Sallie Krawcheck, head of Bank of America Corp. (BAC)'s wealth management division, told Merrill Lynch financial advisers that a new “garden leave” policy doesn't apply to them, said two people with knowledge of the matter.
Concern had spread among some of Merrill Lynch's 15,500 advisers that they would face curbs like those imposed by the bank's U.S. Trust unit, said the people. The policy bans associates who leave from soliciting the firm's clients for eight months, starting with a two-month garden leave. The term refers to workers who are ordered to stay home after they give notice, leaving them little to do other than gardening.
“Contrary to press and recruiter speculation, there are no changes coming from Merrill Lynch Financial Advisors on any type of garden leave,” Krawcheck wrote in a Feb. 25 memo, according to the people, who asked not to be identified because the matter isn't public. “Please put that one in the circular file.”
Bank of America, seeking to stem defections and protect client accounts, asked U.S. Trust employees to sign agreements last month extending notice periods to 60 days from as little as two weeks, according to a copy of the document. The advisers face legal action if they approach the Charlotte, North Carolina-based firm's clients during the two-month garden leave, and for six months after they move on.
Bonus Payments.
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The bank also told U.S. Trust workers that they weren't covered by the so-called broker
protocol, a voluntary recruiting agreement that allows advisers to solicit clients after changing employers without getting sued. Merrill Lynch, a co-creator of the protocol, is still subject to the agreement.
(View a list of the firms in the protocol for broker recruiting.
The U.S. Trust unit is a private bank catering to wealthy clients, with about 4,000 employees. Workers received the garden leave notice ahead of 2010 bonus payments and were told their continued employment hinged on agreeing to the new policy.
“She wants to make it completely clear to Merrill Lynch advisers that she wasn't talking about them” regarding the U.S. Trust resignation policy, said Richard Lipstein, a managing director at headhunter Boyden Global Executive Search Ltd. “You want to keep as many of your people happy as possible.”
Krawcheck's message to Merrill Lynch advisers came at the end of an e-mail entitled “Notes from the Road,” part of a series of letters typically detailing how clients are responding to the firm's strategies. Registered Rep, an industry trade journal, reported on the e-mail this week.
U.S. Trust
U.S. Trust managers including unit head Keith Banks made the policy changes after they observed that some newly hired advisers had garden leave provisions from former employers, said Susan Thomson, a Bank of America spokeswoman. The change expanded an existing policy to include more workers, she said.
The wealth management division, cobbled together with the 2009 acquisition of Merrill Lynch & Co. and the 2006 acquisition of U.S. Trust, has about 20,000 brokers, advisers and bankers and $2.2 trillion of client balances as of Dec. 31, according to a presentation.
The business generated net income of $1.35 billion last year, a 22 percent decline from 2009, on higher expenses, while revenue climbed 3.3 percent to $16.7 billion. Krawcheck, 46, has a long-term target of 6 percent to 7 percent annual revenue growth, she told investors this week during an investor conference held in New York. Bank of America is the largest U.S. lender by assets and deposits.
--Bloomberg