Family Office
Tech firms join forces to advise breakaway brokers

IATF out to help ex-wirehouse advisors set up indie investment
advisories. A group of companies that provide technologies to
independent investment advisors and financial planners have
established the Independent Advisor Technology Forum (IATF) to
help brokers exiting full-service firms set up on their own.
"The recent turmoil on Wall Street has impacted the
financial-advisor industry substantially, and as many leave their
firms in the wake of this year's economic conditions they are
beginning to form their own independent advisory firms," says
Nien-Ling Wacker, president of IATF member Laserfiche, a Long
Beach, Calif.-based provider of document-management technologies.
"IATF will provide them with document management solutions and
best practices, as well as the technology tools they need for
investment and financial planning services."
Interested parties
In fact the jury is still out on how many brokers are leaving
big-name outfits to set up on their own. Two months ago, the
Boston-based research and consulting firm Aite Group said that
16,500 wirehouse advisors were thinking of going independent in
the immediate wake of Lehman Brothers' collapse, Merrill Lynch 's
decision to become part of Bank of America, Wells Fargo's
agreement to acquire Wachovia, and in the midst of a dramatic,
general and ongoing drop in financial-company share prices. That
would be about 30% of the total wirehouse-advisor headcount -- a
startling, if unlikely, outcome that could spell disaster for
some of the firms in question.
Meanwhile RIA custodians like Fidelity and Schwab say they're
seeing more ex-wirehouse brokers establishing RIAs, but the
actual data to date doesn't point to an especially sharp
increase.
Because industry sources suggest it takes most brokers at least
half a year to set up an RIA, the extent to which brokers are
breaking away from full-service firms will probably be more
apparent in 2009.
In any case, IATF members recognize that brokers who have grown
accustomed to wirehouse-style infrastructure face a daunting
challenge when it comes to selecting and integrating the
technologies they need to remain competitive as independents.
Many of these advisors have "never had to build an investment
practice from the ground up and this requirement can be an
obstacle for going independent," according to Timothy Welsh of
IATF member Nexus Strategy, a Larkspur, Calif.-based
business-development and practice-management consultancy. IATF
"will be a key resource for advisors that will help them find all
of the information they need in one place to make the right
technology purchasing decisions and make the transition
easier."
Other IATF founding members are Palm Beach Gardens, Fla.-based
CRM-technology maker Junxure, Jacksonville, Fla.-based
performance-report provider Black Diamond, Miami-based
investment-policy-statement toolmaker IPS AdvisorPro and Ontario,
Calif.-based financial-form software maker Laser App.
The IATF's " Technology CheckList " page is a good resource.
-FWR
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