Alera Group Wealth Services has added $1.5 billion in client assets with the acquisition of Johnson Brunetti, a retirement and investment specialist with eight East Coast offices. The firm also oversees another $1.5 billion in annuity and insurance assets.
This is the third deal since June for the wealth management division of private equity-backed Alera Group, which led its wealth management division into the acquisition business in June when it quadrupled its assets by buying $3.5 billion Wharton Business Group.
That deal was followed by the purchase in July of DFG 401(k) Advisors, a Phoenix-based retirement plan firm advising on $500 million.
The latest acquisition by Deerfield, Illinois-based Alera puts it on track to follow an aggressive commitment to inorganic growth. In June, Alera’s executive vice president and wealth services practice leader Tina Hohman said the goal was to “be at about $10 billion under management in the next year or so.”
While the wealth management division is new to the RIA acquisition game, the parent company is well seasoned.
Alera was formed in 2017 when 24 employee benefit firms combined with the backing of private equity firm Genstar Capital. Since then, Alera Group has completed more than 150 deals across its other three divisions.
With its employee benefits, property and casualty, and retirement plan services divisions gaining scale and a national footprint, the company’s next target for growth is wealth services.
Regarding the latest deal, Hohman said, “Johnson Brunetti has a distinctive model and compelling growth story. We’re not looking for RIAs that fit some cookie-cutter model. We’re looking to grow by embracing a wide range of niches that complement each other.”
Based in Wethersfield, Connecticut, Johnson Brunetti was founded in 2005 and has become a well-known brand in Connecticut and the Northeast region through its educational programs and sponsorship agreements, including its role as official wealth management partner of the UConn Huskies. Johnson Brunetti focuses on retirement and investment services for a mass affluent audience.
“Our education-based model has helped us serve thousands of clients, and now as part of Alera Group Wealth Services we anticipate reaching many more, both in our current footprint and elsewhere,” managing partner Joel Johnson said in a statement. “We anticipate leveraging Alera Group’s expertise in mergers and acquisitions in addition to back-office, technology and centralized investment services.”
As Goldman Sachs tightens rules on event contract trading, RIAs and hedge funds are weighing their own policies
Meanwhile, Wells Fargo lures defectors from UBS and JPMorgan to expand in the East Coast, while another bank aligns itself with RayJay's financial institutions division.
New research suggests AI-exposed workers over 55 are leaving jobs more often than before ChatGPT’s rise.
Agentic AI is landing in trading, treasury and wealth management roles across major banks, with advisory functions as the next frontier.
Wells Fargo affiliate and women-focused wealth firm both promote leadership as they scale advisor support.
Northern Trust’s Ken Lassner shows advisors how to convert volatility into after-tax portfolio gains
Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income