LPL's Atria deal poses complexities: Report

LPL's Atria deal poses complexities: Report
Atria's financial advisors might be getting M&A 'whiplash,' one recruiter notes.
APR 10, 2024

Bringing aboard 2,400 financial advisors from seven separate broker-dealers, as LPL Financial is doing with its acquisition of Atria Wealth Solutions Inc.'s network of firms, will be "complex," even for a firm with LPL's long experience with acquisitions, according to a March research note from analysts at JPMorgan Chase & Co.

In February, LPL Financial Holdings Inc. said it was buying the private equity broker-dealer aggregator Atria for $805 million, with up to another $230 million based on retention, or keeping advisors in their place. Atria's advisors work with about $100 billion in assets, and LPL is aiming to complete the integration of the seven Atria broker-dealers by mid-2025.

"Preparations for onboarding/integration are underway," according to the JPMorgan note. "While LPL does not expect to complete the full integration until mid-2025, the integration of seven separate broker-dealers will be complex even for an experienced LPL team that has a streamlined process to onboard advisor teams and enterprises within the banks/credit union segment."

Atria was backed by private equity investors Lee Equity Partners, and Morgan Stanley veteran Doug Ketterer was its CEO. In roughly seven years, Atria bought two broker-dealers that focused on supporting banks and credit unions — CUSO Financial Services and Sorrento Pacific Financial – and five that work with independent financial advisors — Cadaret Grant, NEXT Financial Group, SCF Securities, Western International Securities, and Grove Point Financial.

LPL Financial is one of the most prolific dealmakers in the wealth management industry, and it has been buying up broker-dealers at a prodigious rate since 2005, when it sold a majority stake to two private equity managers. But hanging onto the financial advisors from the firms LPL has acquired has not always been easy. Its 2017 acquisition of the National Planning Holdings network of financial advisors resulted in LPL gaining about 70% of those advisors' fees and commissions, a disappointing result for the firm, which is currently home to more than 21,000 financial advisors.

"LPL expects to retain about 80% of assets from Atria, or $80 billion, which falls within range for retention rates of select transactions such as NPH, 65-70%, and [Waddell & Reed Financial Inc.], 95% or more," according to the JPMorgan Chase note. "Ultimately, LPL continues to expect a run-rate [earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization] contribution of about $140 million from the Atria acquisition when fully ramped."

An LPL spokesperson did not return calls Wednesday to comment.

Industry recruiters underscored the complexities that LPL faces in moving or integrating seven broker-dealers at the same time.

"It's seven different cultures, management teams, custodians, with common technology and ownership," said Louis Diamond of Diamond Consultants, an industry recruiter. "This is much more complex than Osaic buying Lincoln Financial.

"Remember, all the Atria broker-dealers have already been bought recently," Diamond said. "These are financial advisors affiliated with much smaller, boutique-type firms, and it's one deal after another. The advisors might be getting whiplash, but overall LPL is a positive on scale and resources for them."

"Moving to a new firm is a lot of work for financial advisors, and it's tricky," said Jodie Papike, CEO of Cross-Search, a recruiting firm. "They have to make sure they're comfortable with the new business, the products offered, the third-party money managers."

High-quality bonds a bargain compared to stocks, says Schroders portfolio manager

Latest News

Citigroup continues strategic investment banking talent raid on JPMorgan
Citigroup continues strategic investment banking talent raid on JPMorgan

Since Vis Raghavan took over the reins last year, several have jumped ship.

Slow is smooth, smooth is fast
Slow is smooth, smooth is fast

Chasing productivity is one thing, but when you're cutting corners, missing details, and making mistakes, it's time to take a step back.

Edward Jones layoffs about to hit employees, home office staff
Edward Jones layoffs about to hit employees, home office staff

It is not clear how many employees will be affected, but none of the private partnership's 20,000 financial advisors will see their jobs at risk.

CFP Board hails record July exam turnout with 3,214 test-takers
CFP Board hails record July exam turnout with 3,214 test-takers

The historic summer sitting saw a roughly two-thirds pass rate, with most CFP hopefuls falling in the under-40 age group.

Founder of water vending machine company, portfolio manager, charged in $275M Ponzi scheme
Founder of water vending machine company, portfolio manager, charged in $275M Ponzi scheme

"The greed and deception of this Ponzi scheme has resulted in the same way they have throughout history," said Daniel Brubaker, U.S. Postal Inspection Service inspector in charge.

SPONSORED Delivering family office services critical to advisor success

Stan Gregor, Chairman & CEO of Summit Financial Holdings, explores how RIAs can meet growing demand for family office-style services among mass affluent clients through tax-first planning, technology, and collaboration—positioning firms for long-term success

SPONSORED Passing on more than wealth: why purpose should be part of every estate plan

Chris Vizzi, Co-Founder & Partner of South Coast Investment Advisors, LLC, shares how 2025 estate tax changes—$13.99M per person—offer more than tax savings. Learn how to pass on purpose, values, and vision to unite generations and give wealth lasting meaning