Aspen Standard Wealth makes dealmaking debut with Summitry acquisition

Aspen Standard Wealth makes dealmaking debut with Summitry acquisition
The New York-based firm billing itself as a "long-term partner for successful RIAs" has snapped up the $2.8 billion boutique firm in San Francisco.
NOV 04, 2024

There's a new player in the red-hot RIA M&A space, and it's bursting onto the scene with a sizeable West Coast acquisition.

Aspen Standard Wealth announced Monday Morning it has acquired Summitry, an RIA managing $2.8 billion in assets, marking its debut in the RIA space.

This acquisition brings together two firms focused on client-centered growth and long-term planning for financial advisory firms.

Summitry, founded in 2003 and based in the San Francisco Bay area, provides tailored financial planning and investment strategies, including retirement and estate planning, equity compensation advice, and other institutional-grade services. With a reputation for its client-focused approach, Summitry has become a prominent RIA in the region.

“When I met the team at Aspen, it was clear that they were different. They take a long-term view of everything they do,” Colin Higgins, CEO of Summitry, said in a statement announcing the deal. “They care about growing our people, continuing to build on top of the foundation that our team has built, and helping us deliver more for our clients.”

Higgins is a two-decade veteran of the wealth industry, with a 21-year record as an investment advisor, according to his IAPD profile.

Summitry's history is nearly as long, beginning its existence as an investment management firm operating under Charles Schwab in 2003. Over time, it has developed into a multibillion-dollar boutique offering comprehensive financial planning services – including retirement planning, estate and trust servies, and an expertise in equity compensation – with a focus on affluent clients whose income and wealth characteristics closely mirror the broader profile of the Bay Area.

"We have the deep roots here. We understand the dynamics of this unique ecosystem and we can be equally valuable in helping them take care of those needs," Higgins told InvestmentNews in a recent interview. "It's a people business. Stocks and bonds are the vehicle but the reality is it's all about human interaction and relationships."

Aspen Standard Wealth touts a unique approach in the RIA acquisition landscape, aiming to serve as a “permanent home and long-term partner” rather than eventually reselling acquired firms. The firm emphasizes alignment of interests and long-term stability, a model intended to support growth for partners without the friction and conflicts that often accompanies conventional M&A transactions.

“Summitry embodies everything we seek in a partner: growth oriented, client obsessed, and people focused,” said Aly Kassim-Lakha, CEO of Aspen, whose professional history includes a brief stint as a registered broker at Goldman Sachs. “Aspen offers what successful, leading RIAs like Summitry have long been looking for: a deeply knowledgeable, permanent partner who is there to support them indefinitely.”

Aspen operates through a decentralized model, providing resources to RIA leaders while preserving autonomy within partner firms, reflecting a broader mission to empower advisory firms for sustained growth.

The firm is majority-owned by Alpine Investors, a San Francisco-based private equity firm with a long-term approach to its portfolio investments. In an interview with Barron's, Kassim-Lakha emphasized that patient approach as a distinctive hallmark separating Aspen from other PE-backed acquirers, who are often under the gun to recapitalize with a partial sale every five to seven years.

When asked what his acquisition aspirations are in terms of the size of prospective partner firms, Kassim-Lakha cast a wide net, going from a minimum of $200 million to $10 billion in AUM. That upper limit, if achieved, would make it an outlier even in the current environment where the focus on billion-dollar deals has gotten increasingly steady over the years.

Latest News

Social Security trustees see one less year in insolvency countdown, project shortfall to start 2034
Social Security trustees see one less year in insolvency countdown, project shortfall to start 2034

New report shows dimmed outlook for benefits to retirees and disabled Americans, creating further pressure for federal tax hikes or more borrowing.

NY Republican Stefanik presses SEC to probe Harvard bond sale
NY Republican Stefanik presses SEC to probe Harvard bond sale

Open letter to SEC Chair Paul Atkins questions whether the Ivy League university withheld material information prior to its $750 million taxable bond offering.

Ex-LPL leader re-emerges at The Wealth Consulting Group
Ex-LPL leader re-emerges at The Wealth Consulting Group

The Las Vegas-based hybrid RIA overseeing $8.8 billion in assets has named Andy Kalbaugh president to help scale its advisor platform.

Envestnet extends investment offerings with new alts model portfolios
Envestnet extends investment offerings with new alts model portfolios

The wealth tech giant – in collaboration with Fidelity, BlackRock, State Street, and Franklin Templeton – is offering its advisor and wealth firm users more ways to diversify.

Just as wealth industry M&A was picking up, economic uncertainty could kill it again
Just as wealth industry M&A was picking up, economic uncertainty could kill it again

Deal volume increased post-election but now caution has taken over.

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.

SPONSORED Beyond the dashboard: Making wealth tech human

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