Commonwealth Financial Network to launch parallel business for RIAs

Commonwealth Financial Network to launch parallel business for RIAs
Firm wants to help brokers shifting to fee-only business, and compete with custodians such as Schwab in technology and practice management.
NOV 13, 2018

Commonwealth Financial Network, already a major independent broker-dealer, intends to broaden its business by setting up a parallel business for registered investment advisers. Commonwealth has already seen at least 75 of its 1,800 reps shift their business totally to fee-only from either commissions or a mix of commissisons and fees. To stay ahead of those brokers, the firm intends to launch within a year a separately branded business for RIAs and compete with heavyweight custodians such as Schwab Advisor Services and TD Ameritrade Institutional, said John Rooney, managing principal. The firm would not custody financial assets. Mr. Rooney said Commonwealth also sees an opportunity to appeal to RIAs that are not currently affiliated with the firm. "The big opportunity is not just to talk to advisers moving in the broker-dealer space or industry, but to advisers working directly with Schwab and TD who switch and have to figure out their own support platforms and [who] are looking for a turnkey solution," Mr. Rooney said. He added that Commonwealth would be the first IBD to launch such a parallel RIA business for brokers leaving the commission side of the business entirely. Commonwealth has recently been dedicating support staff in its various service lines to work with its advisers who are fee-only, Mr. Rooney said. "It's mainly an issue of getting branding and marketing materials together," he said. "I think we need to make it a distinct, new brand. The RIA-only advisers look at broker-dealers as a broken system and don't want to have anything to do with them." The firm would continue to offer an array of services such as technology, planning and practice management to brokers switching to a fee-only practice, Mr. Rooney said. The move by Commonwealth is significant. It was one of the first IBDs in the 1990s to stress a fee-based business model for brokers, who until then overwhelmingly charged commissions and worked under an "eat what you kill" mentality. The firm has thrived since. At the end of last year, Commonwealth Financial had $156 billion in assets under management and $1.24 billion in total revenue. Sixty-four percent of the firm's revenues last year came from fees, according to InvestmentNews data. In the past, Commonwealth would see three to five brokers per year tear up their broker registrations to work as advisers who charge only fees. That has accelerated significantly, Mr. Rooney said. Now, that many brokers are making the change each month. And the brokers exiting the brokerage business are younger and control more assets, Mr. Rooney said. The firm's advisers are among the most productive, and profitable, in the securities industry. At Commonwealth Financial, a dual, or hybrid, adviser is 54 years old, has about $91 million in assets under management and produces $698,000 in revenue on average. A typical fee-only Commonwealth adviser is almost a decade younger, has $160 million in AUM and produces, on average, $779,000 in annual revenues. "It's a little cheaper to be RIA-only for advisers, but they have other expense like their own for ADV with the SEC, and they typically do their own client contracts instead of the broker-dealer controlling the contract," Mr. Rooney said. Other firms, including Cambridge Investment Research Inc., are seeing a surge in brokers and advisers looking to move their businesses to focus solely on fees. "Over the last year or so, Cambridge has experienced increased interest in our fee-only solutions, and we've been focused on this expanding growth area in serving independent financial professionals," said Cindy Schaus, a spokesperson for Cambridge. She declined to comment when asked if Cambridge was planning a similar strategy as Commonwealth Financial Network.

Latest News

 Zocks, Jump expand advisor reach with new enterprise integrations
Zocks, Jump expand advisor reach with new enterprise integrations

Zocks has inked an exclusive partnership with mega-RIA Hightower, while Jump becomes the choice AI operating system for Equitable Advisors' field force.

SEC moves to scrap climate disclosure rules for public companies
SEC moves to scrap climate disclosure rules for public companies

The agency's proposal to rescind the contentious 2024 Biden-era mandate opens up a 60-day public comment period.

EverNest joins Focus after bitter split with Sanctuary Wealth
EverNest joins Focus after bitter split with Sanctuary Wealth

The Carmel, Indiana RIA grew nearly 150% in assets since severing ties with its first backer following a FINRA dispute.

Advisor moves: Wells Fargo welcomes back $550M advisor duo from Ameriprise
Advisor moves: Wells Fargo welcomes back $550M advisor duo from Ameriprise

Meanwhile, Raymond James' employee arm adds a defector from D.A. Davidson, and South Carolina-based RIA Ballast Rock Private Wealth recruits a new advisor.

JPMorgan contests $4.25M order over LA advisor's Super Bowl spending
JPMorgan contests $4.25M order over LA advisor's Super Bowl spending

A FINRA arbitration panel sided with a former wealth manager fired over a $642 deli platter and a disputed client event.

SPONSORED Estate planning isn't a service add-on. It's your retention strategy.

As $84 trillion prepares to change hands, advisors who treat estate planning as peripheral are quietly building a sieve, not a book.

SPONSORED Why strategy matters more than performance

In volatile markets, the advisors who win aren't the ones with the best calls - they're the ones whose clients stay the course.