Dynasty's Harris Baltch: LPL's Commonwealth deal is a 'melting ice cube tray'

Dynasty's Harris Baltch: LPL's Commonwealth deal is a 'melting ice cube tray'
Harris Baltch, co-head of investment banking at Dynasty Financial Partners
The $2.7 billion acquisition raises eyebrows over its financial structure—and whether advisors will stick around long enough to justify it.
APR 11, 2025

LPL Financial’s $2.7 billion acquisition for Commonwealth is raising questions about the deal’s valuation math, and whether the advisors that make it worth that price will actually stay.

The traditional broker-dealer model sees advisors operate as independent entrepreneurs, using the firm’s platform for custody, clearing, and oversight. In an interview with Investment News, Dynasty Financial Partners’ co-head of investment banking Harris Baltch explains that the broker-deal model produces low margins in which scale and cost synergies become critical to LPL’s $2.7 billion cost for Commonwealth.

“It's a big headline number, but that deal is really in some ways a melting ice cube tray,” was the metaphor Baltch used to suggest diminishing value. “If you look at the financials of LPL or Commonwealth … these types of businesses are very low margin in terms of their profitability,” he said. “Positioning the deal as a multiple that is below the level you trade, regardless of the financing mix you're going to utilize to take down the deal, was really important in that trade.”

LPL’s investor presentation says the $2.7 billion purchase price is based on a multiple of eight times run-rate EBITDA — a figure Harris noted includes “a couple hundred million dollars of synergies, which may or may not be realized.”

“I think the bankers were incredibly prescriptive in how they designed the press release and the investor day presentation, because LPL itself just trades at forward EBITDA in high single digits,” Baltch said. “So you run the risk of creating a commentary to the public market that if your multiple you did the deal is higher than the multiple in which you actually trade, then it's going to be presented as dilutive. And therefore you run the risk of analysts asking more questions than management actually cares to answer.”

LPL has said it is targeting to onboard 90% of the $2,900 advisors from Commonwealth, who collectively manage $285 billion in assets. Firms such as Raymond James, Kestra and Cetera are pursuing Commonwealth’s advisors, with Baltch expecting an “inevitable” crowd of Commonwealth advisors to ditch LPL. He referenced similar large-scale advisor exits during First Republic’s sale to JPMorgan and Silicon Valley Bank’s move to First Citizens

“LPL is coming out with retention packages to incent the advisor base of Commonwealth to stay, but it wouldn't surprise me if some of the more sophisticated advisors start to re-evaluate their alternatives as a result of a deal like this,” said Baltch. “Because there are limiting incentives, they may not like the full infrastructure, they may want more choice. And so it wouldn't surprise me if you see a lot of money in motion—whether it's firms that stand up their own RIA or move elsewhere as a result of a big deal like this, it's almost inevitable.”

Latest News

New RIA aggregator United Wealth Partners gives majority ownership to advisors
New RIA aggregator United Wealth Partners gives majority ownership to advisors

RIA industry veterans Jay Hummel and John Phoenix have launched a firm which offers 60% equity to advisors with plans to grow to over $5 billion in AUM, before selling to an institutional investor within five years.

Wealth team launches KRM Investment Counsel
Wealth team launches KRM Investment Counsel

A high-net-worth advisory group leaves Wintrust to embrace independence.

Modern Wealth marks two-year milestone with 16th acquisition
Modern Wealth marks two-year milestone with 16th acquisition

Independent firm joins expanding national advisory network.

Shift toward fee-based models accelerates among independent advisors
Shift toward fee-based models accelerates among independent advisors

New research reveals shifting strategies in financial guidance.

EP Wealth Advisors acquires NBS Financial Services
EP Wealth Advisors acquires NBS Financial Services

Westlake Village office strengthened by acquisition.

SPONSORED Compliance in real time: Technology's expanding role in RIA oversight

RIAs face rising regulatory pressure in 2025. Forward-looking firms are responding with embedded technology, not more paperwork.

SPONSORED Advisory firms confront crossroads amid historic wealth transfer

As inheritances are set to reshape client portfolios and next-gen heirs demand digital-first experiences, firms are retooling their wealth tech stacks and succession models in real time.