The beefing up of Raymond James' RIA business continues as affiliated RIAs will have access to the firm's alternative investment platform beginning in September.
In an effort to provide a broader array of alternative investments to its advisers, RIAs affiliated with Raymond James Financial Inc.'s investment adviser division will be able to access the firm's alternative investment platform beginning in September.
The Raymond James Alternative Investment Group offers research and support for private equity, private real estate, hedge funds, managed futures and alternative mutual funds, the company said.
It has 22 professionals reviewing products targeted at higher-net-worth clients, Raymond James said in a release issued today.
Pricing on a “very large percentage” of alternative products had to be tweaked for RIAs, said Bill Van Law, the division's president.
“Most of the [alternative] products were designed for the broker-dealer world, not the advisory world,” he said. “What we've done is taken an excess amount of fees and commissions, and paid the balance back to clients. So we've created a structure that works well for advisers.”
“On the surface, it looks great,” said Scott Stoltenberg, a partner at Quad Cities Investment Group LLC, which holds assets in custody at the division. “The more things you can do at one [custodian], the better,” he said.
Raymond James held a conference call yesterday with its registered investment advisers to discuss the announcement.
Adding alternatives is the latest effort by Raymond James to beef up its RIA platform. The firm said it has recently introduced more support services for RIAs, covering areas such as practice management, marketing and succession planning.
In July, the investment adviser division added four new regional directors to help recruit and coach existing practices. Last fall, it cut equity ticket charges and waived some individual retirement account fees paid by clients of its RIA firms in an effort to better compete with the larger RIA custodians.
The division, which serves about 100 RIA firms with $8 billion in assets, has long been overshadowed by Raymond James' much larger employee and independent-contractor channels.
In early 2012, the firm reorganized the custody unit as a stand-alone division, separating it from its independent-contractor business. Mr. Van Law, then the head of recruiting at the company's independent broker-dealer, Raymond James Financial Services Inc., was put in charge of the division.
Raymond James plans a media campaign beginning next month to get the word out about its RIA custody service, as well as options for hybrid advisers.