Subscribe

Bank of America forms wealth management banking and lending group

bank of america wealth management

The new organization, which comprises about 3,500 employees, seeks to expand the firm's offerings for affluent clients increasingly sought by rivals.

Bank of America Corp. formed a new wealth management banking and lending group as the firm expands its offerings to affluent clients increasingly sought by rivals.

The new organization comprises about 3,500 employees and will be led by April Schneider, a spokesperson confirmed to Bloomberg News. The expanded group includes the bank’s wealth management banking specialists, loan officers, banking and lending product strategy as well as wealth-management client-care specialists, according to the company.

Banks have been competing for wealthy individuals, bolstering their advisory and lending practices to capture more assets on their balance sheet. Citigroup Inc. combined its consumer wealth-management and private-banking units under a single executive early last year amid the push.

Bank of America’s wealth and investment management group reported a 7% jump in revenue to $5.4 billion in the second quarter, buoyed by higher balances and higher interest rates. In July, the bank shuffled leaders across its wealth-management business and split its western regional unit into two, placing more emphasis on the California area, a key growth location.

Reuters reported the news earlier.

Schneider, who serves on the company’s management and operating committees, will report to Merrill president Andy Sieg and Katy Knox, president of Bank of America’s private bank.

“The new organization brings together banking and lending products, servicing and distribution. April is ideal to lead this area of strategic importance and her team will deliver the best experience for our Private Bank and Merrill clients,” Knox said in an emailed statement.

[More: Bank of America deepens ties to iCapital alts platform with strategic investment]

Related Topics: ,

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Former Nuveen trader behind $47M insider scheme seeks leniency

Defense attorneys for the disgraced trader argue his criminal behavior was spurred by trauma and phobia about financial insecurity.

With SEC rule changes looming, money funds start shifting their holdings

Measures from the federal regulator are likely to shift the balance of market demand toward less risky assets.

Price tag for Trump tax cuts swells to $4.6T

Estimates from Congressional Budget Office project renewed fiscal measures will more than double the cost of the original 2017 cuts.

FTX victims could recoup total losses plus interest

Collapsed crypto exchange has more cash than it needs for creditors.

Morgan Stanley cautious about China stock rally

Wall Street strategists favor individual, thematics rather than index.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print