Family Office
Multifamily office hiring up despite down economy

Client demand and turmoil in the financial markets triggers more
recruiting. Wobbly markets and a weak economy have done little to
stem the flow of job creation in the multifamily office space. If
anything, recruiting is up this year as boutique
wealth-management firms move to fill out vacancies created by
increased client demand, according to industry participants.
"We're seeing our best year ever," says David Zier, executive
v.p. of Convergent Wealth Advisors (CWA), a Rockville, Md.-based
multifamily office with about $9 billion in assets under
advisory. "A down market is generally good for our business
because it makes people re-evaluate what they're doing."
Mindy Diamond of Chester N.J.-based Diamond Consultants, a
recruiting firm that places big-firm financial advisors, agrees
with Zier's assessment. "When market conditions are turbulent,
customers rely more on their trusted advisor than in good times,"
she says.
Freak out
And a quick survey of this publication's archive confirms that
the economic slowdown hasn't crimped hiring by high-touch wealth
managers. In recent weeks FWR has reported on senior-staff
hires by firms like CWA, Bessemer, GenSpring, Glenmede, Hirtle
Callaghan, Threshold and Wells Fargo 's family-wealth group --
with some of them adding several staffers at once or in quick
succession, and nearly all of them seeing additional hires in the
near future.
Recruiting is also up in the broader independent RIA arena,
according to Alison Wertheim, a spokeswoman for San
Francisco-based Schwab Institutional.
Although the wirehouses and bank brokerages Diamond recruits for
may be downsizing in some areas, big-book advisors aren't among
those threatened. But they're feeling restless all the same, and
their sense of insecurity has sent of them to new firms.
"The Bear Stearns thing really freaked people out," says Diamond,
referring to JPMorgan Chase's Federal Reserve-sanctioned bid to
buy a big chunk of the Wall Street stalwart for pennies on the
dollar.
And the reaction to Bear Stearns' apparently impending demise is
giving impetus to a trend that has been building since the
sub-prime-mortgage debacle started to make itself felt in
financial markets last summer.
"Advisors are feeling disenfranchised because of a whole host of
things: write downs, CEO terminations, firms having to raise
money from [sovereign wealth funds] overseas; all these things,"
says Diamond. "And [advisors are] seeing higher transition
incentives and -- because market conditions help them position a
move as better for their clients -- they're seeing the largest
producers making 90%, 100% asset recovery in a short time.
Altogether, this has led to a frenzy of movement."
But brokers don't tend to move to multifamily offices -- though
brokerage managers some times do. The main thing keeping
big-time brokers away is the lack of fat signing bonuses.
"Most brokers want big payouts up front," says Zier. "That said,
we speak with brokers with a consulting model -- the ones who
really are dedicated to open architecture; we're attractive to
them and they're attractive to us. The bottom line is that we're
looking for people who love this business and want to be a part
of what we're building."
But even if multifamily offices aren't destinations of choice for
successful fee-based brokers, "movement engenders movement," says
Diamond.
Clients first
Jeffrey Rankin, chairman of the Rankin Group, a Lake Geneva,
Wisc.-based search firm for commercial and non-commercial family
offices, agrees that hiring by high-end independent advisories is
up, but he thinks it's more a product of client demand than a
result of Wall Street advisors' discontent.
Hiring is up at multifamily offices because those with at least
$10 million in investable assets are increasingly inclined to the
view that banks, let alone brokerages, "can't provide the
services they need anymore," says Rankin.
And those in the $30-million-plus bracket -- the target for most
multifamily offices these days, according to Rankin -- have a
commensurately greater need for unbiased counsel that cuts across
aspects of wealth from investing to tax and estate planning and
family governance -- and are that much likelier to view
depositary, lending and trust services as commodities.
"Most banks don't have it in them to serve families with assets
like that, and that's why this is a great market for multifamily
offices," says Rankin. "It helps these firms that clients don't
mind paying the fees -- provided they're getting good advice
that's truly tailored to their requirements."
And the need for additional talent is particularly acute at
mid-size shops. "An awful lot of multifamily offices hit the wall
at $1.5 billion to $2 billion," says Rankin. "This raises
questions like 'How do we grow this?' and 'How do we
get the managerial talent to take this to a new level?'"
But increased demand client demand for multifamily-office
services hasn't made the task of finding suitable candidates for
high-end advisor slots any easier.
"It's tough to hire for a multifamily office because the skills
that are required are so specialized -- and at the same time very
broad," says CWA's Zier. "It's really a unique combination."
It helps though, that "the awareness level of the
multifamily-office model is up" among financial-service
professionals -- particularly private bankers and trust officers
-- and estate attorneys, says Rankin.
And it helps that multifamily offices are used to taking in
professionals from other financial-service channels.
"We hire people from other industries and provide very robust
training," says Zier. "That goes for people in operations as well
as people on the front lines -- our view is that everyone should
understand the issues clients face." -FWR
Purchase reproduction rights to this article.