It's official: Raymond James closes on Morgan Keegan deal

It's official: Raymond James closes on Morgan Keegan deal
Acquires Memphis-based brokerage for $1.18B; no retention headaches so far
MAY 23, 2012
Raymond James Financial Inc. completed the acquisition of Morgan Keegan & Co. Inc. today. The final price tag on the deal is $1.18 billion. The initial offer was $930 million. The acquirer also agreed to a stipulation where Morgan Keegan would pay its former parent, Regions Financial Corp., a $250 million dividend. Regions and Raymond James agreed to delay the special dividend, however, until the closing of the merger. Morgan Keegan now will make a $250 million payment to Raymond James, which in turn will pay Regions. The merged firms have about 6,500 financial advisers managing more than $370 billion in assets. “The combined firm will provide our financial advisers and capital markets professionals with the benefits of scale and best practices to better support their clients and help us realize our vision of being the premier alternative to Wall Street,” Raymond James chief executive Paul Reilly said in a statement. Despite the poor record for mergers in the brokerage industry, this deal has been reasonably well-received by the market. Although the price of Raymond James stock dropped 5% after the deal was announced Jan. 11, the stock has risen along with the shares of much of the rest of the brokerage sector. The stock is up 7% since the merger was announced and 14% for the year. That compares to a return of about 24% on the NYSE Arca Securities Broker-Dealer Index. Early indications are that the integration of the two firms is going smoothly. The top 12 executives at Morgan Keegan — including 6 in the private client group — have joined Raymond James. According to Dennis Zank, chief operating officer at Raymond James and head of the firm's integration efforts, 98% of the advisers who were offered a retention package have indicated they plan to stay with the merged company. MK advisers needed to have annual production of at least $300,000 to be offered the package. The response to the deal by the more than 1,000 Morgan Keegan advisers was a concern of some RJ watchers. Indeed, Standard & Poor's Rating Service analyst Nic Khakee put Raymond James on a negative Creditwatch when the merger was announced. He has since removed the negative outlook. “Mergers fail not because of financial matters but because of major cultural differences between firms,” said Mr. Zank, who has been with Raymond James for 34 years. “This is not about wringing every nickel of savings out of the combined operations. We want continuity with our management and with our traders and advisers.” Mr. Zank credits Morgan Keegan managers with keeping the vast majority of their advisers in the fold. “I take my hat off to the Morgan Keegan management team,” he said. “The reason we're seeing such a high level of retention of advisers is because they feel comfortable with Raymond James and with the fact that their own management team is remaining intact.”

Latest News

FINRA industry snapshot shows broker headcount growth as dual registration dominates
FINRA industry snapshot shows broker headcount growth as dual registration dominates

Industry report shows that there are now fewer firms as consolidation intensifies.

AI won't replace advisors but it will separate the ones who survive
AI won't replace advisors but it will separate the ones who survive

The firms building now have a head start that will be very difficult to close. The ones waiting are accumulating a debt they may not be able to repay.

Fintech industry crosses $500bn revenue mark, led by trading and investments
Fintech industry crosses $500bn revenue mark, led by trading and investments

Global revenues hit record high in 2025 with sector growing at four times the rate of traditional financial institutions.

SEC sues Texas man over alleged $12.3 million AI crypto scheme
SEC sues Texas man over alleged $12.3 million AI crypto scheme

He swore the bots were real, the FDIC had it covered - the SEC says neither was true

Citadel loses SEC fight as appeals court upholds IEX options trading speedbump
Citadel loses SEC fight as appeals court upholds IEX options trading speedbump

One firm controls 30% of options volume – and just lost this one

SPONSORED Estate planning isn't a service add-on. It's your retention strategy.

As $84 trillion prepares to change hands, advisors who treat estate planning as peripheral are quietly building a sieve, not a book.

SPONSORED Why strategy matters more than performance

In volatile markets, the advisors who win aren't the ones with the best calls - they're the ones whose clients stay the course.