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Focus Financial sets sights on wirehouse brokers

Thomas Coyle

23 August 2007

Independent RIA network gets set to accommodate like-minded registered reps. Focus Financial Partners is gearing up to recruit wirehouse brokers. Though the RIA holding company has so far targeted established fee-based advisories, Focus says that some high-end brokerage teams looking to set up de novo RIAs are a natural fit with its independent fiduciary business model.

"The key words are 'independent' and 'fiduciary,'" says Richard Gill, whom Focus hired away from San Francisco-based RIA custodian Schwab Institutional several months ago to work with transition-minded reps. "There are some brokers who act exactly as we would want them to act: they have deep relationships with clients who always come first to them, and the majority of their business is fee-based; they just happen to be brokerage employees."

And it seems that some of these brokerage employees are getting restless -- whether it's because they want to work with their clients in the absence of "agency risk," because they're sick of having bosses or because they're eager for the chance to take more off the table when it comes time to retire.

Dream teams

About 700 wirehouse brokers go independent every year, says Dan Seivert, CEO of Los Angeles-based investment banking and business-consulting firm Echelon Partners. Of these "breakaway" brokers, Seivert thinks that 45% join independent broker-dealers, 45% establish their own RIAs and 10% join existing investment advisories.

Focus is looking to help fiduciary-style brokerage teams set up their own RIAs, which would be partly owned by Focus and -- by virtue of the holding company's structure -- its other affiliates.

The help in question boils down to Focus taking brokers through the entire conversion process -- and then eating the cost of the transition. Candidates for affiliation with Focus have to be pretty big, however. "We acquire a portion of the firm's cashflow, so there has to be enough to make it worthwhile to everyone," says Gill. Generally speaking, a firm needs at least $350 million in assets under management to qualify as an acquisition prospect for Focus. Gill says that most of the teams Focus is in talks with now have books of business in the $800-million-to-$1-billion range.

But there may also be room for productive individual advisors at Focus' affiliates -- provided that they're culturally compatible with the firm, adds Gill.

Looking ahead

Focus -- which came out of the gate about 20 months ago with four wealth-management affiliates and a $35-million private-equity infusion from Summit Partners -- acquires anywhere from 40% to 60% of its affiliates. Typically these are high-growth, fee-based investment advisories that take a strict fiduciary approach to wealth management . Acquisition payments are a combination of cash and equity in the parent company, with additional earn-outs kicking in over time.

From a practice-management perspective, Focus' affiliates run their own businesses. Focus offers support around referrals, marketing, public relations, intra-firm networking, technology and human resources, but it doesn't force its partners to accept its help in these areas. It leaves its affiliates wholly to their own devices when it comes to investment products.

Though Focus likes to stress that it isn't an exit vehicle for senior partners -- it usually targets firms whose principals plan to stick around for a while -- Gill says that the company's ability to help finance buy-ins to individual partner firms by junior partners sets it apart from other players in the RIA space. "In 10 or 15 years you're going to see a problem develop junior partners the resources to buy out the senior partners. could finance with debt, but paying that off over 20 years is really going to compress profits for them."

Focus' solution is to "spot" junior partners as they buy out senior members of their firms over time, and do it under terms that aren't too onerous. That way, Focus covers the senior partners' exits, provides for next-generation leadership at the affiliate level and keeps the firm in the Focus fold.

Seven, eleven

In addition to Gill, Focus has also hired Bettina Eckerle as its general counsel. She joins Focus from Longmont, Colo.-based DigitalGlobe, an earth-imaging company.

Focus' founder and CEO Ruediger Adolf says the holding company "has reached a level where these additional roles" -- that is, Eckerle as head of legal affairs and Gill as broker-transition specialist -- "are necessary to support our rapid growth appropriately."

These appointments bring Focus' professional staff to seven.

New York-based Focus recently made Hermitage, Pa.-based JFS Wealth Advisors its eleventh "partner firm." Its other affiliates are Richmond, Va.-based Capital Advisory Group, Providence, R.I.-based StrategicPoint, Cupertino, Calif.-based Founders Financial Network, New York-based Geller Group , San Diego-based HoyleCohen, Westport, Conn.-based Resnick Investment Advisors, St. Louis, Mo.-based Buckingham Family of Financial Services, Wakefield, Mass.-based Sentinel Benefits Group and Corte Madera, Calif.-based Quantum Capital Management and Irvine, Calif.-based Benefit Funding Services Group.

Altogether Focus' affiliates manage or supervise more than $21 billion in assets for high-net-worth individuals and families as well as middle-market employers and institutions. -FWR

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