Office address: 501 Commerce Street, Nashville, TN 37203
Website: alliancebernstein.com
Year established: 1967
Company type: financial services
Employees: 4,300+ (global)
Expertise: asset management, private wealth management, investment planning, risk-management services, equity strategies, fixed-income strategies, alternatives, multi-asset solutions, global investment research
Parent company: Equitable Holdings, Inc. (majority owner)
Key people: Seth Bernstein (CEO), Onur Erzan (global head), Mark Manley (general counsel), Tom Simeone (CFO), Karl Sprules (COO), Cathy Spencer (chief people officer), Andrew Chin (chief AI officer)
Financing status: shareholder-owned company
AllianceBernstein (AB) is a global investment firm based in Nashville, serving institutions, advisors, and individuals. It provides asset management, private wealth management, alternatives, and research-driven investment solutions worldwide. The company oversees about $785 billion AUM, with over 4,300 employees in 52 offices across 26 countries.
In 1967, Sanford C. Bernstein launched a namesake private securities firm for discerning investors. His contrarian research approach helped the firm grow into a leading independent investment manager. Bernstein soon became closely associated with deep institutional research that challenged conventional market thinking.
In 1971, Alliance Capital was formed by combining two established investment advisory businesses. Leaders across both sides believed distinctive research and inventive strategies could improve client outcomes.
Their capabilities fully came together in 2000, when Alliance and Bernstein formally merged. The combined firm later established a new global headquarters in downtown Nashville in 2021 to signal its renewal.
By 2024, AB's Bernstein Private Wealth Management oversaw almost $38 billion for ultra-wealthy clients worldwide. Around 1,290 individuals and families, averaging 12-year relationships, relied on the firm's expanded platform. AllianceBernstein rebranded its advisors, strengthened leadership, and built a dedicated center for complex wealth.
Another growth engine emerged as AllianceBernstein built dedicated coverage for registered investment advisors in 2023. Since launch, RIA sales rose 113 percent by 2024 and 35 percent in 2025. Together, these moves mark a new growth phase focused on advisors and wealthy families.
AB offers research-driven investment solutions that aim to improve returns while managing downside risk:
AllianceBernstein also has the AB Advisor Institute, which provides practice-management coaching and tools for advisors. It is built to help advisors grow their businesses, strengthen client relationships, and use the firm's insights more effectively.
AllianceBernstein states that its purpose is to pursue insight and opportunity. And according to the firm, these values shape how people work together:
AllianceBernstein also says that its employee benefits are built to support employee growth and overall financial and family stability. These benefits include:
Along with these benefits, AllianceBernstein encourages its employees to support various communities. In 2024, the firm set a goal to expand its global giving and create more year-round volunteer opportunities.
Seth Bernstein is president and CEO of AllianceBernstein, a role he has held since 2017. Before joining the firm, he spent 32 years at JPMorgan Chase in various leadership roles. Bernstein earned a BA in political science and economics from Haverford College.
AllianceBernstein's management team includes several senior leaders with distinct responsibilities:
AB states that its leadership group brings different backgrounds, experience, and viewpoints to one table. Together, these leaders help guide strategy and support the firm's long-term direction.
AB, through Bernstein Private Wealth Management, is aiming to reshape its ultra-high-net-worth platform by promoting seasoned internal leaders. The firm appointed Ashley Velategui in 2025 to lead the wealth strategies group and deepened planning, tax, philanthropy, and portfolio advice for wealthy US families. These moves support AllianceBernstein's plan to grow Bernstein's private wealth business and double ultra-high-net-worth assets in five years.
Building on these private wealth moves, AB continues to use RIA acquisitions and hires to support long-term private wealth growth. Bernstein Private Wealth has become a larger contributor to the firm's overall assets under Onur Erzan's leadership. AllianceBernstein has created a dedicated RIA search team, so future partners align with its culture, fiduciary focus, and long-term expansion plans.
Eight companies are looking to raise as much as $3.7 billion when they go public next week, the most activity the U.S. IPO market has seen in a single week in nearly two years.
Former AllianceBernstein CEO Lewis A. Sanders will launch a new firm as early as January, according to sources who declined to be identified.
Kenneth Lewis, Bank of America Corp.'s embattled chief executive, gave a trenchant analysis of the state of banking — and the brokerage business, in particular— last week when he announced that former Smith Barney boss Sallie Krawcheck will run the bank's global wealth and investment management sector.
Pershing LLC, the largest provider of back-office services and financing to small and independent broker-dealers, this month began charging shareholder servicing fees to brokers and financial advisers who buy certain mutual funds from its Fund Center platform.
Fidelity Investments had the most internally managed active-domestic-equity assets for U.S. institutional tax-exempt assets clients last year.
Cohen & Steers Inc. has snagged David Edlin from AllianceBernstein Investments Inc. to be its new national sales manager, the company announced this morning.
Marc Mayer, a 20-year veteran of AllianceBernstein, was tapped as the first chief executive of GMO LLC, a spokesman confirmed today.
AllianceBernstein LP reported a 73% fourth-quarter-profit decline, while CIT Group Inc. and Fifth Third Bancorp posted fourth-quarter losses stemming from bad loans.
As asset managers position themselves for 2009, the steady stream of pink slips that started to flow last month is expected to continue.
As leaner times sweep through the asset management industry, everything from travel expenses and catering services to payroll (read: bonuses) is on the chopping block.
The Vanguard Group Inc.'s handling of its lackluster U.S. Growth Fund threatens to tarnish the company's reputation for putting investors first.
Some international-equity managers are wondering whether the drop in the greenback will continue, while others are beginning to implement currency hedges to protect their portfolios against a rise in the U.S. dollar.
The use of alternative hedge-fund-like strategies within mutual funds was a hot topic of discussion last week at the Investment Company Institute's 50th annual general membership meeting in Washington.
Advisers may see increasing numbers of mutual fund products that include alternative-investment strategies.
John Carl of AllianceBernstein won $10 million in damages against the firm and $2 million in punitive damages.