending on what their clients are demanding. “Would HighTower expand and work in the middle market M&A space on behalf of our clients? Probably,” he says. “We’re already seeing a demand for multigenerational tax planning…At the end of the day, we’re only making money if we’re delivering value to our clients. We’re not making money if we cook up some product and sell it to them.” One thing that’s not in the short term is a cashout by HighTower’s investors, he says. “There’s no pressure from our investors to grow any faster than we think is healthy,” Weissbluth says. “And they’re also sophisticated enough to know this is a business about delivering a high quality experience to financial advisors. “There’s always going to be a tension between the ability to grow quickly and making sure you’re doing all the things you’re supposed to,” Weissbluth says. With hundreds of billions of dollars expected to move out of the wirehouse channel in the next few years, “We could grow very rapidly and still never scratch the surface of this marketplace.” ● Posted with permission from January 2012. Registered Rep, Penton Media, Inc. 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