Charles Goldman to leave Fidelity

Recruited from Charles Schwab Corp., Mr. Goldman will be leaving Fidelity after just one year.
JUL 28, 2010
Charles Goldman, who one year ago joined Fidelity Investments to run its RIA custody, correspondent clearing and family office businesses, is leaving the firm. Mr. Goldman, who is president of institutional platforms, will officially depart at the end of March “to pursue other opportunities,” said Vin Loporchio, a spokesman at Fidelity. Mr. Goldman could not be reached for comment. The move is the latest in a merry-go-round of departures by senior Fidelity executives, and ends Mr. Goldman's personal quest to narrow the market-share gap separating Number Two Fidelity from Charles Schwab Corp., the largest custodian of RIA assets. Mr. Goldman worked at Schwab from 2001 to 2008, leaving after the RIA business he headed was subsumed under another executive, James McCool. Fidelity's RIA unit houses about $396 billion of assets managed by independent advisers. Schwab oversees just under $600 billion of retail assets on its RIA custody platform. Mr. Goldman was hired at Fidelity by Michael Clark only weeks after Mr. Clark had lured Michael Durbin to run the firm's Institutional Wealth Services division for RIAs and also arranged for new leadership at National Financial, the mutual fund giant's correspondent clearing unit. National Financial ended 2009 with $550 billion in introducing broker assets, up $44 billion from the end of 2008. Mr. Goldman took a newly created post overseeing both units, promising to improve servicing and try to better integrate the two units' services for hybrid advisers. His tenure coincided with tumultuous markets, a wavering economy and big cutbacks at Fidelity that last September included the departure of Mr. Clark. Earlier this month, Fidelity President Rodger Lawson, who hired Mr. Clark in 2007 from JPMorgan Chase, announced that he will be leaving in March. Mr. Goldman will not be immediately replaced. The presidents of the three units that reported to him — IWS's Mr. Durbin, National Financial's Sanjiv Mirchandani, and Fidelity Family Office Services' Ed Orazen — will report directly to Gerald McGraw, who assumed Mr. Clark's role as president of institutional products in September, according to Mr. Loporchio. Mr. Goldman, who is under 50 years old, received more than $2 million in compensation in 2007 when his RIA unit grew faster than any other part of Schwab. His compensation in 2008 and last year at Fidelity was not disclosed. Prior to joining Schwab, he ran a California nut and citrus company and also was a consultant.

Latest News

Edward Jones facing more race bias claims in new lawsuit
Edward Jones facing more race bias claims in new lawsuit

A private partnership, Edward Jones is a giant in the retail brokerage industry with more than 20,000 financial advisors.

Advisor moves: LPL recruitment momentum continues with $815M Northwestern Mutual team
Advisor moves: LPL recruitment momentum continues with $815M Northwestern Mutual team

Meanwhile, Raymond James and Tritonpoint Partners separately welcomed father-son teams, including a breakaway from UBS in Missouri.

SEC chief Atkins signals caution on prediction market ETFs amid broader rethink of novel fund structures
SEC chief Atkins signals caution on prediction market ETFs amid broader rethink of novel fund structures

Paul Atkins has asked staff to solicit public comment on novel ETFs, pausing the clock on as many as 24 filings linked to the booming event contracts market.

Private capital's $1 trillion bet on the American retirement account
Private capital's $1 trillion bet on the American retirement account

From 401(k)s to retail funds, Deloitte sees private equity and credit crossing into mainstream investing on two fronts at once.

Advisor moves: Wells Fargo Advisors pulls in $9.6b in fresh talent during first half of May
Advisor moves: Wells Fargo Advisors pulls in $9.6b in fresh talent during first half of May

Big-name defections from Morgan Stanley, UBS, and Merrill Lynch headline a busy two weeks of recruiting for the wirehouse.

SPONSORED Are hedge funds the missing ingredient?

Wellington explores how multi strategy hedge funds may enhance diversification

SPONSORED Beyond wealth management: Why the future of advice is becoming more human

As technical expertise becomes increasingly commoditized, advisors who can integrate strategy, relationships, and specialized expertise into a cohesive client experience will define the next era of wealth management