Family Office
MFO GenSpring buys Denver boutique Epic Advisors

Hap Perry's expansion plans continue to take shape under
Lagomasino's team. Genspring has struck again. In its fourth
acquisition in less than two years, the multifamily office is
buying high-end family-service firm Epic Advisors. Along with
Genspring's last two acquisitions -- Costa Mesa, Calif.-based
Cymric Family Office Services earlier this year and Phoenix,
Ariz.-based Inlign Wealth Management early in 2008 -- the
addition of Colorado-based Epic helps establish the Palm Beach
Gardens, Fla.-based firm as a formidable ultra-high-net-worth
advisory for families west of the Mississippi.
"Epic's location in Denver accelerates our strategy of creating a
national and international market leader that squarely sits on
the family's side of the table and uses its collective power and
resources solely for their benefit," says Genspring's CEO Maria
Elena Lagomasino.
Gloria Higgins, Epic's CEO, and her staff of about 25 plan to
stay on after the merger.
"This isn't at all about a succession strategy or an exit
strategy," says Higgins, who founded Epic in 1991. "I love what
I'm doing and I'm going to continue to do it -- but as the
economy began to falter, I saw we needed a deeper bench and
deeper investment capabilities to continue to serve our clients'
best interests."
But simple expedience wasn't the only point of attraction between
Epic and GenSpring, according to Higgins. Early in the seven- or
eight-month process of feeling each other out, it became apparent
that the firms share vital cultural affinities, she says.
Lagomasino agrees. "Gloria and her staff share our values and
have a long, rich history of exclusively representing the
interests of wealthy families," she says. "Like GenSpring, they
are passionate about working with families on the issues that
keep them awake at night."
Part of a plan
GenSpring, known as Asset Management Advisors until mid 2007, was
founded in 1989. Between becoming a subsidiary of Atlanta-based
SunTrust Banks early in 2001 and late 2003, it opened de
novo offices in Miami, Orlando, Fla., Charlotte, N.C.,
Washington, D.C., Atlanta. In 2004 it opened a second office in
Atlanta, and in mid 2005 it Orlando office to include a satellite
branch in Tampa, Fla.
With the exception of its 2003 purchase of Greenwich, Conn.-based
Eagle Capital International, with which established a bridgehead
in New England as well as the Manhattan tri-state area, GenSpring
in those years tended to hire teams to open offices in new
locations -- and it tended to stay firmly within SunTrust's
retail-banking footprint.
By mid 2004, GenSpring's co-founder and then-CEO Hap Perry was
saying that a high-touch, narrow-margin business like GenSpring
needed geographic breadth beyond the reach of its corporate
parent and compelling economies of scale to make it to the next
generation in terms of the firm's own leadership and of the
multi-generational families it serves.
"We need to continue to get bigger," Perry, now GenSpring's
chairman emeritus, said in 2005. "And any growth strategy we
undertake will entail establishing a national footprint."
So, with a view to start acquiring smaller multifamily offices as
the basis for establishing GenSpring as a national name in
ultra-wealth advisory, Perry started looking for a younger leader
to put this plan in motion. The serach culminated, late in 2005,
with the hire of Lagomasino, formerly CEO JPMorgan Private Bank,
along with her ex-JPMorgan colleagues Michael Holden as COO and
Michael Zeuner as strategy chief.
GenSpring's first substantial move after those appointments --
other than opening an office in New York -- came in the summer of
2007 when it established GenSpring International by buying TBK
Investments, a Miami-based financial and investment consultancy
to wealthy families in Latin America and Europe. Then came the
additions of Inlign, Cymric and now Epic.
Epic's year-old RIA subsidiary Epic Capital has about $44 million
under management, but Higgins says that Epic Advisors -- the
multifamily office -- has about $2.5 billion in assets "under
influence."
GenSpring advises about 700 families on approximately $17 billion
in assets. -FWR
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