Family Office
Arbitrage and momentum in advisory consolidation

The deals are coming in faster now than ever as aggregators race
the clock. The pace of wealth-firm aggregations seems to be
picking up. Adding to recent purchases by comparative newcomers
Focus Financial Partners and United Capital Financial, veteran
advisory acquirers WealthTrust and Boston Private Financial
Holdings have moved to expand and solidify their respective
affiliate networks. For all the activity so far, however,
industry participants say it's just a foretaste of deal-flow to
come as savvy buyers wave wads of cash and parent-company stock
under the noses of liquidity-strapped firm owners in need of
viable growth-and-exit strategies.
"You're going to continue to see this kind of activity for a
while," says Elizabeth Nesvold, managing partner of New
York-based M&A consultancy Silver Lane Advisors, referring to
recent acquisitions in the RIA space. "The firms doing the
roll-ups take different approaches but [they are showing] that
they know how to structure and execute these kinds of deals."
Dan Seivert, CEO of Los Angeles-based investment banking and
consulting firm Echelon Partners, agrees that move toward
integration among independent wealth firms is still in its
infancy. "Some of the early players are making themselves known,"
he says. "And there are 15 or 20 others right behind them."
Deals
Late this past summer Boston Private, which started buying
private banks and investment advisories a decade ago, established
a private-banking and trust presence in New York when one of its
affiliates, Coral Gables, Fla.-based Gibraltar Private Bank &
Trust, opened an office in Manhattan. This gives Boston Private a
wealth-management "cluster" in the Big Apple to match similar
groupings of private-banking and high-net-worth advisory
affiliates in or around Boston, San Francisco and Seattle.
Nashville-based WealthTrust, which also did its first deals in
the late 1990s, last week completed its first acquisitions in a
year by taking stakes in Cleveland, Ohio-based Fairport Asset
Management and Radnor, Pa.-based Axiom Asset Management. These
transactions extend WealthTrust's presence into Ohio and the
Northeast, increase its total assets under management to around
$9 billion and -- through Fairport -- gives it a shot at
sharpening its network-wide financial-planning capabilities.
New York-based Focus, which made its first acquisitions late in
2005, brought in five more fee-based affiliates over the last
three or four months, giving it a total of 14 "partner" firms and
around $25 billion in client assets. Newport Beach, Calif.-based
United, another two year old, recently acquired four firms to
give it a network of more than a dozen offices and approximately
$8 billion in client assets.
The simple view of the aggregation phenomenon has buyers wanting
in on an anticipated bonanza in wealth management as hordes of
baby boomers -- flush with assets from inheritances, business
sales and pension-plan nest eggs -- look for help sorting out
their finances and investments to prepare for retirement or,
where there's enough money on hand, to get their estates in
order.
Cycles
In addition, market research indicates that the high-net-worth
clients prefer the fee-based, fiduciary, and product-neutral RIA
business model over the traditional service offerings of big
banks and brokerages -- many of which have responded by
re-molding their approaches to wealth management, says Fairport's
CEO Scott Roulston.
Independent RIAs are the fastest-growing asset gatherers in the
financial-service industry, says Tiburon, Calif.-based
market-research firm Tiburon Strategic Advisors. Boston-based
Cerulli Associates, another research firm, says that the RIA
space has grown from about $950 billion and 11,745 firms in 2005
to $1.4 trillion and 14,451 firms in 2007.
Though this paints a tantalizing picture, the image is still
blurry until you realize that most independent RIA owners are
themselves boomers -- and they're just as keen as their clients
to see themselves rewarded for decades of hard work.
Unfortunately their principal assets -- their businesses --
aren't, in most cases, especially fungible. And this makes buying
such firms a neat arbitrage play for the early-in
aggregators.
Wealth-firm owners "are suffering from illiquidity," says
Seivert. But as more buyers come into the market, the arbitrage
aspect of acquiring such firms -- that a network of affiliates,
suitably managed, is worth a lot more in re-sale or IPO than the
same firms would be as standalones -- is likely to be diluted as
competition among buyers inflates initial asking prices.
This makes speed in establishing a viable network of affiliates
and parlaying it into a significant liquidity event a vital
consideration for wealth-firm consolidators.
Haves
It also means that firms looking for buyers need a realistic
understanding of their place in the market.
In a 2005 report called Back to the Future, JPMorgan Asset
Management's Undiscovered Managers points to a growing gulf
between "have" and "have not" firms. The have-nots may compensate
their owners pretty well, but they lack the resources to fund
expansion or react nimbly to changes in the marketplace by, for
instance, investing in new technologies and coping with more
stringent compliance.
"[The have-not] group includes about 94% of all industry
participants and all of those firms [with] less than $25 million
[in] assets under management," says the Undiscovered Managers
study. The have-not category also includes "firms that generate
between $1 million and $3 million in annual revenues but have
unattractive client bases or are inefficient."
The haves meanwhile are "mid-sized firms with annual revenues of
$1 million to $3 million, and a small percentage of organizations
that have less than $1 million in annual revenue but more than
$25 million of assets under management," says Back to the Future.
"Although not yet large companies, these mid-sized firms have
robust client bases, are profitable and have the resources to
grow their organizations over time."
Aggregation, however nascent, is widening the gulf between have
and have-not firms as the haves, pressured by large competitors,
coalesce into groups of 40 or 50 "highly profitable"
organizations.
Momentum
WealthTrust, Focus, United and Dallas-based Fiduciary Network,
run by Undiscovered Managers founder Mark Hurley are -- the odd
401(k) administrator aside -- fairly pure-play aggregators of
fee-based, client-facing wealth-management firms. Boston Private,
with considerable holdings in institutionally oriented asset
management, straddles the pure-play set and a group of
asset-manager aggregators with private-client sidelines like
Affiliated Managers Group, Asset Management Finance and
Convergent Capital Management. (Boston Private stands apart from
other firm-wide aggregators in having already gone public.)
Another half-way participant is insurance-brokerage network
National Financial Partners.
Meanwhile momentum is becoming as important to attracting new
affiliates -- a key ingredient to reaching the critical mass
necessary to the arbitrage that underlies many aggregation plays
in the wealth-management space.
WealthTrust's acquisitions of Fairport and Axiom were its first
since it bought Scottsdale, Ariz.-based DeGreen Wealth Management
(now WealthTrust Arizona) in the fall of 2006. That followed hard
on a private-equity infusion that let WealthTrust get back on the
acquisition trail after a two-year hiatus imposed by regional
brokerage Morgan Keegan, its erstwhile owner.
"It feels good to have closed a couple more," says WealthTrust's
CEO Rusty Benton. "But we never went away: we had to spend time
pulling functions out of Morgan Keegan, and on re-integrating our
systems, but that's done and we expect to do a couple [of
acquisitions] a quarter next year."
United's CEO Joe Duran agrees that it's helpful to be seen as an
active acquirer. "People look and say, 'Those people are doing
things' -- it's very important." -FWR
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