Makeover at Wells Fargo Advisors well-received

Makeover at Wells Fargo Advisors well-received
The wealth management network again reduces its corporate structure as part of realignment.
AUG 20, 2019

Wells Fargo Advisors continued a reorganization of its wealth management business, cutting about a dozen market manager positions last week. And for some, it couldn't have come sooner. "Wells Fargo Advisors has been top heavy with management and the back office for years, and as the firm made big acquisitions, it hired more people instead of modernizing the back office," said one adviser, who asked not to be named. "This is just one more small step to cut waste and duplicative management." The changes leave Wells Fargo with 91 markets, which are also called "complexes" internally at the firm. Managers who have been cut will be able to apply for similar positions that are open, return to working as a financial adviser or retire. "The big firms need to cut costs and staff to make money, it's overdue," said Danny Sarch, an industry recruiter. "With technology, it's easier to monitor more advisers for less money. In the old days, managers had to walk the office or branch to keep an eye on the brokers." At the same time the cutbacks were announced, the company said that those working in wealth management in bank branches would fall under the supervision of market managers. [Recommended video: How the client experience will be different in five years] The firm said a year ago it was embarking on a $4 billion cost-cutting plan that will fold its bank brokerage channel into the larger wirehouse channel. Then in May, Wells Fargo Advisors reduced the number of regions its financial advisers work under from 21 to 14. The firm's roughly 12,000 advisers who work in the firm's employee channel work within those regions, and the newly reworked "markets" are essentially subsets of those regions. "What's really exciting is that we now have common leadership in a particular geography of Wells Fargo Advisors," said Rich Getzoff, head of advisor-led business and in charge of the 14 regions, in an interview. "That makes us much more efficient, in our view." It's been a time of change for Wells Fargo Advisors. Its parent, the giant bank Wells Fargo & Co., has been dealing with a variety of embarrassing scandals and problems since September 2016 and hundreds of advisers have left the firm since. In a reshuffling of senior management, Wells Fargo & Co. said at the end of July that Jim Hays, a 14-year veteran of the firm, would become the new head of Wells Fargo Advisors. Mr. Hays replaced David Kowach, who moved to head community banking.

Latest News

 Younger Americans fear AI's retirement impact, Thrivent finds
Younger Americans fear AI's retirement impact, Thrivent finds

AI-driven job fears are weighing on retirement confidence, especially among Gen Z and Millennials, Thrivent survey finds

FINRA spanks Centaurus with $1.1 million penalty over variable annuity switches
FINRA spanks Centaurus with $1.1 million penalty over variable annuity switches

It’s the second time in as many years regulators have penalized Centaurus Financial for lack of compliance with Reg BI.

Wells Fargo touts AI Teammate to streamline advisors’ workloads
Wells Fargo touts AI Teammate to streamline advisors’ workloads

AI Teammate is embedded within Wells Fargo’s Advisor Gateway desktop platform.

Advisor moves: &Partners reels in $524M RayJay team, Focus firm Eton Advisors welcomes Northern Trust alum
Advisor moves: &Partners reels in $524M RayJay team, Focus firm Eton Advisors welcomes Northern Trust alum

Elsewhere, Ameriprise added a $470 million Wells team in New York, while an ex-Morgan Stanley advisor bolsters UBS' Austin, Texas office.

The exit planning conversations advisors need to have with business owners
The exit planning conversations advisors need to have with business owners

Financial advisors play an essential role in helping small business owners navigate their transition out of the company — and into retirement.

SPONSORED Direct indexing webinar targets tax-loss harvesting amid market swings

Northern Trust’s Ken Lassner shows advisors how to convert volatility into after-tax portfolio gains

SPONSORED Who builds the income when the pension disappears?

Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income