LPL crosses 20,000 adviser head count, probes small-firm M&A market

LPL crosses 20,000 adviser head count, probes small-firm M&A market
When it comes to mergers and acquisitions, "it’s smaller broker-dealers and RIAs that may be an opportunity," CEO Dan Arnold said.
APR 29, 2022

LPL Financial Holdings Inc. reported Thursday that it had reached the milestone of having more than 20,000 financial advisers working and registered across its varied platforms, and the firm's senior management reiterated that LPL was keeping its eye on both internal and external growth opportunities.

LPL Financial has been an acquisition machine for years when it comes to large firms. Most recently, in 2021, it completed its purchase of financial advisers from Waddell & Reed Financial Inc.

While LPL is primarily focused on internal or "organic" growth in the ranks of its financial advisers, it remains aware of the market for potential mergers and acquisitions involving smaller broker-dealers and registered investment advisers, CEO Dan Arnold said Thursday afternoon in a conference call with analysts to discuss the firm's first-quarter earnings.

"When you look at M&A as a complement to that organic growth, we’re constantly looking across the landscape," Arnold said.

"It’s smaller broker-dealers and RIAs that may be an opportunity and interesting perspective to support our overall growth agenda," he said, adding that the challenging financial markets recently create opportunities to make such deals.

Meanwhile, LPL Financial reported that its financial adviser head count was 20,091 at the end of March. That's an increase of 2,419, or 13.7%, compared to the same time a year earlier and a rise of 215, or 1.1%, from the end of December.

A big chunk of the advisers new to LPL came from the Waddell & Reed deal. LPL acquired the majority of the 920 advisers registered with Waddell & Reed at the time of the deal.

LPL reported that its recruited assets for the quarter were $10 billion, and for the trailing twelve months $76 billion, up approximately 34% from the same time in 2021.

Annualized advisory fees and commissions per adviser for the quarter were $327,000, which compared to $293,000 at the end of March 2021, an increase of 11.6%.

Latest News

 Younger Americans fear AI's retirement impact, Thrivent finds
Younger Americans fear AI's retirement impact, Thrivent finds

AI-driven job fears are weighing on retirement confidence, especially among Gen Z and Millennials, Thrivent survey finds

FINRA spanks Centaurus with $1.1 million penalty over variable annuity switches
FINRA spanks Centaurus with $1.1 million penalty over variable annuity switches

It’s the second time in as many years regulators have penalized Centaurus Financial for lack of compliance with Reg BI.

Wells Fargo touts AI Teammate to streamline advisors’ workloads
Wells Fargo touts AI Teammate to streamline advisors’ workloads

AI Teammate is embedded within Wells Fargo’s Advisor Gateway desktop platform.

Advisor moves: &Partners reels in $524M RayJay team, Focus firm Eton Advisors welcomes Northern Trust alum
Advisor moves: &Partners reels in $524M RayJay team, Focus firm Eton Advisors welcomes Northern Trust alum

Elsewhere, Ameriprise added a $470 million Wells team in New York, while an ex-Morgan Stanley advisor bolsters UBS' Austin, Texas office.

The exit planning conversations advisors need to have with business owners
The exit planning conversations advisors need to have with business owners

Financial advisors play an essential role in helping small business owners navigate their transition out of the company — and into retirement.

SPONSORED Direct indexing webinar targets tax-loss harvesting amid market swings

Northern Trust’s Ken Lassner shows advisors how to convert volatility into after-tax portfolio gains

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