John Hancock acquiring 1,100 Transamerica advisers

John Hancock acquiring 1,100 Transamerica advisers
John Hancock Financial Network plans to acquire up to 1,100 advisers from Transamerica Financial Advisors Inc., representing roughly one-quarter of those currently affiliated with Transamerica.
NOV 10, 2015
John Hancock Financial Network Inc. said Tuesday it was acquiring up to 1,100 advisers from Transamerica Financial Advisors Inc. Those advisers represent roughly one-quarter of those currently affiliated with Transamerica. Upon the close of the transaction, the advisers will become affiliated with Signator Investors Inc., the independent broker-dealer of John Hancock Financial Network. Transamerica is not exiting the independent broker-dealer space. After the close of the acquisition, anticipated in the next six months, Transamerica will still have more than 3,000 affiliated advisers. In statements, the two companies said the deal was designed to allow John Hancock to acquire “certain assets” of Transamerica Financial Advisors, including 90 home office staff members who will now work for Signator. The remaining Transamerica advisers are affiliated with World Financial Group, a financial services marketing and distribution organization controlled by Transamerica. Terms of the transaction were not disclosed. The Transamerica advisers who will move to Signator are independent contractors who are duly registered, registered reps and investment advisers, said Melissa Berczuk, a spokeswoman for John Hancock. She said the company was not stating the amount of assets those advisers managed. She added, however, that “they will significantly increase Signator's total assets both in the broker dealer and the investment advisory platform.” According to the 2014 InvestmentNews survey of independent broker-dealers, Signator Investors and Transamerica Financial Advisors had, respectively, 1,374 and 5,103 registered representatives and advisers. Signator produced $297.6 million in total revenue last year while Transamerica Financial Advisors produced $279.9 million, according to the survey. After a tepid first half of 2015, mergers-and-acquisition activity in the independent broker-dealer industry has heated up. InvestmentNews in September reported that Next Financial Group Inc. was on the block. And last month, in the largest independent broker-dealer acquisition of the year, H.D. Vest Financial Services Inc., said it was being acquired by Blucora Inc., a company that focuses on Internet businesses, for $580 million.

Latest News

Advisor moves: FiNet practice Merrit Point tucks in $1B Truist team in Florida debut
Advisor moves: FiNet practice Merrit Point tucks in $1B Truist team in Florida debut

Elsewhere, a Commonwealth team in Massachusetts converts to Cetera, while Janney draws four former Wells Fargo advisors to its Radnor, Pennsylvania office.

Trader used firm ties to freeze $3.6 million, investors allege
Trader used firm ties to freeze $3.6 million, investors allege

Clients say he copied the boss on his emails - and now they can't touch their cash.

CFTC alleges North Carolina fund manager faked profits, lost $8.6 million
CFTC alleges North Carolina fund manager faked profits, lost $8.6 million

He wired millions to his own accounts and told investors the fund was winning.

OnePoint BFG taps RISR as advisors chase business-owner clients
OnePoint BFG taps RISR as advisors chase business-owner clients

The partnership arrives as most small business owners near retirement age still don't have a formal succession plan in place.

Trust & Will cuts staff amid restructuring, AI disruption
Trust & Will cuts staff amid restructuring, AI disruption

A spokesperson for the estate planning fintech cited AI's reshaping of the industry as Trust & Will restructures its business.

SPONSORED Who builds the income when the pension disappears?

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

SPONSORED Why direct indexing stopped being optional

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.