As MetLife cuts, adviser ranks are thinning out fast

Insurer has axed 2,500 reps in the past year.
JUN 02, 2013
MetLife Inc. is making good on its plans to ratchet down sales of variable annuities and universal life insurance with secondary guarantees in the United States, and dramatically reduce head count in its financial adviser force. Over the past year, the company has axed 2,500 advisers from its career agency channel, leaving it with 5,000 advisers. MetLife is on track to save $150 million annually by the end of next year, according to a presentation Eric Steigerwalt, head of its U.S. retail business, made to investors May 21. Low interest rates have forced most insurers to cut back on their sales of variable annuities and reduce the costs of their distribution networks. VA sales at MetLife dropped to $18 billion in 2012, from $28 billion in 2011, and the company plans to cut them to less than $11 billion this year.

INDIE B-DS

The cuts to the adviser ranks don't include the approximately 850 advisers at Tower Square Securities Inc. and Walnut Street Securities Inc., the two independent broker-dealers that MetLife agreed to sell to Cetera Financial Group Inc. in April. The two firms managed about $25 billion in assets between them. That transaction has not yet closed and doesn't affect MetLife's remaining two affiliated broker- dealers: MetLife Securities and New England Securities, MetLife spokes- man Christopher Breslin said. Mr. Steigerwalt gave a blunt explanation of the company's -reasons for cutting a third of the advisers who sell insurance and investment products at the company. “We're not financing advisers who frankly were never going to make it in this business, and we're putting all of our resources into people who have demonstrated that they can do a great job for their clients and a great job for the company,” he said during his presentation. Mr. Steigerwalt also indicated that the division was likely finished with the cuts and would “probably start growing” from here. He suggested the company would hire about 500 inexperienced advisers and maybe 200 experienced advisers this year as opposed to the 2,200 it hired two years ago. Mr. Steigerwalt wasn't available for further comment.

SIGN OF THE TIMES

The cuts are a sign of the times, said Larry Papike, president of adviser and executive search firm Cross-Search. “MetLife is doing what everybody else is doing in the independent- broker space, and culling brokers at the bottom and making sure the bigger advisers have resources to do better and bigger business,” he said. “They're looking at where the profit margin is coming from, and they're cutting the dead weight.” Some of the advisers shown the door might land elsewhere, but the odds are probably against them. “My guess is some of them might be attractive to other firms, but they're generally low-end advisers,” said Danny Sarch, president of recruiting firm Leitner Sarch Consultants Ltd. “The reason they were cut was, they weren't productive.” This story was supplemented with reporting from Bloomberg News.

Latest News

No succession plan? No worries. Just practice in place
No succession plan? No worries. Just practice in place

While industry statistics pointing to a succession crisis can cause alarm, advisor-owners should be free to consider a middle path between staying solo and catching the surging wave of M&A.

Research highlights growing need for personalized retirement solutions as investors age
Research highlights growing need for personalized retirement solutions as investors age

New joint research by T. Rowe Price, MIT, and Stanford University finds more diverse asset allocations among older participants.

Advisor moves: RIA Farther hails Q2 recruiting record, Raymond James nabs $300M team from Edward Jones
Advisor moves: RIA Farther hails Q2 recruiting record, Raymond James nabs $300M team from Edward Jones

With its asset pipeline bursting past $13 billion, Farther is looking to build more momentum with three new managing directors.

Insured Retirement Institute urges Labor Department to retain annuity safe harbor
Insured Retirement Institute urges Labor Department to retain annuity safe harbor

A Department of Labor proposal to scrap a regulatory provision under ERISA could create uncertainty for fiduciaries, the trade association argues.

LPL Financial sticking to its guns with retaining 90% of Commonwealth's financial advisors
LPL Financial sticking to its guns with retaining 90% of Commonwealth's financial advisors

"We continue to feel confident about our ability to capture 90%," LPL CEO Rich Steinmeier told analysts during the firm's 2nd quarter earnings call.

SPONSORED How advisors can build for high-net-worth complexity

Orion's Tom Wilson on delivering coordinated, high-touch service in a world where returns alone no longer set you apart.

SPONSORED RILAs bring stability, growth during volatile markets

Barely a decade old, registered index-linked annuities have quickly surged in popularity, thanks to their unique blend of protection and growth potential—an appealing option for investors looking to chart a steadier course through today's choppy market waters, says Myles Lambert, Brighthouse Financial.