Family Office
Bank of America to launch ad campaign (and a UMA)

U.S. Trust to be highlighted in down-to-earth print and
television campaign. Bank of America plans to launch a print and
television advertising campaign targeting millionaires and
featuring its U.S. Trust wealth-management subsidiary.
"Bank of America hasn't done a lot of advertising around its
wealth-management capabilities," Anne Finucane, the chief
marketing officer of Bank of America, told the New York Times
last week. "This is new to this part of the bank."
New face
The campaign, developed by ad firm Hill Holliday, will cast Bank
of America's high-end services as "the new face of wealth" and
"wealth management for today's wealth." The ads target people
with at least $3 million in investable assets. The campaign is
expected to cost bank of America about $25 million.
Brian Moynihan, president of Bank of America Global Wealth &
Investment Management -- a division that includes the bank's
wealth-management business, U.S. Trust Bank of America Private
Wealth Management -- says the point of the ad campaign is "to
convey to clients, prospects and the broader marketplace that
[U.S. Trust] understands -- and is uniquely qualified to address
-- the needs, motivations and values associated with this new
face of wealth."
Gritty issues
The ads are meant to appeal is to first-generation wealth
creators who haven't forgotten their humbler origins -- or like
to think they haven't.
The voice-over of one of the T.V. spots says, "She owns a house
in Palm Beach, a villa in St. Bart's, condo in Sun Valley -- and
yet a piece of her still lives on a cul-de-sac in Ohio." Another
goes: "The most valuable car in his collection isn't the Italian
roadster or Le Mans racer or the British limousine, but a 1968
bus."
As it happens, Citi Smith Barney is running a campaign targeting
self-made millionaires, also designed by Hill Holliday, which has
"Working Wealth" as its campaign theme. It's pretty compelling
and it touches on some gritty issues.
"The base of wealth in America is changing, but the way we have
talked to consumers about it has not changed," Hill Holliday
president Karen Rather told the N.Y. Times. "It's stuck in
this stereotypical world of boats and summer homes and vacation
homes."
The UMA
Bank of America also plans to launch a unified managed account
(UMA) program for its wealthy and ultra-wealthy clients. Like
most UMAs, this one combines separate account managers, ETFs and
mutual funds in a single account.
Developed and administered by Bank of America's Consulting
Services Group, the new UMA will be rolled out to all U.S. Trust,
Bank of America Private Wealth Management clients over the next
few months, starting with investors who were clients of Bank of
America Private Bank before the Bank of America completed its
acquisition of U.S. Trust early in July 2007.
U.S. Trust Bank of America Private Wealth Management had more
than $220 billion in assets under management and more than $322
billion in total client assets on 1 July 2007. -FWR
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