Subscribe

Brouwer & Janachowski, Seton Smoke to merge

San Francisco area financial advisory firms Brouwer & Janachowski and Seton Smoke have agreed to merge operations to create a single firm with nearly $1 billion under advisement.

San Francisco area financial advisory firms Brouwer & Janachowski LLC and Seton Smoke Capital Management have agreed to merge operations to create a single Tiburon, Calif.-based firm with nearly $1 billion under advisement.
The deal, the details of which were not disclosed, was brokered and financed by Fiduciary Network LLC, the same Dallas-based firm that helped Brouwer & Janachowski of Tiburon set up an internal business ownership transition strategy in January.
Seton Smoke, based in Greenbrae, Calif., which has $300 million under advisement, is located about seven miles from the Brouwer & Janachowski offices.
The new firm will take the name of Brouwer & Janachowski, bringing $680 million under advisement to the merger.
“We’re taking two good firms and making one great firm,” said Kurt Brouwer, who will become chairman of the new company.
Steve Janachowski, who co-founded the firm along with Mr. Brouwer 21 years ago, will remain as president.
Bob Smoke, the current president of Seton Smoke, will become the vice chairman of the new firm.
Mr. Smoke, 62, will be under contract to stay for at least five years after the merger.
The plan is to retain all employees, including seven from Seton Smoke and the 11 with Brouwer & Janachowski.
“I’ve probably had a dozen people approach me with merger ideas, but none were a good fit or the deal didn’t make sense,” Mr. Smoke said. “This is a good fit, and the deal makes sense because we need larger scale.”
The offices of both firms will remain open after the merger, which is expected to be completed within 60 days.

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Bank of America sounds warning on options-ETF boom

Skeptics says products often fare worse than simpler alternatives.

Gold in flux as investors await Fed meeting

Following a 13 percent advance this year, the price of the yellow metal wavered as traders weigh the odds of harmful rate hikes.

Hedge funds ramp up tech allocations, says Goldman

Data show amped-up net buying in sector through long positions and short-covering even amid a slide in S&P 500 IT index.

Stocks rise following hot March inflation

The S&P 500 is poised to extend gains on tech earnings while short-term Treasury yields fell following brisk rise in Fed’s preferred inflation gauge.

Fed will cut once before presidential election, says Howard Lutnick

Cantor Fitzgerald’s chief executive predicts the central bank will “show off a little bit” just before voters head to the polls.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print