Big U.S. brokerages chase
the rich in departure from retail roots
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[July 29, 2016]
By Olivia Oran and Elizabeth Dilts
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Big U.S.
brokerages are redefining the term "wealthy" in their pursuit of
ever-richer clients to prop up margins eroded by historically low
interest rates and growing regulatory burdens.
Brokerages owned by Morgan Stanley, Bank of America Corp and Wells
Fargo & Co have been using new incentives and penalties to push
financial advisers to bring in more multi-millionaires and whittle
down smaller accounts.
Clients with less than $750,000 are now considered "mass affluent,"
meaning they may not get the same service as top customers because
their financial needs are simpler, said Kendra Thompson, who heads
the wealth and asset management division of consulting firm
Accenture. Industry sources say that figure was closer to $250,000
before the financial crisis.
In a departure from their decades-long commitment to all investors,
brokerages are increasingly referring customers with as much as a
couple hundred thousand dollars to call centers and digital advice
platforms, executives and advisers say.
Rich investors not only have more assets to manage. They can also
bring additional business such as estate planning or lending against
fine art, they say.
Serving those clients "used to be about prestige, now it's about
margins," said Jane Swan, a managing director who focuses on the
wealth management industry at recruiting firm Sheffield Haworth.
The gradual shift toward clients with millions rather than hundreds
of thousands to invest has accelerated in recent months, in part
because of new rules on financial advisory services, executives,
advisers and industry consultants say.
"All of these firms are mid-step in major transformations," said
Accenture's Thompson.
Announced in April and due to be phased in by 2018, the Labor
Department's fiduciary rule will explicitly require advisers to act
in clients' "best interest." The current standard obliges them to
offer products that are "suitable."
Industry groups are pushing back, arguing the new rule brings
disclosure requirements, paperwork, product restrictions and legal
liabilities that will make small accounts unprofitable.
In the meantime, brokerages are getting ready for its
implementation, in part by shifting their business up the wealth
scale.
"Somebody with $32,000 to invest does not need a Morgan Stanley
financial adviser to help them do it," the bank's chief executive,
James Gorman, told a conference last month.
'SWEET SPOT'
Morgan Stanley's wealth business has grown assets from households
with over $10 million to invest by 88 percent since 2009, Gorman
said at a financial services conference in June, describing
millionaire clients as a "sweet spot" in the bank's business.
While overall client assets under Morgan Stanley's management rose
$515 billion since 2009, those coming from households with less than
$100,000 fell by 27 percent. The firm has reduced financial
advisers' commissions for clients under that threshold, encouraging
brokers to send them to a call center instead.
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Images and market data is displayed on digital display signs on the
exterior of the headquarters of Morgan Stanley at 1585 Broadway in
New York's Times Square, September 16, 2015. REUTERS/Mike Segar
Similarly, Merrill Lynch has stopped paying brokers on accounts with
less than $250,000 in assets. Wells Fargo, meanwhile, has begun
offering bonuses to advisers when at least three-quarters of their
clients have $250,000 or more in their accounts. Wells also
recruited over 100 private bankers from Credit Suisse AG last year
to bolster its high net worth business.
As a result of the growing focus on wealthy clients, financial
advisers are raking in more in revenue. They brought in $695,000 on
average last year, up 6 percent from 2014 and 53 percent more than
in 2009, according to investment data firm PriceMetrix. (GRAPHIC:
http://tmsnrt.rs/2aji1XT)
In fact, advisers at Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch and UBS Group
AG's wealth management business in the Americas have already come
close to or exceeded the $1 million mark for annual revenue.
"Unless you have a couple hundred thousand at the branch, they don't
want to give you the time of day," said Bryan Frank, who was once a
brokerage customer but shifted his money to the digital platform
Betterment in 2012.
Analysts expect the trend to continue, but warn that brokerages'
pursuit of rich clientele comes with its own risks.
They face fierce competition not just from their peers, but also
elite private banks, putting pressure on fees.
Big brokerages must also be careful not to alienate those just below
the top wealth bracket, who produce leaner margins, but represent a
bigger chunk of the business, analysts say.
If neglected, customers like Frank can drift to digital platforms,
or robo advisers, such as Betterment or Wealthfront, which use
algorithms and have low fees and tiny account minimums.
Most big brokerages are developing their own robo platforms, or
planning to partner with one. Bank of America, Morgan Stanley, UBS
and Wells Fargo also have call centers that can serve small clients,
hoping it will help keep them while allowing advisers to focus on
big accounts.
"People with certain levels of wealth have issues that are very
distinct," said Brad DeHond, a Morgan Stanley financial adviser in
Chicago who focuses on clients with more than $20 million in assets.
"It isn't a matter of just having some extra zeroes at the end of
their statements."
(Reporting by Olivia Oran and Elizabeth Dilts; Editing by Lauren
Tara LaCapra and Tomasz Janowski)
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