The ongoing fight for control of giant branch offices registered at independent broker-dealers rolled into 2023 as Cetera Financial Group announced this week that it had recruited an office with $2.5 billion in assets from rival Securities America Inc., the largest broker-dealer in the Advisor Group network.
The office, The Patriot Financial Group, is based in a suburb of Boston and works with 70 financial advisors, who moved their securities and industry registration to Cetera Financial Specialists starting last month, according to a search of executives' BrokerCheck reports.
According to its Form ADV, about $1.15 billion of The Patriot Financial Group's assets are parked at its registered investment advisor, making it a large RIA enterprise for a brokerage firm.
2022 saw a significant development in the consolidation of the wealth management industry: Independent broker-dealers began competing with private equity-backed aggregators of registered investment advisors to purchase or invest in giant offices of advisors, with several IBDs making investments in giant branch offices of advisors already registered with the firm.
Such offices are often referred to as offices of supervisory jurisdiction, or Super OSJs.
"The recruiting Super OSJ model is a double-edged sword," said Jodie Papike, president of Cross-Search, a recruiting firm. "A lot of broker-dealers support the recruiting at the branch, but the firms have to keep the heads of those Super OSJs happy — or run the risk they move to another brokerage firm."
"Like Cetera, we are agnostic about how our advisors affiliate their business to deliver the best service, solutions and guidance," Michael Tashjian, CEO of The Patriot Financial Group, said in a statement. "We believe that this model provides a powerful combination of options that will serve our advisors and their clients well for years to come."
At the end of last year, Cetera Financial Group controlled about $322 billion in assets, according to the company.
Five low-cost index ETFs to anchor Trump Accounts as advisors weigh options against 529 and UTMA plans for clients
A bipartisan proposal aimed at aligning advisor compensation rules with modern business structures is headed to the full House.
Vanilla is extending its estate planning tech to Callan Family Office's ultra-high-net-worth business, while WealthFeed's organic growth engine will now be available to roughly 100 advisors at The Mather Group.
“We are helping families take an important first step toward building a financial foundation for the next generation,” said Franklin Templeton CEO Jenny Johnson
Richard Brothers Financial Advisors joins the fee-only RIA, adding its first Maine office and $240 million in client assets
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
Direct indexing is on pace to outgrow ETFs and mutual funds. Northern Trust's Ken Lassner explains why the advisors who get it wish they had started sooner.