How advisers are leveraging the bank channel

How advisers are leveraging the bank channel
While at the InvestmentNews Retirement Income Summit last week, our team spoke with a wide variety of advisors from all areas of the industry.
MAY 27, 2014
By  Tom Daley
Of particular interest were some of our conversations with bank channel advisors who are leveraging financial institutions to grow their client bases. What we heard anecdotally also mirrored the numbers we are seeing here at The Advisor Center with 15% of our community of advisors reporting they are affiliated with financial institutions. There are a number of reasons why an advisor may want to choose this business model. Continual Pipeline of Clients Banks are one of the only channels where referrals and leads are directly funneled to advisors. One advisor working in a small market told us 50% of her clients are bank customers. The other 50% are referrals from those bank customers. Another advisor told us he can count on always having a pipeline of potential clients at his fingertips. Without lead generation to worry about, he can focus on helping clients. More and More Investment Options Banks have to come realize that supporting and investing in the wealth management side of the business is a natural way to improve overall customer satisfaction and customer retention. In this light, more and more banks are providing advisors with deep investment product offerings, top technology and overall support. Built-in Marketing and Branding To bolster the advisory side of their business, the leading financial institutions are actively marketing their banks as a place to get financial investment advice as well as make deposits and apply for loans. In addition, an advisor can leverage the financial institution's already-recognized brand. Opportunities for Advisors New to the Industry We met one young advisor from a mid-size Midwestern city who had recently switched over from the institutional side of banking to begin his career as a financial advisor. With the help of a trusted mentor at his financial institution, he was pleased how quickly he had been able to establish his advisory business and was bullish on his future growth. A Corner on Some Markets In some areas, the bank is the cornerstone of the area with deep, entrenched community roots and a solid reputation. It's a place where locals handle both their professional and personal banking interests. In these cases, adding financial advisory services is a natural fit. With so many choices of affiliation, advisors may want to take a closer look at opportunities at financial institutions when weighing out the options. This is especially true for advisors who don't have the desire to take on the added complexities of being an entrepreneur as some of the other channels require.

Latest News

RIA moves: True North adds $353M California RIA as SageView grows North Carolina presence
RIA moves: True North adds $353M California RIA as SageView grows North Carolina presence

Plus, a $400 million Commonwealth team departs to launch an independent family-run RIA in the East Bay area.

Blue Owl Capital, Voya strike private market partnership for retirement plans
Blue Owl Capital, Voya strike private market partnership for retirement plans

The collaboration will focus initially on strategies within collective investment trusts in DC plans, with plans to expand to other retirement-focused private investment solutions.

Top Commonwealth advisor to recruiters: Stop with the cold calls already!
Top Commonwealth advisor to recruiters: Stop with the cold calls already!

“I respectfully request that all recruiters for other BDs discontinue their efforts to contact me," writes Thomas Bartholomew.

Why AI notetakers alone can't fix 'broken' advisor meetings
Why AI notetakers alone can't fix 'broken' advisor meetings

Wealth tech veteran Aaron Klein speaks out against the "misery" of client meetings, why advisors' communication skills don't always help, and AI's potential to make bad meetings "100 times better."

Morgan Stanley, Goldman, Wells Fargo to settle Archegos trades lawsuit
Morgan Stanley, Goldman, Wells Fargo to settle Archegos trades lawsuit

The proposed $120 million settlement would close the book on a legal challenge alleging the Wall Street banks failed to disclose crucial conflicts of interest to investors.

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.