Family Office
United Capital acquires four more small advisories

Roll-up firm targets independents that are willing to give up
independence. United Capital Financial Partners, an aggregator of
fee-based advisory firms, has acquired four more of them:
Southborough, Mass.-based retirement-plan advisor PFE, Boca
Raton, Fla.-based RIA Spectrum Assets, Dallas-based broker-dealer
Park Cities Financial Group and Stamford, Conn.-based Sapient
Wealth Management.
United, which launched in 2005, now has 15 locations and about $8
billion in client assets -- including retirement-plan assets,
according to United's president Patrick Bommarito. The firm has a
staff of about 100 with roughly two dozen of them at its
headquarters in Newport Beach, Calif.
Springes to catch woodcocks
PFE aside, it's hard to get a handle on United's latest
acquisitions. Spectrum has given up its RIA, but in its last
filing with the SEC it reported $60.5 million in assets under
management, mostly for individuals who didn't qualify as
high-net-worth investors. Park Cities had more than $200 million
in assets under management when it became affiliated with
Wachovia Securities' Financial Network, the Charlotte, N.C.-based
bank's independent-broker platform -- but that was way back in
November 2002. Sapient is the book of business former
PricewaterhouseCoopers advisor Thomas Garvey bought from PwC when
the business consultancy bailed out of the investment-advisory
business this past summer.
United describes itself as a "transformational acquirer." Backed
by Boston-based merchant bank Grail Partners to the tune of about
$15 million (and additionally capitalized by its founders), the
company buys businesses outright -- typically advisories in the
$100-million-to-$500-million range, says Bommarito -- and
centralizes their manager research and due diligence, human
resources, compliance and technology functions.
United uses Advent for connectivity, PortfolioCenter for account
management, Tamarac for portfolio rebalancing and Salesforce for
CRM.
All this frees United advisors "to provide life-relevant advice
to their clients," says United's CEO Joe Duran.
Knightsbridge says no thanks
According to Duran, United's 100% buyout approach makes its
advisors "participants in building a major national
institution."
Before founding United, Duran was president of Centurion Capital
Management, a third-party investment platform provider that GE
Private Asset Management -- now Genworth -- bought for about $100
million in 2001. He is also author of a book called Start It,
Sell It and Make a Mint: 20 Wealth Creating Secrets for Business
Owners.
Though United doesn't disclose the details of individual
acquisitions, Bommarito says the typical payout is a third of the
purchase price in cash, a third in notes (payable over a
pre-defined period) and a third in shares of United.
United initially had in mind to target firms run by advisors in
their 50s and 60s who might be looking for an exit strategies.
But, as things have turned out, a number of its acquisitions are
run by younger advisors who seem content to stay put. "Nobody
wants to leave," says Bommarito.
Nobody says it, but what might be keeping these advisors in place
is the prospect of United going public or perhaps finding a buyer
with the result, perhaps, that their stake in United will
increase substantially in value.
In any case, United "will be a national firm for a long time,"
says Bommarito.
Meanwhile though, United needs a new firm to help it identify and
negotiate with acquisition targets. Knightsbridge Advisors had
that mandate, but last week the New York-based search firm
"decided to terminate the relationship for reasons we'd rather
not state," says partner Allan Starkie. -FWR
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