Lightyear Capital takes 50% stake in $9 billion HPM Partners

Private equity backing could fuel acquisitions by the large RIA.
JAN 16, 2018

Private-equity investor Lightyear Capital has taken a roughly 50% ownership stake in HPM Partners, a New York-based wealth management firm with more than $9 billion under management. The deal, announced Tuesday, shifted the ownership of HPM from Emigrant Bank, an affiliate of New York Private Bank & Trust Corp. Lightyear managing director Mark Vasallo said the purchase was made from a $950 million private-equity fund, which has an investment term of "10 years or more." He declined to say how much Lightyear paid for the ownership stake. "We're partnering with the [HPM] management team and employees, and they remain significant owners, but it's roughly a 50-50 split," he said. Lightyear, a private-equity firm that specializes in the financial services market, is headed by veteran investor Donald Marron, 83, who ran Paine Webber Group Inc. for more than two decades through 2000, when he struck a deal to sell the retail brokerage to UBS AG for more than $10 billion. HPM Partners did not respond to a request for comment. In the statement announcing the deal with Lightyear, HPM president and chief executive Kurt Miscinski said, "We selected Lightyear due to its strong business acumen and deep knowledge of our business and services." David DeVoe, managing partner of consulting firm DeVoe & Co., said one of the upsides for HPM is capital for growth. "HPM already had demonstrated an M&A capability, which will likely be a core component of the future strategy," he said. "Lightyear has a proven track record of supporting the inorganic growth of its acquired firms. Lightyear has made several investments in the independent wealth management space, including Wealth Enhancement Group, AIG Advisor Group and Cetera." Cetera was subsequently sold to real estate investor Nicholas Schorsch's RCS Capital Corp. The sale of the HPM stake to a private-equity investor follows a growing trend, and could introduce new challenges along with the opportunities, according to Daniel Seivert, chief executive of the investment bank Echelon Partners. "While wealth managers often can take their time with the sale of their businesses, private-equity investors often have to sell their stakes in four to six years to realize attractive [investment returns] for limited partners that have placed capital with them," he said. "It is important for wealth management owners to be open and receptive to entrepreneurs and investors that may be able to obtain a higher return on the firm's assets through scale, a powerful network of contacts or changes in the business model."

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