Subscribe

Raymond James adds $580 million Wells Fargo team

$580 million

The four advisers will operate as Heberle Helm Ferguson Group in Monroeville, Pennsylvania.

Raymond James announced that a four-adviser team that had managed $580 million at Wells Fargo is joining Raymond James & Associates, the firm’s employee adviser channel, in Monroeville, Pennsylvania.

Brian Heberle, Dustin Helm, John Ferguson and Craig Cacini will operate as Heberle Helm Ferguson Group of Raymond James. They are joined in the move by two staffers, Leslie J. Hewitt and Jeffrey Weaverling.

“We were attracted to Raymond James by the technology and financial planning tools that will enable us to expand upon and enhance the value we provide to our clients,” Heberle said.

Heberle has 26 years of experience, according to his BrokerCheck record, having started at Wheat First Securities in 1995. He had been affiliated with Wells Fargo since 2009.

Helm has 29 years of experience. He started at Lehman Brothers in 1993 and had been affiliated with Wells Fargo since 2009.

Ferguson has 36 years of experience, beginning at First Jersey Securities in 1986, and was affiliated with Wells Fargo since 2009.

Craig Cacini has seven years of experience, all at Wells Fargo.

Related Topics: , ,

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Fiduciary commitment should be table stakes

Speed and nature of new DOL rule has left many in the insurance industry fuming, losing sight of the impact on ordinary investors

Cresset adds two J.P. Morgan teams overseeing $5B

The two groups were among several former First Republic teams whose exits from J.P. Morgan were announced Friday.

Ascensus buying Vanguard small-business retirement offerings

The company is acquiring the Individual 401(k), Multi-SEP, and SIMPLE IRA plan businesses from Vanguard.

Raymond James adds advisor from Wells Fargo

South Florida-based advisor had been overseeing $105 million in client assets at Wells.

Dimon says AI could be ‘transformational’

JPMorgan Chase's CEO says AI's impact on the economy could equal that of the steam engine.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print