Family Office
New deal frees WealthTrust to chart its own course

Wealth-advisory holding company plans to step out of its regional
footprint. Private-equity firm Circle Peak Capital and junior
capital provider Falcon Investment Advisors have backed the
management buy-back and re-capitalization of wealth-management
holding company WealthTrust, a subsidiary of regional brokerage
Morgan Keegan and Regions Financial. WealthTrust, which has
pulled in 10 affiliates in about seven years, says the deal means
it can resume an ambitious acquisition strategy aimed at
establishing itself as a national wealth advisory.
"We went looking for a private-equity partner so that we could
expand geographically," says Rusty Benton, CEO of Nashville,
Tenn.-based WealthTrust. "Morgan Keegan did not want us going
outside its footprint, which is essentially the Southeast. With
Circle Peak, we share a common goal of working to create and
realize the company's value."
Benton, a 12-year veteran and co-founding principal of Brentwood,
Tenn.-based asset manager Weaver C. Barksdale & Associates,
founded WealthTrust in 1997 with the idea of buying equity in
private-client investment advisories, re-branding them as
WealthTrust affiliates and centralizing their compliance, human
resources and other support services in the name of cost
efficiency.
Within two years WealthTrust had made several acquisitions, and
by the end of 1999 Memphis, Tenn.-based Morgan Keegan had agreed
to help bankroll its regional growth strategy for a 50% stake in
the company.
Through the next three years WealthTrust continued gobbling up
advisories, primarily in the South and Midwest. But by 2003 the
pace of mergers had slowed. In mid 2004, WealthTrust made its
ninth acquisition overall and its last as a subsidiary of Morgan
Keegan.
Benton says the slowdown was partly due to a general slowdown in
the aftermath of the 2001 economic recession and the market
meltdown that started in 2000 and continued through early 2003,
and partly to the fact that WealthTrust had maxed out on its home
turf.
"We can see there are a lot of firms out there nationally," says
Benton. "That's why it was frustrating to be stranded
geographically."
Morgan Keegan couldn't be reached for comment, but Elizabeth
Nesvold, a managing director with New York-based investment bank
Cambridge International Partners who helped broker the
multi-party transaction between Morgan Keegan, its Birmingham,
Ala.-based parent Regions and WealthTrust and its private-equity
partners, says the brokerage "realized it had to make the
determination to be in this business whole heartedly or to find
the right home for management to expand as aggressively as their
model warranted."
R. Adam Smith, New York-based Circle Peak's managing partner says
his firm's deal with WealthTrust "best the elements of the
partnership model" -- typified in the asset-management realm by
Affiliated Managers Group's (AMG) holding-company strategy --
"with a complementary set of services and products for partner
firms to enhance and broaden their offering to clients."
Smith's emphasis on the end-client isn't just lip service. Circle
Peak is focused on consumer-driven industries like fitness, food,
medical devices and -- says Adam -- private-asset management.
Between January 2000 and July 2006 there were 228 merger
transactions involving independent investment advisories with an
aggregate price-tag of $1.5 billion, according to a new study
sponsored by Jersey City, N.J.-based clearing firm Pershing and
conducted by Seattle-based business consultancy Moss Adams.
Lucky few
A 2005 study by JPMorgan Asset Management's Undiscovered Managers
says that independent advisors have to contend with two main
trends over the next 10 to 20 years. One is general attrition as
an aging population of firm owners sell or shutter their firms as
a prelude to retirement. The other is a growing gulf between
"have" and "have not" firms.
Have-not firms may compensate their owners quite well, but they
lack the resources to underwrite expansion or to react nimbly to
changes in the marketplace, according to Undiscovered Manager's
Back to the Future report. So as the advisory space
becomes more rationalized through improved technologies and more
robust performance reporting, have-not firm owners will have to
run harder just to stay put.
"[The have-not] group includes about 94% of all industry
participants and all of those firms [with] less than $25 million
[in] assets under management," says the 2005 study. "A majority
of the industry's mid-sized participants also fall into the
have-not category because they too are unprofitable as businesses
despite operating at or near capacity." The have-not category
also includes "firms that generate between $1 million and $3
million in annual revenues but have unattractive client bases or
are inefficient."
The haves meanwhile are "mid-sized firms with annual revenues of
$1 million to $3 million, and a small percentage of organizations
that have less than $1 million in annual revenue but more than
$25 million of assets under management," according to Back to
the Future. "Although not yet large companies, these
mid-sized firms have robust client bases, are profitable and have
the resources to grow their organizations over time."
Another theme of the Undiscovered Managers study is that the
divide between have and have-not firms will widen as the haves,
pressured by large competitors, coalesce through merger and
acquisition into a group of 40 or 50 highly profitable
organizations, each with at least $15 billion in assets under
management, that look rather like multi-family offices for the
mass affluent.
The newer Pershing study says that investment-advisory
consolidators accounted for 21% of the merger transaction in the
space last year. Typically, these acquirers look for motivated
partners with excellent track records and strong growth
potential, and principals who believe in the national
holding-firm model and want to keep running their practices -- at
least through a reasonable and mutually accepted transition
period.
With its holding company approach and its focus on advisories
catering to clients in the $2 million to $5 million in investable
assets, it's pretty clear that WealthTrust wants to one of these
middle-market "have-firm" aggregators.
"Our goal is to create a national wealth-management firm that's
not a bank, not a brokerage, not an insurance company or a
mutual-fund company, but a fee-based advisory," says Benton. "I
think there's room for an independent company like that to serve
the needs of a growing client base."
Benton says outfits like Boston Private Financial Holdings, which
has 14 private-banking or wealth-advisory affiliates, and Mellon
's Private Wealth Management group, another serial consolidator,
don't conform to his ideal because of their origins as banks.
"Banks want to own 100% of the firm and fold it into their
operations," Benton told Investment Advisor Magazine in
2004. "This means the advisor has to start managing money the way
the bank wants."
Track record
New York-based Focus Financial Partners, which got a $35-million
investment from Boston-based private-equity firm Summit Partners
late in 2005 and went on to acquire its first six advisory
affiliates this year, may be more analogous to WealthTrust.
Like Focus, WealthTrust helps its affiliates' founders partially
monetize their business equity, offers them help with later-stage
succession planning and provides firm-wide infrastructure cost
savings. In essence, both holding companies seek to consolidate
on its affiliates' behalf anything that can be consolidated.
"What has to be local is portfolio management, research and
client service," says Benton. "Beyond that nobody cares who pays
the bills or if the reporting comes from here [in Nashville] -
especially if it helps everyone keep costs down."
Ben Phillips, a managing director in Putnam Lovell NBF's New
York-based investment-banking practice, says that Summit's
investment in Focus is an early indication of private equity
interest in private-client advisory as distinct from an
established attraction to pure-play high-net-worth asset
management and retail-oriented investment-platform providers.
For one thing, venture capitalists have come to see that
investment advisories aren't very capital intensive by broad
industry standards and they "throw out a lot of cash" even in
down cycles, making them fairly attractive places to park cash,
according to Phillips.
Mainly though, if private-equity firms are indeed glancing
appreciatively at advisory collectives it might be because there
are few others left to flirt with. "There's a $300-billion
overhang in private equity right now," says Phillips. "That's
money they've yet to invest."
In his year-long search for venture backing Benton says he
encountered "a tremendous amount of interest" from potential
investors. But he says that wasn't as much because they had cash
burning holes in their pockets as much as it was a response to
WealthTrust's track record.
"We made our first acquisition in 1999 and we've done 10
transactions since then," says Benton. "We know how to partner
with these firms and how to manage them."
Cambridge International's Nesvold has seen evidence of
WealthTrust's superior management skills in the protracted run-up
to its buy-out from Morgan Keegan. "[WealthTrust] did an
incredible job balancing multiple parties' objectives --
including its own -- in one of the most complicated transactions
on record," she says. "They've done right by their past partners
and will do right by their new capital partners and future
acquisitions."
And future transactions won't be long in coming, says Benton. The
tenth WealthTrust acquisition he mentions -- that of Scottsdale,
Ariz.-based DeGreen Wealth Management -- in fact followed the
Circle Peak deal this week.
"You can look at DeGreen as a model for the kind of acquisitions
we'll be pursuing," says Benton. "That's both in terms of the
kind of firm and the aspect of geographic expansion."
WealthTrust's other affiliates are Memphis-based Delta Asset
Management, St. Louis-based WealthTrust · DunckerStreett,
Bethesda, Md.-based WealthTrust · FBB, Greenwood, S.C.-based
Greenwood Capital Associates, Louisville, Ky.-based Harvey
Investment Company, Richmond, Va.-based Kanawha Capital
Management, Optimum Investment Advisors with offices in Chicago,
Dallas and San Francisco, Norfolk, Va.-based Wilbanks Smith &
Thomas Asset Management and WealthTrust Advisors, which has
offices in Charlotte, N.C., Nashville and Paducah, Ky.
DeGreen Wealth Management will be re-branded as WealthTrust
Arizona. -FWR
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