Family Office
Coconut Grove Bank picks SunGard's WealthStation

Florida bank adds SunGard advisor desktop to same-source UMA,
trust system. Having been using SunGard's unified managed account
(UMA) program for that past nine or 10 months, Miami, Fla.-based
Coconut Grove Bank has now selected the Wayne, Pa.-based software
and processing company to provide its front-office
wealth-management technology.
Coconut Grove will integrate SunGard's WealthStation advisor
desktop -- which provides financial planning, portfolio
construction and presentation capabilities -- with SunGard's
Charlotte trust accounting and SunGard's "Unified Overlay
Management" UMA program.
Sans seams
UMAs are fee-based, single-account investment products that
typically feature combinations of separately managed accounts
(SMAs), mutual funds and ETFs. In this context, overlay
management refers to processes associated with account-level
rebalancing, restrictions, cash flows, and, where relevant,
tax-liability management.
"The seamless integration that WealthStation provides with
Charlotte and the overlay program greatly simplifies the process
of customizing and optimizing client portfolios," says Barry
Givner, senior trust officer for the Coconut Grove's Trust and
Wealth Management department. "With WealthStation, we have the
ability to swiftly analyze our clients' portfolios, financial and
estate plans and present the information in a coherent and
professional manner using the system's presentation and reporting
tools."
And this, adds Givner, lets Coconut Grove give its
wealth-management clients investment products and services that
are competitive with big-name bank and brokerage offerings.
Coconut Grove has been using SunGard's overlay program -- which
is based on technology from Cambridge, Mass.-based Smartleaf --
since February 2007.
Coconut Grove Bank says it has seen its revenue grow by 15% over
the last year -- in part, it suggests, because of the UMA
program.
SunGard is one of six leading advisor-platform providers,
according to a 2007 report by Aite Group, a Boston-based
consultancy. The others are Xeye, Thomson Financial, NorthStar
Systems International, Finantix and AdviceAmerica.
Of this half dozen, Aite classifies AdviceAmerica and SunGard as
standalone advisor-platform providers; the rest figure as
platform integrators.
Coconut Grove, which has been in business since the mid 1920s,
has nearly doubled its assets over the last three years to $680
million and deposits to $500 million. It has branches in Miami,
Coral Gables, Aventure and Pametto Bay. -FWR
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