For the past decade, the independent channel has represented the fastest-growing segment of the wealth management industry. According to McKinsey, more than 700 independent RIA firms launch annually. Advisors seek out greener pastures for a multitude of reasons—the freedom to provide clients with the best advice and investment solutions or the ability to grow a team that matches your values. Regardless of the reason, technological advances have allowed more advisors to fulfill their personal and professional goals.
But while many advisors may want to break free of the big banks, independent broker-dealers (IBDs), and wirehouses, they may feel overwhelmed by the options.
Should you form a pure or hybrid RIA with state and/or Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) oversight, or go hybrid with a broker-dealer relationship and FINRA as an added regulatory layer. Then you have to consider the how - do you join an existing firm, which allows you to focus more on client service but may have limited flexibility, or start the business from scratch and assume all the operational requirements that come with it? There are lots of options.
As advisors wrestle with these questions and others, one thing is clear: the independent RIA model represents the future of wealth management. As a collective channel, pure and hybrid RIAs rank as the second largest channel ($7.2 trillion) by advisor-managed asset, behind only the four major wirehouses’ ($9.2 trillion), according to Cerulli. Most impressively, the RIA channel’s annualized growth rate of 10.7% over the past decade is twice the growth rate achieved by the wirehouse channel (5.3%), and it’s projected that pure and hybrid RIAs will control nearly one-third of intermediary assets by 2027.
Though every advisor is different, wealth management professionals who decide to break out on their own should carefully weigh these five questions before making the transition:
The decision to break from an IBD, wirehouse, or bank is exciting but can also be fraught with complexity and risk. Before jumping into unknown waters, develop a detailed plan for the immediate and long term. Lean on your professional partners for support and look beyond the household names. Custodians regularly help advisors transition from hybrid to pure RIA, and they can be a good resource for making connections and helping to solve problems. Talk to other advisors who have successfully transitioned, and, most importantly, select partners who align with your values and can grow with you. Whether you operate as a hybrid or pure RIA, as a stand-alone firm, or as part of a larger RIA or IBD firm, the future is independent. As the great wealth transfer continues, millennials and Gen Z clients will seek out holistic financial planners and advisors who set themselves up to serve this growing industry segment and will be well-positioned for long-term success.
Gino DeRango is SVP, national sales manager at Axos Advisor Services, an RIA custodian that delivers individualized attention, intuitive technology, and knowledgeable consulting support.
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