Subscribe

Banks can provide an opportunity for RPAs

retirement plan advisers

As several recent deals show, such as OneDigital's purchase of Truist's RPA business, banks offer retirement plan advisers a chance to grow their business.

OneDigitals recent acquisition of Truist Financial’s retirement advisory practice raises the question of whether banks offer an opportunity for retirement plan advisers to grow their business, just as they have for record-keeper outsourcers like Empower Retirement and Ascensus.

For Vince Morris, president of OneDigital’s retirement and wealth practice, there was the obvious opportunity to acquire more $10 billion in assets, 1,200 plans and 24 team members. But there is also the chance to cross-sell.

“We take a holistic vision,” Morris said. “Most of the Truist clients only used them for retirement. We want to cross-sell employee benefits and HR consulting.”

Morris said he expects to be aggressive about acquiring business from other banks in the future. Overland Park, Kansas-based Qualified Plan Advisors recently acquired the retirement advisory business of First National Bank of Oklahoma.

Truist, the sixth-largest U.S. bank, resulted from the merger of SunTrust and BB&T, both of which had defined-contribution record-keeping divisions. Those record-keeping divisions were also just sold, to Empower and Ascensus, respectively, each of which had previously provided record-keeping services for the banks.

The now-vacated Obama-era fiduciary rule from the Department of Labor meant that “the banks had already bifurcated their advisory and record-keeping roles,” Morris said. “It only made sense to sell the advisory practice after they sold their record keeper.”

“Retirement is not a significant percentage of the bank’s revenue and not a core business,” he said.

[More: The cost of record-keeper consolidation]

Banks are not a big part of the record-keeping industry only Bank of America remains among the giants, after the sale of most of JPMorgan’s record-keeping division to Empower and Principal’s acquisition of Wells Fargo’s DC business. But there are smaller regional banks leveraging their trust departments and banking relationships to provide retirement services to clients.

Banks are challenged to refer relationships internally, never mind working with an outside firm. Smaller, regional retirement plan advisers will have to be creative in financing deals and developing relationships. OneDigital, for example, has no formal relationship with Truist going forward to refer bank clients interested in retirement services, Morris said.

“We see opportunities to partner with record keepers to provide our managed accounts and 3(38) solutions to their clients,” Morris said. “How much new business does Financial Engines refer to their record-keeper partners?” And now that Financial Engines is part of Edelman, which has a fledgling RPA division, it could be considered a competitor to RPAs.

Regardless, the pace of consolidation and change with record keepers and RPAs especially is dizzying, with no indication that it will let up anytime soon. The driving forces are numerous: Private equity firms are flooding the market; the industry is fragmented and maturing; RPA owners are aging; government support for retirement plans is growing; the COVID-19 pandemic is prompting changes; and there is a convergence of wealth, retirement and benefits at the workplace.

And for many RPAs, the opportunities are ongoing but that is especially true for larger, well-capitalized groups like OneDigital.

[Listen: IN Podcast: A new day in Washington, but what does that mean for financial services?]

Fred Barstein is founder and CEO of The Retirement Advisor University and The Plan Sponsor University. He is also a contributing editor for InvestmentNews’​ RPA Convergence newsletter.

Related Topics: , ,

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Covid, convergence, consolidation and the 2021 RPA roundtables

Aggregators realize that in-plan retirement income solutions are needed, while CIOs understand that advisers need to be able to help participants navigate the myriad of benefits offered at work.

Chief investment officers critical to success of DC plans, participants

CIOs from the leading DC record keepers, aggregators and broker-dealers discussed their greatest opportunities and challenges.

RPAs need a new name to reach the next level

While 'retirement plan adviser' has been a good description of those who serve ERISA retirement plans, it's actually quite limiting to focus on the plan, rather than the participant.

Who will win the 401(k) battle in the 2020s?

The start of the 2020s has been dominated by the three Cs — Covid, convergence and consolidation. Government mandates could cause the small and startup plan market to explode, and RPA consolidation has blown up.

RPA aggregators focused on convergence, consolidation and cooperation

Unlike any other industry event, the RPA Aggregator event had no agenda. All participants were focused on the defined-contribution industry’s biggest opportunities and challenges.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print