Mercer Global Advisors has acquired a registered investment advisor, Kingfisher Capital, that manages $630 million in assets for more than 200 clients, the company announced Tuesday.
Charlotte, North Carolina-based Kingfisher was founded in 1989 by Alexander B. Miles and H.K. Hallett and takes a family office approach to supporting its clients.
In a statement, Hallett cited the firm’s need to be there for its clients “forever — our fiduciary duty to them is a forever commitment, which meant we needed to join a national, fully institutionalized organization that shared our mission, vision and values.”
After meeting with Dave Barton, vice chairman at Mercer, “we knew we had found the right partner that was not only a national family office RIA with institutional investment capabilities, but also a firm with dozens of estate planning lawyers, a dedicated team of CPAs and other tax professionals, and corporate trustee and other services in-house, and all under one roof,” Hallett continued.
Denver-based Mercer Global Advisors oversees $52 billion in client assets and has more than 70 locations across the country. In recent months, it has announced the purchase of a $720 million RIA in San Diego, California, and a $400 million RIA in Macon, Georgia.
In June, Mercer said that it was bringing in a new private equity investor, Altas Partners, in a deal that was expected to raise more than $1 billion to fuel the Mercer’s growth-through-acquisition strategy.
Divorce, widowhood, and retirement are events when financial advisors may provide stability and guidance.
The industry group and other financial associations called out risks from premature disclosures, overreporting, and bad actors weaponizing the rule's requirements.
In regards to the new fund, called WVB All Markets Fund, Morningstar analysts wrote that, “despite the brand-name pedigree of the asset managers involved, most of these strategies are untested.”
New Broadridge survey reveals surge in AI investments, with a third of respondents expecting a payoff within six months.
The latest launches in 2025, which include leveraged strategies, cryptocurrency, and active funds, mark a sharp turn from the passive revolution envisioned by Jack Bogle.
How intelliflo aims to solve advisors' top tech headaches—without sacrificing the personal touch clients crave
From direct lending to asset-based finance to commercial real estate debt.