Family Office
Focus Financial Partners adds five more affiliates

Two-year-old wealth-firm aggregator far exceeds its own growth
predictions. Focus Financial Partners has acquired five more
affiliates. The additions give the RIA holding company a network
of 14 partner firms with more than $25 billion in client assets,
putting it well ahead of the growth it -- and its private-equity
backer Summit Partners -- foresaw at launch in January 2006.
Back then, as Focus was coming out of the gate with four partner
firms and combined client assets of $3.5 billion, CEO Ruediger
Adolf said the plan was to hit the $25-billion mark within five
years; in part through organic growth but chiefly by bringing its
affiliate total to between 30 and 50 firms.
"We're clearly ahead of schedule," Adolf says now. "We got
recognition earlier, and so were able to attract a broader
selection of firms with significant scale than we originally
thought we would."
Kevin Mohan, a general partner of Boston-based Summit, describes
Focus' progress to date as "fantastic."
Summit controls an investment fund of about $9 billion. It made a
$35-million investment in Focus late in 2005, and hinted that it
would commit more to the venture as needed. So far, however,
Focus has been able to fund further growth with
traditional-source lending.
Catalyst
"[Focus] has turned into something large and successful earlier
than we thought it would," says Mohan.
In terms of the recognition Adolf mentions, Focus has garnered an
unusual amount of press coverage for a company of its size and
type. In August 2006, Adolf made Registered Rep magazine's
"Top Ten to Watch" list for that year.
But to potential partners, the addition early this year of St.
Louis, Mo.-based Buckingham Family of Financial Services may have
been as important an indicator of Focus' success as any amount of
favorable ink. At the time Buckingham managed about $1.6 billion
in its direct-to-client business and another $6.3 billion through
BAM Advisor Services, an outsourced investment platform.
"Buckingham was a catalyst," says Adolf.
Focus also seems to benefit from old-fashioned pavement pounding.
Robert Jazwinski, founder of new Focus affiliate JFS Wealth
Advisors, says Adolf first contacted him about joining the
then-nascent network in 2005; pre-launch, in other words.
Partners
Initially Jazwinski demurred. "I didn't think JFS was ready to
begin that journey," he says. Adolf kept in touch, however, and
Jazwinski came to see a match between his long-term plans for the
wealth advisory he founded in 1986 and the new RIA
aggregator.
"I really like [Focus'] business model, the team Rudy has
assembled and the other partners," says Jazwinski.
Hermitage, Pa.-based JFS joined Focus this past summer, shortly
after Irvine, Calif.-based Benefit Funding Services Group made
the leap. The other new additions are Williamstown, Mass.-based
Dion Money Management, Wellesley, Mass.-based GW & Wade, and
Church Falls, Va.-based Lara, Shull & May.
Its other affiliates, Buckingham aside, are Richmond, Va.-based
Capital Advisory Group, Providence, R.I.-based StrategicPoint,
Cupertino, Calif.-based Founders Financial Network, New
York-based Geller Group, San Diego-based HoyleCohen, Westport,
Conn.-based Resnick Investment Advisors, Wakefield, Mass.-based
Sentinel Benefits Group and Corte Madera, Calif.-based Quantum
Capital Management.
Scale
Focus acquires between 40% and 60% in its affiliates, which get a
combination of cash and equity in the holding company. Its
targets are usually high-growth firms with at least $350 million
in client assets operated by experienced advisors who want the
benefits of independence along with the scale and depth of a
national network. But affiliates have to adhere to strict
fiduciary standards of wealth management -- or, as with several
of its affiliates, third-party pension-plan administration.
The principals of Focus' partner firms, frequently their
founders, continue to run their own businesses. The holding
company offers affiliate-level help with marketing, compliance
and human resources but it doesn't foist these things, or
anything else, on its partners. Affiliates follow their own leads
with regard to investment products, execution and custody.
"We're not trying to build a copy of a wirehouse," says Adolf.
"We're successful because what we're doing is aligned with what
made our partners successful in the first place."
Though participation in network-level programs is voluntary,
economies of scale are rapidly coming into play for Focus'
partners. With a combined client base of 11,000 and an aggregate
workforce of about 550, the Focus network is a giant in the
independent RIA space and for its vendors -- asset managers,
custodians and technology providers alike -- a customer worth
keeping happy.
Long term
Focus' increasing scale is also making intra-firm networking more
dynamic, says Adolf. He gives the example of a partner firm that
drew on the expertise of another affiliate going into a pivotal
client meeting.
Succession planning is another aspect of the Focus formula.
Though Adolf emphasizes that the holding company doesn't "do
exits," it will help junior partners finance buy-ins to
individual partner firms. And for firms that lack such personnel,
it will help identify and recruit people who can be groomed for
future leadership.
The idea is to provide for the departures of its partners' senior
members and provides for next-generation leadership at the
affiliate level. "We are an instrument to ensure continuity for
our partners and for Focus," says Adolf.
Affiliation with Focus means laying the groundwork for "the
long-term plan," says Jazwinski. "I have no desire to step down
right now, but in 15 or 20 years I might want to slow down a
bit." With this in view, adds Jazwinski, the pay-out that came
with Focus' acquisition of JFS wasn't a motivation for the
link-up. Rather than the part-cash payout, Jazwinski says he'd
have "taken all Focus stock" if that were possible. "This
is about working in a superior business model and [participating
in] in the growth of Focus as an entity."
Rapidity
For Mike Glor, principal and founding partner of new Focus
affiliate GW & Wade, the attraction to Focus boils down to its
understanding that "this business is about personal
relationships."
It also helped that the transition to affiliation with Focus was
seamless for his clients, adds Glor. "We made a point to call all
our clients beforehand," he says. "It was nice to be able to
reassure them that the transaction would be invisible to
them."
There are other RIA aggregators out there, says Peter
Rockefeller, a managing director New York-based investment bank
Berkshire Capital, but Focus is probably the most aggressive.
Adolf "has grown the company on a very rapid timetable," he
says.
Other companies in the game include Boston Private and
WealthTrust. Firms like insurance-brokerage holding company
National Financial Partners and asset-manager networks such as
Affiliated Managers Group, Asset Management Finance and
Convergent Capital Management have similar missions even where
wealth management is more of a sideline than a raison
d'etre.
New age
At bottom, Focus and these other firms are trying to get pieces
of a $37.2-trillion global wealth-management market that has more
than doubled since the mid 1990s. If anything the rate of
personal-wealth growth seems likely to accelerate in coming years
as baby boomers enter their peak accumulation years or sell
businesses, exercise options and divest from pension vehicles in
preparation for retirement.
Boston-based research firm Celent sees a 24% jump in the
population of North Americans with at least $250,000 in liquid
assets to 37.7 million by 2010 from 30.4 million in 2006. Another
research firm, Tiburon, Calif.-based Tiburon Strategic Advisors,
predicts that investable assets held by U.S. consumers will rise
to around $30 trillion by 2010 from less that $20 trillion in
2004.
Though a tide like that is likely to lift a lot of boats, Focus
is betting that independent investment advisories will benefit
particularly. "Independent RIAs manage 15% of personal wealth" in
the U.S., he says. "They should be managing 50%."
To support this view Adolf points to data from Boston-based
Cerulli that shows assets under management by independent
RIAs increasing from $286 billion in 1997 to $750 billion in
2005. Citing Tiburon research, he also notes that RIAs increased
assets under management at a faster rate than discount brokers,
wirehouses, mutual funds, banks and insurance companies between
1995 and 2004.
"This is the beginning of the age of the independent," says
Adolf. "Wealthy individuals are realizing that they're better
served by an RIA than a sales person." -FWR
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