Subscribe

Morgan Stanley brings in ETrade executives

The investment bank is putting the finishing touches onto its $13 billion purchase of ETrade Financial, and has benefitted from ETrade’s direct, online access to a younger group of clients.

Morgan Stanley & Co. on Wednesday said it was adding a number of senior ETrade Financial Corp. executives as the firms continue their integration in the wake of last year’s acquisition of ETrade.

Morgan Stanley is putting the finishing touches onto its purchase. In April, the wirehouse said it was selling ETrade’s small but promising custody service, ETrade Advisor Services, for $55 million in cash.

The moves were outlined in an internal Morgan Stanley memo from Andy Saperstein, co-president.

“By joining forces with ETrade, we’ve established a dominant position in the Advisor, Workplace and Direct channels and we’re poised to continue leading and reshaping our industry,” Saperstein wrote. “Over the past year I’ve really enjoyed getting to know our new colleagues from ETrade. I’ve been deeply impressed by the talent in the organization.”

Chad Turner, ETrade’s CFO, will lead the digital direct business; Andrea Zaretsky, ETrade’s chief marketing officer, will be in the same position for wealth management. Another seven ETrade executives were also given Morgan Stanley spots.

Morgan Stanley said in February 2020 that it was buying ETrade Financial for $13 billion in stock. The investment bank has benefitted from ETrade’s direct, online access to a younger group of clients, but the financial advice industry was watching the merger closely.

Related Topics: ,

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Advisor attrition dropping at Merrill Lynch

Although departures of financial advisors may have slowed at certain large firms, that doesn't mean the problem's been squelched,

Arete Wealth pays out $1.1M in arb claims to start 2024

"We have a handful of open cases against Arete Wealth, and some involve Center Street, as well," says a plaintiff's attorney.

Stability, finally, at Wells Fargo Advisors?

'We’re back to more normal, or maybe slightly below normal, attrition levels across the [financial advisor] business, which is good,' says CEO Charles Scharf.

Poor REIT sales signal potential cuts in valuations

'The problem is, when an NAV gets shaved, advisors and investors get pissed off,' one executive says.

LPL’s Atria deal poses complexities: Report

Atria's financial advisors might be getting M&A 'whiplash,' one recruiter notes.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print