Subscribe

Merrill fires $2.5 billion-plus adviser

A top broker in California, Marc D. Lowe was dismissed earlier this month for "inappropriate workplace behavior;" circumstances still unclear.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch fired a top broker in California earlier this month, citing “conduct involving inappropriate workplace behavior, resulting in loss of management’s confidence,” according to documents filed with state regulators by Merrill Lynch.
Marc D. Lowe, a senior vice president on a team that oversaw $2.5 billion in client assets in Los Angeles, confirmed that he was no longer at the firm but declined to elaborate on the reasons behind his departure.
A spokesman for Merrill Lynch, William P. Halldin, confirmed that Mr. Lowe was no longer with the firm but declined to comment.
The disclosure, which was made in a Central Registration Depository Snapshot, a detailed employment record available through state securities regulators, shows he was discharged on July 9.
Sources say the reasons behind his departure are still unclear, but added that there were disagreements between Mr. Lowe and senior management at the firm.
Mr. Lowe’s BrokerCheck record with the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. shows that he is no longer registered with Merrill Lynch but does not show any termination for cause or any other disclosure events or client complaints.
Mr. Lowe is still looking for a new firm, sources said.
In 2011, Mr. Lowe was ranked No. 24 on a list compiled by Barron’s of top advisers in California. He was said to be managing $5 billion in assets. Sources noted, however, that the managing director on the team, John Vilardo, may have overseen a large portion of the assets the team was managing.
The rest of Mr. Lowe’s 12-person team, including Mr. Vilardo and several other advisers and support staff, remains at the firm, according to their website.
Mr. Lowe is a legacy Bank of America adviser and worked with Banc of America Investment Services Inc. until he registered with Merrill Lynch in 2009, according to BrokerCheck.
An industry recruiter, Mark Albers, who was a former complex director with Merrill Lynch in San Diego, said the team built its business while at the bank by working with a number of high-net-worth families.
“The Vilardo team has a reputation of being professionals, and they have done a really good job of working with clients,” Mr. Albers said. “The loss of one guy is unfortunate. It appears to be some HR issue, but we’ll never know.”

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

RIAs could be required to report suspected money laundering

Proposal from FinCEN would have investment advisers monitor and report questionable activity under the Bank Secrecy Act.

SEC fines RIA $2.8 million and bars owner in ‘Madoff of Main Street’ case

Regulator bars owner of Total Wealth Management, Jacob Cooper, known as 'Main Street Madoff' by former clients, and holds him liable in case where losses are expected to total as much as $44 million.

RBC, City National deal marries bank and brokerage

The $5.4 billion deal could have RBC's regional wealth management business looking more like a wirehouse or private bank than a regional firm.

Morgan Stanley hit with racial discrimination suit

As part of her claim, ex-broker alleges the wirehouse's recent move toward mandatory arbitration is an attempt to prohibit employees from publicly challenging unfair practices.

LPL faces reckoning from activist investor

With giant broker-dealer's stock down 25% from its high last year, experts say Marcato could push for major changes.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print