Family Office
Curian Capital to hire new wholesalers

Cut-rate SMA vendor says it’s feeling expansive again. Curian
Capital plans to hire nine new wholesalers by the end of
June. The Denver-based third-party separately managed account
(SMA) platform provider says it’s ramping up to support new
opportunities to push its low-minimum, models-based SMA platform
into the independent brokerage channel.
News from Curian, an upstart platform that continues to turn
heads with SMA minimums starting at $25,000 in an industry where
the going hurdle is closer to $100,000, has been scant since late
in 2004. That’s when the Jackson National Life Insurance
affiliate shed about 10% of its 200-strong workforce, including
two of its three top managers and 15 of its 40 wholesalers.
Big team
The latest hiring round is meant “to take full advantage of the
enormous opportunities that exist in the managed accounts
industry,” says Michael Bell, Denver-based Curian’s president and
CEO. “By expanding our wholesaling force, we are demonstrating
our commitment to providing superior client service for financial
professionals as they seek out new and innovative investment
opportunities for their clients.”
Bell says the nine new wholesalers Curian plans to hire this year
will re-align the external and internal sales teams – now split
15 to 10 in favor of the road warriors – to a one-to-one ratio.
In other words seven of the new wholesalers will be providing
in-house support.
With two-person wholesale teams back in place, Bell says Curian
is looking forward to upgrading the support it offers advisors
who use its SMAs. Though that support boils down to education on
the role of SMAs in investment consulting processes, Bell says it
also runs to business-practice consulting – a familiar enough
refrain from investment-product wholesalers.
Even without the nine new wholesalers Curian has an outsized
sales force. One of its more established competitors, with about
12 times Curian’s assets under management, says it has only 12
wholesalers; another, slightly smaller, one fields eight
wholesalers.
But Bell says Curian’s large sales team allows it to penetrate
its 17 U.S. markets more effectively than its rivals. “We’re out
there in every one of our markets really trying to help our
advisors build their businesses.”
Brief recap
Bell has been running Curian since late 2004, when, as the firm’s
chief legal officer, he survived a purge that rid the firm
of James Vitalie, executive v.p. for strategic planning, and
Kevin Garrow, v.p. for business development. At the time Vitalie,
Garrow and Bell were Curian’s top executives.
Like Vitalie, Bell is a former employee of FOLIOfn, a Vienna,
Va.-based fractional-share trading platform. Vitalie now heads
SMA wholesaling for Old Mutual Investment Partners, a subsidiary
of Old Mutual Capital.
With Vitalie and Garrow gone, Jackson National named Mitch Waters
and Dan Maurer to top slots at its SMA distribution
unit late in 2004. Both had been with Curian since before
its 2003 launch. Waters is in charge of Curian's sales efforts.
Maurer is responsible for outreach to client institutions and
advisor training.
Jan Hanshaft, who manages Curian’s trade processing, clearance
and settlements, and Steven Young, head of strategic asset
allocation and capital market analysis, round out Curian’s
five-man management team.
Curian’s assets under management have grown from $781 million at
the end of September 2004 to $1.7 billion across about 16,000
acounts at the end of 2005. The SMA provider has nearly 300
selling agreements touching about 18,000 brokers and
advisors.
The bulk of Curian’s business is in the independent-broker space.
“That’s where we see the most opportunity for growth and that’s
the area we’re concentrating on,” says Bell.
Curian has been focused on independent brokers since it went
live. Bell says its models-based accounts are comparatively easy
for intermediaries to administer, and its low minimums make it a
less intimidating step up from mutual funds than big-ticket
SMAs.
But in the early days Curian was also keen to reach small banks
through their brokerage and personal-trust platforms. Late in
2003 it forged a preferred-provider agreement with the
Independent Community Bankers of America, an industry association
for small banks and thrifts. It also has a couple of
selling agreements with investment-product adjuncts to credit
unions. Meanwhile, managed-account providers to the trust space
say they don’t run into Curian all that much.
Curian’s parent Lansing, Mich.-based Jackson National Life
Insurance is a subsidiary of Prudential plc, a U.K..-based
insurance and banking company that has nothing to do with
Prudential Financial, a U.S.-based insurance and banking company.
–FWR
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