Family Office
Mellon acquires Atlanta's City Capital

Private-client group makes eighth acquisition in under five
years. In its eighth wealth-management acquisition since late in
2000, Mellon Financial has agreed to buy City Capital.
Atlanta-based City Capital, an asset manager with about $800
million in high-net-worth and institutional assets under
management, will become part of Mellon’s Private Wealth
Management group and bring Mellon’s Georgia-based private-client
assets to about $2 billion.
The deal is expected to close by the end of this year. Other
terms of the transaction weren’t made public.
“This agreement is another example of Mellon's growth strategy in
action as we continue to invest in and expand our asset
management businesses and, in particular, our wealth management
business,” says Mellon Private Wealth Management president David
Lamere.
Busy, busy
City Capital’s chairman Willis Dobbs sees the acquisition as a
way to improve client service. “Mellon's exceptional resources
will enable us to provide our clients with a deeper level of
investment management capabilities," he says. “With Mellon's
breadth of services and expertise in strategic asset allocation,
alternative investments, and planned giving programs, to name a
few areas, we'll see immediate benefits for our private and
institutional clients.”
This isn’t the first time that Mellon’s private-client group has
bought high-net-worth wallet share in Atlanta. The Boston-based
group acquired the Arden Group in 2003. That deal brought $750
million in assets under management to Mellon’s private-client
group. Mellon Private Wealth Management’s Atlanta-based president
Jack Sawyer was a principal of Arden.
Claritas, a San Diego-based market research company, expects
Atlanta’s population of millionaires to grow faster than that of
any other urban center in the U.S. through the rest of the
decade.
But Mellon has been acquisitive in other regions as well,
especially on the West Coast. In the past five years it has
nabbed the Trust Company of Washington and Safeco Trust in
Seattle as well as Glendale-Calif.-based Van Deventer & Hoch.
Since late 2000 it has also acquired Cleveland-based Weber Fulton
& Felman, Las Vegas-based Paragon Asset Management and
Providence, R.I.-based Providence Group Investment Advisory.
City Capital has been around for a while. Dobbs helped found it
in 1984 as the private-client division of Atlanta Capital
Management, and participated in a leadership buyout four years
later.
Mellon’s Private Wealth Management group has 59 offices and $78
billion in client assets. –FWR
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