LPL Financial said on Thursday it has surpassed its target for retaining advisers from Waddell & Reed Financial Inc. and has commitments from advisers with 80% of client assets to move to LPL when the acquisition closes later this year.
In December, LPL said it was buying the wealth management business of Waddell & Reed as part of a larger, complicated transaction. The price tag was $300 million for 70% Waddell & Reed's 921 advisers, who work with close to $70 billion in client assets.
But broker-dealer mergers are always fraught with tension as management and back-office employees hustle to hang onto as many of the desirable advisers from the acquired firm as possible. Competition is fierce, and rival broker-dealers routinely dangle promises of better service and more lucrative recruiting bonuses.
Just days after it announced the deal, LPL rolled out its stay bonus package with advisers being offered between 30% and 50% of their prior year’s fees and commissions to sign on, according to several industry sources.
"We announced the transaction in early December and at that point we began our retention efforts associated with the Waddell & Reed advisers," said LPL's CEO Dan Arnold on a call with analysts Thursday afternoon to discuss last quarter's earnings. "We have been at that largely six weeks. And so what you are seeing is that 80% retention rate has more to do with just the timing and where we are in the overall process than anything else."
Meanwhile, LPL reported $903 billion in client assets at the end of 2020, a year-over-year increase of 18%. Its advisor assets at the end of December reached $461 billion, or more than half its total, an increase of 26% when compared to the end of 2019.
The company reported adviser headcount was 17,287, up 119 from the end of September and 823 year-over-year.
Relationships are key to our business but advisors are often slow to engage in specific activities designed to foster them.
Whichever path you go down, act now while you're still in control.
Pro-bitcoin professionals, however, say the cryptocurrency has ushered in change.
“LPL has evolved significantly over the last decade and still wants to scale up,” says one industry executive.
Survey findings from the Nationwide Retirement Institute offers pearls of planning wisdom from 60- to 65-year-olds, as well as insights into concerns.
Streamline your outreach with Aidentified's AI-driven solutions
This season’s market volatility: Positioning for rate relief, income growth and the AI rebound