To hear
Leon LaBrecque talk about how to prepare a financial advisory firm for an economic downturn, one might assume he is actually rooting for such a scenario.
Truth is, the chief growth officer at
Sequoia Financial Group has learned through decades of experience that recessions and market pullbacks present opportunities for those prepared to take advantage.
"I look at recessions as opportunities to kill the competition," he said.
Just as he advises his clients to have enough
"dry powder" to get through an
economic slowdown, Mr. LaBrecque has learned to prepare his business not only to weather, but to make the most of recessions.
"If you own an advisory firm, my advice is to sit down with your chief financial officer or CPA and do a gut check on the business to figure out what you need in terms of equipment and employees," he said. "Get some credit lined up now when you don't need it and have some dry powder to hire great employees or to make an acquisition."
Thinking of growth and expansion at a time when the economy is slowing and the stock market pulling back, is what often separates the winners from losers.
'hunkering down'
Ken Van Leeuwen, founder and managing director of
Van Leeuwen & Co., said his decades of experience have taught him to shore up the foundation of his firm leading into downturns.
"We're going through all our expense categories and really hunkering down on our cash needs," he said. "We're looking at all of our resource costs, and if there's something we're not using to its fullest extent, we're putting that on a shelf for a while."
Mr. Van Leeuwen said his firm has a goal of reducing expenses by 10% by year end, which is similar to the strategy that helped him pull through the
Great Recession of 2009 following the financial crisis and not have to lay off any employees.
Running a tight ship can mean the difference between success and failure during a recessionary period.
"You should be stress-testing your P&L and balance sheet and you should know it cold," said David Canter, head of the RIA segment at Fidelity Clearing & Custody Solutions.
"When your revenue erodes 20%, 30% or 40%, you need to understand how to react to that type of situation," he said, explaining that being armed and aware heading into a downturn can translate to strength.
"Times of economic downturn and stress are great times to get new clients," Mr. Canter said. "This is when people who have tried to muddle through on their own start looking for help, so don't overlook prospecting for new clients in a recession."
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Jeffrey Powell, managing partner and chief investment officer at Polaris Greystone Financial Group, has worked in financial services for nearly 30 years and he said he plans to follow the same business strategy that got him through the financial crisis.
"I take full responsibility to protect the people who work for me, so I have to build in budget safeguards so I'm not laying off our newest employees who came to us and entrusted their livelihood to us," he said. "You've got to be the bank; you have to provide the buffer. As a firm, we grew in 2008 because we marketed our way through it."
beyond survival
The idea is to not just survive, but thrive during down market cycles, according to Mark DiOrio, chief investment officer at Brookstone Capital Management and a 20-year veteran of financial services.
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"Don't duck away from the markets or your clients, which happens a lot because nobody has good answers when everything is going down," he said. "Where you win business is being out there."