Wells Fargo Advisors to sell new bitcoin ETFs

Wells Fargo Advisors to sell new bitcoin ETFs
'We’ve made significant investments the last few years across our franchise to better serve our customers, and help drive growth,' says Wells CFO Mike Santomassimo.
JAN 12, 2024

Wells Fargo Advisors, with close to 12,000 financial advisors across various business channels, said Friday that it was selling new spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds, but only when a customer asked for the security in a non-solicited trade or without any prompting from a salesperson.

"Spot bitcoin ETFs are available for unsolicited purchases through an advisor with Wells Fargo Advisors or through our online WellsTrade platform," a company spokesperson wrote in an email Friday morning.

The broad retail brokerage industry, with 320,000 or so financial advisors selling and recommending products, is in the process of deciding whether or not to sell the new bitcoin ETFs, almost a dozen of which were given the green light Wednesday by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Bloomberg News reported that a Vanguard Group Inc. spokesperson said its brokerage arm will not offer trading in ETFs that invest directly in bitcoin.

Bank of America Corp.’s Merrill Edge is still evaluating whether to provide that service, and UBS Group is offering a number of the bitcoin ETFs to some of its wealth management clients with brokerage accounts who approach it on an unsolicited basis, according to Bloomberg's report.

Meanwhile, Wells Fargo Advisors said Friday in its fourth-quarter earnings presentation that it intends to deliver a number of additions and tweaks to its broker desktop and other similar services to its platform for financial advisors.

Those included: the rollout to all advisor platforms of Advisory Gateway, a new front end allowing advisors to better serve clients; a streamlined client and advisor experience to transact digitally for alternative investments; a unified managed account platform enabling advisors to model and move assets across investment strategies; and a streamlined account opening and money movement experience to reduce paper and time for advisors and clients.

"Some of the tech changes have been positive," said one Wells Fargo financial advisor, who asked to speak anonymously.

Meanwhile, the bank's Wealth and Investment Management group, which includes Wells Fargo Advisors, reported total revenue of $3.66 billion for the quarter ending December 31, reflecting lower net interest income driven by lower deposit balances as customers continued to reallocate cash into higher-yielding alternatives. Net income for the quarter at the wealth group was $491 million, a decline of 31% when compared to the same quarter last year.

Since 2019, Wells Fargo & Co., the giant bank, has been overhauling its wealth management business, jettisoning noncore operations like its overseas client operations and rebranding its private bank, and focusing on overhauling management and better retaining its private client wealth management advisors.

Many of those advisors have been eying its independent arm, Wells Fargo Advisors Financial Network, or FiNet, where they work with greater autonomy and receive a more generous percentage of the revenue, but also shoulder more of the expenses as independent contractors.

"We’ve made significant investments the last few years across our franchise to better serve our customers and help drive growth," Mike Santomassimo, the bank's chef financial officer, said on a conference call Friday morning with investors. "We expect the revenue growth that these investments should generate in businesses like corporate investment banking and wealth and investment management will help fund additional investments." 

Increase investment returns by avoiding autocratic countries

Latest News

RIA moves: True North adds $353M California RIA as SageView grows North Carolina presence
RIA moves: True North adds $353M California RIA as SageView grows North Carolina presence

Plus, a $400 million Commonwealth team departs to launch an independent family-run RIA in the East Bay area.

Blue Owl Capital, Voya strike private market partnership for retirement plans
Blue Owl Capital, Voya strike private market partnership for retirement plans

The collaboration will focus initially on strategies within collective investment trusts in DC plans, with plans to expand to other retirement-focused private investment solutions.

Top Commonwealth advisor to recruiters: Stop with the cold calls already!
Top Commonwealth advisor to recruiters: Stop with the cold calls already!

“I respectfully request that all recruiters for other BDs discontinue their efforts to contact me," writes Thomas Bartholomew.

Why AI notetakers alone can't fix 'broken' advisor meetings
Why AI notetakers alone can't fix 'broken' advisor meetings

Wealth tech veteran Aaron Klein speaks out against the "misery" of client meetings, why advisors' communication skills don't always help, and AI's potential to make bad meetings "100 times better."

Morgan Stanley, Goldman, Wells Fargo to settle Archegos trades lawsuit
Morgan Stanley, Goldman, Wells Fargo to settle Archegos trades lawsuit

The proposed $120 million settlement would close the book on a legal challenge alleging the Wall Street banks failed to disclose crucial conflicts of interest to investors.

SPONSORED How advisors can build for high-net-worth complexity

Orion's Tom Wilson on delivering coordinated, high-touch service in a world where returns alone no longer set you apart.

SPONSORED RILAs bring stability, growth during volatile markets

Barely a decade old, registered index-linked annuities have quickly surged in popularity, thanks to their unique blend of protection and growth potential—an appealing option for investors looking to chart a steadier course through today's choppy market waters, says Myles Lambert, Brighthouse Financial.