Ric Edelman by the end of this year will step back from his role at Edelman Financial Engines, moving further away from the firm he co-founded.
According to a statement the company released Monday afternoon, Edelman will stay on as a strategic adviser, a board member and the firm’s largest individual shareholder. Currently, Edelman serves as the firm's chairman of financial education and client experience.
"A big part of our focus [going forward] will be RIADAC — the RIA Digital Assets Council that I created three years ago. It’s devoted to teaching financial professionals about blockchain and digital assets, so they can better serve their clients," Edelman said in an email. "More than 700 advisers have enrolled so far, and 200 have completed the course and now hold the certificate."
In February the company's prolific founder proposed a savings-bond program for newborns as a way to address the retirement-savings crisis.
Edelman founded the company in 1986 with his wife, Jean. In 2018, the company merged with Financial Engines, a combination that produced the biggest fee-only investment adviser in the U.S. The firm today manages $270 billion in assets for more than 1.3 million clients and has about 340 advisers, according to the firm.
In March, private equity firm Warburg Pincus announced it would take a minority stake in the company, with Edelman Financial Engines being valued in total at $7.3 billion. The majority owner, Hellman & Friedman, acquired a majority stake in Edelman Financial Services in 2015, prior to its merger with Financial Engines.
“Jean and I have decided the time is right for us to start our next chapter,” Edelman said in the company’s announcement. “With a team of talented and dedicated planners and staff, and an experienced and capable management team, we are confident in the firm’s future. We are grateful to our friends, colleagues and, most importantly, to our clients for their faith in us. And we are excited about our new ventures.”
The Edelmans are also involved in funding for Alzheimer's research and plan to continue that work, Ric Edelman said.
Among their work together, the couple authored a children’s book about money, entitled “The Squirrel Manifesto.”
As part of his stepping back from the company, Ric Edelman will also be giving up his weekly radio show, which he has hosted for 29 years. The final edition of The Ric Edelman Show will air during the fall, after which it will be renamed and feature a yet-to-be-identified host, the company stated.
Ric Edelman will occasionally write columns for the company’s client newsletter and appear at events, according to the firm.
“The philosophy developed by Ric, deployed across the firm’s nationwide network of locations and embraced by our 340 financial advisors is what sets Edelman Financial Engines apart in the RIA industry,” Larry Raffone, CEO of Edelman Financial Engines, said in the announcement. “We will continue to champion Ric’s legacy as we deliver on our mission to help millions of Americans reach their financial goals.”
AI is no replacement for trusted financial advisors, but it can meaningfully enhance their capabilities as well as the systems they rely on.
Prudential's Jordan Toma is no "Finfluencer," but he is a registered financial advisor with four million social media followers and a message of overcoming personal struggles that's reached kids in 150 school across the US.
GReminders is deepening its integration partnership with a national wealth firm, while Advisor CRM touts a free new meeting tool for RIAs.
The Texas-based former advisor reportedly bilked clients out of millions of dollars, keeping them in the dark with doctored statements and a fake email domain.
The $3.3 trillion tax and spending cut package narrowly got through the upper house, with JD Vance casting the deciding vote to overrule three GOP holdouts.
Orion's Tom Wilson on delivering coordinated, high-touch service in a world where returns alone no longer set you apart.
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.