Wells Fargo Advisors
names David Kowach new head
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[August 12, 2016]
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Wells Fargo &
Company named David Kowach to head its retail wealth management
division, Wells Fargo Advisors, the nation's third-largest brokerage, on
Thursday.
Kowach was promoted from his job overseeing roughly 11,000 brokers
in the bank's Private Client Group. He succeeds Mary Mack, who left
Wells Fargo Advisors last month to head up Wells' community banking
business.
Kowach, a 25-year veteran of the financial services industry, was
focused on recruitment, retention, growth and sales during the more
than four years he led the Private Client Group, Wells Fargo's
largest wealth management business. In his new role, he will takes
on managing an additional 4,000 bankers under the Wells Fargo
Advisors umbrella.
Kowach enters the role at a time when the full-service brokerage
industry is undergoing major regulatory and technology changes.
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A new Department of Labor rule that takes effect in April 2017 has
sparked an industry overhaul as wealth management businesses big and
small scramble to decipher which products and business practices
meet the rule's fiduciary standard.
The cost of compliance industry-wide is expected to reach as much as
$31.5 billion in the next decade, which will result in higher costs
to serve mass affluent investors who make up a large portion of the
St. Louis-based brokerage's clientele.
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A Wells Fargo branch is seen in the Chicago suburb of Evanston,
Illinois, February 10, 2015. REUTERS/Jim Young
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Wells Fargo Advisors is working to roll out a pilot version of a
robo adviser in first half of 2017 in order to have more options for
clients who want to pay lower fees or prefer digital options.
Wells also made a play last year to target wealthier clients by recruiting more
than 100 private bankers from Credit Suisse Group AG when the Swiss bank sold
off its U.S.-based brokerage business, many of whom took jobs in Kowach's old
division.
Wells Fargo, which said it would name Kowach's successor shortly, did not make
him available for interviews.
(Reporting By Elizabeth Dilts; Editing by Jonathan Oatis and Bill Trott)
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