Family Office
Contango hires five western-state wealth managers

Zions Bancorporation subsidiary answers demand for private-client
services. In a response to growing demand for wealth-management
services in the retail-banking footprint of its corporate parent
Zions Bancorporation, Contango Capital Advisors, has recruited
five new wealth managers in California, Idaho and Nevada.
Berkeley, Calif.-based Contango is an investment-advisory
subsidiary of Zions, a Salt Lake City, Utah-based holding company
that owns eight banks and nine other financial-service firms. The
banks do business in Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho,
Nevada, Oregon, Texas, Utah and Washington.
Two more
Contango is the sole recipient of wealth-management referrals
from Zions' subsidiaries.
"One of the most important things we do at Contango is to hire
individuals who have the skills and experience to help
individuals, families and closely held businesses determine their
wealth-planning objectives and then work with our investment team
to develop portfolios designed to meet those specific goals,"
says Contango's president David Magee. "I'm very happy today to
welcome five outstanding, new wealth managers who fit this bill
perfectly."
Of the five new recruits, Brett Allred, a former financial
advisor with San Diego-based Capital Management, and Marie
Wiseman, previously a private-client advisor with Detroit-based
Comerica Bank, will work with the customers of Zions' California
Bank & Trust subsidiary, which is also based in San Diego. Kathy
Maxwell, formerly an advisor with Banc of America Investment
Services in Idaho, will focus on the customers of Salt Lake
City-based Zions First National Bank.
Daniel Whitehead, founder of Las Vegas-based Whitehead Wealth
Management, and Sam Mineo, a partner of the same firm, will work
with the customers of Las Vegas-based, Zions-owned Nevada State
Bank.
Contago had these five jobs listed on the employment page of its
website a few months ago. It still has two more wealth-manager
slots to fill.
Contango manages about $1.2 billion, primarily for high-net-worth
clients and other individual investors. -FWR
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