Family Office
Re-named AMA expands abroad, eyes new home mkts

GenSpring acquires TBK Investments and gears up for additional
acquisitions. GenSpring Family Offices -- formerly Asset
Management Advisors -- has acquired TBK Investments, a
Miami-based financial and investment consultancy to wealthy
families in Latin America, Spain and Italy. GenSpring says the
addition of TBK positions it for growth in the international
wealth-management arena.
The merger, GenSpring's first in four years, also presages the
start of an acquisition campaign focused on U.S. markets as the
SunTrust Banks affiliate attempts to establish itself as a
pre-eminent brand in the commercial family-office space.
Latin America
The acquisition of TBK "is a great push into a new geographic
region for GenSpring," says Elizabeth Nesvold, managing partner
of New York-based M&A advisory Silver Lane Advisors.
"Santiago Ulloa" -- TBK's founder and CEO -- "is very well
respected in the Latin American wealth-management community," she
adds.
Latin America's population of U.S.-dollar millionaires increased
10.2% to around 400,000 in 2006, according to Capgemini's most
recent World Wealth Report -- a percentage point or slower
than the high-net-worth population growth of sub-Saharan Africa
and the Middle East, and a percentage point faster than the
population increase of U.S. and Canadian millionaires. Total
financial assets held by the region's millionaires increased
23.2% to $5.1 trillion in 2006, making it the world's liveliest
region for high-wealth creation.
The scenario for ultra-high-net-worth advisory services in
Latin America looks even more promising. Though there were only
about 95,000 individuals with $30 million or more in financial
assets on the planet in 2006, Latin America had the highest rate
-- 2.5% -- of ultra-wealthy individuals as a percentage of total
millionaire population.
Several foreign private banks have made headway in Latin America
-- Switzerland's UBS and Credit Suisse and Spain's Banco Bilbao
Vizcaya come to mind -- but few commercial multifamily offices
have taken the plunge.
Family aligned
But GenSpring's CEO Maria Elena Lagomasino says it's been clear
for a while "that demand for objective, family-aligned advice and
solutions is a growth market not just within the [U.S.], but also
on a global basis." TBK has proved "that a firm can build a
successful, independent family-aligned business in countries
outside" the U.S., she adds.
The deal between GenSpring and TBK calls for TBK to be re-named
"GenSpring International" and for Ulloa to lead it as its
president. GenSpring doesn't plan make any "material changes" to
"TBK's personnel or [to its] handling" of GenSpring's
international business.
That's noteworthy because industry sources say that TBK, which
advises more than 60 families on around $1.5 billion in assets,
relies on third party originators to generate a fair amount of
its business. In any event, TBK doesn't have a permanent physical
presence in any of the non-U.S. markets it serves.
GenSpring makes a point of staying close to its U.S. clients.
Including its headquarters in Palm Beach Gardens, the firm has
five offices in Florida -- the others are in Miami, Orlando,
Tampa Bay and Sarasota -- as well as branches in Atlanta (where
it has two locations) Charlotte, N.C., Washington, D.C.,
Greenwich, Conn., and New York.
Before TBK, GenSpring hadn't acquired a firm since 2003, when it
purchased Eagle Capital International to lay the foundation of
its presence in Connecticut. The firm tends to hire teams to open
offices in new locations, and until a few years ago, it has
tended to stay within Atlanta-based SunTrust's geographic
footprint in the southeastern U.S.
Opportunity
But now GenSpring is looking to move more aggressively out of
SunTrust's shadow through acquisition with a view to making a
national name for itself as an ultra-wealth manager.
This isn't precisely news. Late in 2004, GenSpring's co-founder
and chairman emeritus Hap Perry said the firm would be laying the
groundwork for just such a move by putting in place a younger
leadership team.
In November 2005, Lagomasino, formerly CEO of JPMorgan Private
Bank, took the helm, joined by ex-JPMorgan colleagues Michael
Holden as COO and Michael Zeuner as chief strategy and innovation
officer.
With its leadership fully acclimatized and a new name on the
shingle -- GenSpring says it wanted to emphasize its capabilities
as a multi-generational wealth advisor rather than as a
private-client investment consultant -- the firm says the time
has come to start buying wealth-management firms.
In fact, Lagomasino sees no alternative to that. "Hap recognized
years ago that this firm is growing like crazy," she says. "To
support this growth we are actively looking at potential partners
in the U.S."
In a burst of mainly organic growth, GenSpring's assets under
advisory have more than doubled to around $12 billion since the
end of 2004.
Zeuner says this growth is just a foretaste of what's in store --
predicated on branding and geographic expansion. "We see an
opportunity to emerge as the market leader in the family-office
space and to have a name that is as recognizable as any in the
industry," he says. -FWR
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