Wells thwarted in raiding claim

APR 28, 2013
By  DJAMIESON
An arbitration panel's recent decision to deny Wells Fargo Advisors LLC's $30 million raiding claim against crosstown rival Stifel Nicolaus & Co. Inc. is just the tip of the iceberg in a six-year battle over advisers. More than a dozen raiding claims from Wells Fargo drove Stifel to file a complaint against its rival with the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc., alleging a “nationwide scorched-earth litigation campaign against Stifel” and an “ongoing abuse of the judicial and Finra arbitration process.”

13 CASES

A first hearing on the complaint is scheduled to begin next March. In the claim, filed about a year ago but recently obtained by InvestmentNews, Stifel lays out 13 arbitration cases Wells Fargo Advisors has filed since 2007 that accuse Stifel of raiding its branch offices. Rather than pursue legitimate claims, Wells Fargo Advisors has engaged in “restraint of trade, abusing the [arbitration] process and trying to intimidate people ... from leaving,” said Ron Kruszewski, chief executive of St. Louis-based Stifel. In an interview, Mr. Kruszewski said he thinks he has a good shot at getting an award and stopping what he sees as a vendetta against Stifel by his larger competitor that began in 2007 when he started picking off former A.G. Edwards Inc. brokers after that St. Louis firm was acquired by Wachovia Securities LLC. Wachovia was later taken over by Wells Fargo & Co. Mr. Kruszewski points to three separate arbitrations in which hearing panels have thrown out Wells Fargo Advisors' raiding cases and ordered Wells to pay a total of $2.8 million in legal fees to Stifel. The latest such case was decided April 18, when a Finra panel in California ordered Wells to pay Stifel $800,000 in costs. The litigation has been “frustrating,” Mr. Kruszewski said. “This is the third time we've won ... Now, if you win one time, you might say it's an oddity. But three times now?” In arbitration hearings, Stifel has argued that Wachovia Securities told A.G. Edwards brokers that it would honor a long-held Edwards policy that brokers were free to leave and take clients without fear of litigation. “We believe the former [Edwards] brokers remain free to work wherever they want to, and [Wachovia] encouraged them to look around,” said Stifel's attorney, Joseph Dougherty, managing shareholder at Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney PC. Wells Fargo Advisors has won about $230,000 in two of the cases cited in Stifel's arbitration claim, Mr. Dougherty noted. “But we count those as wins,” he said, since Wells Fargo had asked for a total of $25 million in damages. Two cases filed by Wells Fargo are still pending, as is a third case filed last year in Indiana that arose after Stifel filed its own claim. The rest have been dropped or denied by arbitration panels, Mr. Dougherty said. Officials at Wells Fargo Advisors were not available for comment. Observers said Stifel's arbitration filing against its rival is an unusual action. “I have never seen [a case like] that,” said securities attorney Thomas Fehn, founding partner of Fields Fehn & Sherwin. “It could be a case of malicious prosecution” by Wells Fargo Advisors, but at the same time, Wells can argue it has a right to file arbitrations, regardless of whether it's winning them. “I don't see claims like this every day,” added Larry Moy, an industry employment lawyer and partner at Outten Golden LLP. “There's always a risk that an arbitration panel might say, "A pox on both your houses,' and view this as a private squabble. I'm not sure another panel is going to want to be involved in some type of global solution” to the dispute. Stifel's arbitration complaint does not specify damages but says the firm has spent “millions” in legal fees and suffered “untold hours of business disruption” in defending against the raiding claims. The Stifel-Wells Fargo feud dates from June 2007, when Mr. Kruszewski sent a letter to A.G. Edwards brokers inviting them to join his firm in the wake of the announced Wachovia takeover.

TARGETED RECRUITMENT

Edwards, then run by chief executive Robert Bagby, threatened legal action and accused Stifel of the “highly extraordinary step of targeting A.G. Edwards' brokers for recruitment.” Mr. Kruszewski fired back, accusing the Edwards chief of hypocrisy, and blasting him for pocketing millions from the deal while many Edwards employees faced layoffs. The flurry of litigation started two months later when Wachovia filed a claim against John Lee, an Edwards regional manager in California who had just joined Stifel. According to Stifel's claim, Wells Fargo then proceeded to take action against it and Edwards brokers recruited from offices in Houston, Phoenix, Florence, S.C., Tulsa, Okla., Okemos, Mich., Garden City and Smithtown, N.Y., and the California towns of Carlsbad, Santa Rosa, Grass Valley, Oxnard and Paradise. Stifel acknowledged that it has hired more than 350 former Edwards reps. But it said that more than half of the 6,500 reps who were at Edwards during the Wachovia merger have left, with most going somewhere other than Stifel. [email protected] Twitter: @dvjamieson

Latest News

Advisor moves: Osaic welcomes Valic veteran in Arizona, Janney hails $3.3B recruiting haul
Advisor moves: Osaic welcomes Valic veteran in Arizona, Janney hails $3.3B recruiting haul

Meanwhile, a father-son pair of advisors and ex-marines from ex-Edward Jones gives Kingsview its newest location in Arkansas.

Why more Americans are raiding their retirement savings for emergencies
Why more Americans are raiding their retirement savings for emergencies

New Vanguard and FINRA data show Americans increasingly vulnerable to financial shocks, with hardship withdrawals and cash-outs reaching a new high.

Retirement plans in flux: Why more Americans are reconsidering their exit timeline
Retirement plans in flux: Why more Americans are reconsidering their exit timeline

Many people have already continued working past their planned retirement date

Married retirees could be in for an $18,100 Social Security cut by 2032, CRFB says
Married retirees could be in for an $18,100 Social Security cut by 2032, CRFB says

A new analysis finds long-running fiscal woes coupled with impacts from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act stand to erode the major pillar for retirement income planning.

SEC bars New Jersey advisor after $9.9M fraud against Gold Star families
SEC bars New Jersey advisor after $9.9M fraud against Gold Star families

Caz Craffy, whom the Department of Justice hit with a 12-year prison term last year for defrauding grieving military families, has been officially exiled from the securities agency.

SPONSORED How advisors can build for high-net-worth complexity

Orion's Tom Wilson on delivering coordinated, high-touch service in a world where returns alone no longer set you apart.

SPONSORED RILAs bring stability, growth during volatile markets

Barely a decade old, registered index-linked annuities have quickly surged in popularity, thanks to their unique blend of protection and growth potential—an appealing option for investors looking to chart a steadier course through today's choppy market waters, says Myles Lambert, Brighthouse Financial.