Paul Reilly, chairman and CEO of Raymond James Financial Inc., Wednesday afternoon acknowledged that buyers of registered investment advisors, commonly known as RIA aggregators, have changed the business of recruiting financial advisors over the past 12 months.
When asked about the competition in recruiting financial advisors during a conference call to discuss last quarter's earnings, Reilly echoed a common complaint among brokerage executives who eye RIA aggregators, often backed by private equity managers, with suspicion: prices.
"Probably the biggest change in the competitive landscape has been RIA roll-ups that pay prices that we can't quite figure out, and it's a bet on aggregating and being able to go to market at some point, even though those private multiples are much higher than the public multiples," he said. "That's a new competitor."
"It's kind of lead price," Reilly said. "Now [financial advisors] are selling their firms versus having people still kind of owning their businesses. So that's the newest dynamic. And in an area which I call a new competitor."
Although Reilly didn't give details on pricing, brokerage executives routinely complain in private that the price to buy RIAs has skyrocketed over the past few years. Prior to the Covid-19 pandemic, in 2019 or early 2020, the value of an RIA, based on its assets and client base, would typically have been six to 10 times the firm's EBITDA, or earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization. Some buyers are now willing to pay almost 1½ to two times that amount.
Meanwhile, Raymond James reported 8,710 financial advisors at the end of December across its various business channels, which was essentially flat from the same time a year earlier.
During the earnings call, Reilly noted that an unspecified number of the firm's advisors retired during the last three months of the year. Also, Raymond James advisors who move to the RIA side of the firm are excluded from the advisor count, since they're no longer registered with the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc.
Raymond James also reported new highs in client assets under administration, reaching $1.37 trillion, up 17 percent compared to December 2022. Its domestic private client group reported net new assets of $21.6 billion for the quarter, or annualized growth of 7.8 percent.
Quarterly net revenues at the firm reached $3 billion for the three months ending in December, up 8 percent over the same quarter in 2022.
"The outcome is correct, but it's disappointing that FINRA had ample opportunity to investigate the merits of clients' allegations in these claims, including the testimony in the three investor arbitrations with hearings," Jeff Erez, a plaintiff's attorney representing a large portion of the Stifel clients, said.
The collaboration will give RIAs yet another access point into the alternatives space through a new unified managed account capability.
A drop in interest rates and easier access to capital has reignited appetite among private equity-backed consolidators, who accounted for 53% of RIA deals so far this year- their highest share since 2021 according to DeVoe & Company.
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