TD Ameritrade recruiting breakaway brokers at a rapid clip

TD Ameritrade Institutional reported today that it has attracted more breakaway advisers to the firm during the first nine months of its current fiscal year than it did in all of fiscal 2009.
JUL 30, 2010
By  Bloomberg
TD Ameritrade Institutional reported today that it has attracted more breakaway advisers to the firm during the first nine months of its current fiscal year than it did in all of fiscal 2009. Over the nine-month period ended in June, 212 such advisers joined TD Ameritrade — compared with the 202 recruits that came aboard during the 12-month period ended Sept. 30. Also, the 212 advisers TD has recruited in the first nine months of the year is a 44% increase over the same period in 2009. The custody firm's parent, TD Ameritrade Holding Corp., reported financial results yesterday. Of the new advisers joining TD Ameritrade in the current fiscal year, 42% joined existing advisory firms, up from 34% last year, said Tom Nally, managing director of sales at TD Ameritrade Institutional. "We're really seeing overall strength [in the] move to independence," Mr. Nally said, "and the tuck-in trend is really heating up." So-called tuck-ins — advisers who join an existing firm versus setting up their own RIA — are seen as a large market for custodial firms. Many advisory firms are actively recruiting from the large population of wirehouse brokers, who don't always want to set up shop from scratch. "We've got many [recruits] who are not so entrepreneurial joining existing firms," Mr. Nally said. TD Ameritrade provides custody for about 4,200 advisers. The firm does not disclose the assets of its custody business.

Latest News

Mercer Advisors lands third-biggest deal to date with Full Sail Capital
Mercer Advisors lands third-biggest deal to date with Full Sail Capital

With over 600 clients, the $71 billion RIA acquirer's latest partner marks its second transaction in Oklahoma.

Fintech bytes: FP Alpha rolls out estate insights feature
Fintech bytes: FP Alpha rolls out estate insights feature

Also, wealth.com enters Commonwealth's tech stack, while Tifin@work deepens an expanded partnership.

Morgan Stanley, Atria job cut details emerge
Morgan Stanley, Atria job cut details emerge

Back office workers and support staff are particularly vulnerable when big broker-dealers lay off staff.

Envestnet taps Atria alum Sean Meighan to sharpen RIA focus
Envestnet taps Atria alum Sean Meighan to sharpen RIA focus

The fintech giant is doubling down on its strategy to reach independent advisors through a newly created leadership role.

LPL, Evercore welcome West Coast breakaways
LPL, Evercore welcome West Coast breakaways

The two firms are strengthening their presence in California with advisor teams from RBC and Silicon Valley Bank.

SPONSORED Beyond the dashboard: Making wealth tech human

How intelliflo aims to solve advisors' top tech headaches—without sacrificing the personal touch clients crave

SPONSORED The evolution of private credit

From direct lending to asset-based finance to commercial real estate debt.