Schwab apologizes to RIA clients for marketing letter gaffe

Schwab apologizes to RIA clients for marketing letter gaffe
The head of Schwab Advisor Services apologized yesterday to the firm's RIA clients for sending a marketing piece sent Aug. 9 to advisers' clients who sponsor Schwab-run retirement plans.
AUG 30, 2011
Bernie Clark, head of Schwab Advisor Services, apologized yesterday to the firm's RIA clients, expressing regret for a marketing piece sent earlier this month to advisers' clients who sponsor Schwab-held retirement plans. The original letter, part of a package sent Aug. 9, advises plan sponsors that Schwab will be adding two managed-account programs to retirement plans held at Schwab, unless the client opts out. The letter noted at the top that the mail package did not apply to plan sponsors who work with an independent investment adviser. But that notice didn't assuage Schwab advisers. “They clearly knew advisers' clients were going to get this letter because they put in that disclaimer,” said Ken Winans, president and founder of Winans International Inc., who manages about $140 million. Mr. Winans said he had received no advance notice of the mailing, and that several of his clients contacted him and thought Schwab was replacing his own advisory service with the two Schwab managed portfolios. “I'm e-mailing you today to apologize for the recent mailing that was sent to retirement plan sponsor(s) with whom you have a client relationship,” Mr. Clark wrote in an e-mail yesterday. “I have heard from many of you about this mailing,” he wrote. “In hindsight, it is clear that we should have worked more closely with you prior to communicating directly with the plan sponsor. We understand your role(s) with the plan sponsor, and we attempted to honor that in the letter … I assure you in the future we will work with you and give prior notice when communicating to your plan sponsor(s).” That didn't appease Mr. Winans, who thinks the solicitation was intentional and will happen again. As a result, “We just moved half our assets to TD Ameritrade,” he said. The mailing to plans handled by RIAs was "absolutely against our policies," Mr. Clark said in an interview. "We have controls in place … to make sure [different clients] get the right mailers," he said. "We made a mistake." Mr. Clark said Schwab is now working to make sure the same mistake would not happen again. The Schwab managed portfolios will not be added to plans handled by advisers, he added, and the firm is contacting advisers and the affected clients to explain what happened.

Latest News

Northern Trust names new West Region president for wealth
Northern Trust names new West Region president for wealth

The new regional leader brings nearly 25 years of experience as the firm seeks to tap a complex and evolving market.

Capital Group extends retirement plan services further with a focus on advisors
Capital Group extends retirement plan services further with a focus on advisors

The latest updates to its recordkeeping platform, including a solution originally developed for one large 20,000-advisor client, take aim at the small to medium-sized business space.

Why RIAs are the next growth frontier for annuities
Why RIAs are the next growth frontier for annuities

David Lau, founder and CEO of DPL Financial Partners, explains how the RIA boom and product innovation has fueled a slow-burn growth story in annuities.

Supreme Court slaps down challenge to IRS summons for Coinbase user data
Supreme Court slaps down challenge to IRS summons for Coinbase user data

Crypto investor argues the federal agency's probe, upheld by a federal appeals court, would "strip millions of Americans of meaningful privacy protections."

Houston-based RIA Americana Partners adds $1B+ with former Morgan Stanley director
Houston-based RIA Americana Partners adds $1B+ with former Morgan Stanley director

Meanwhile in Chicago, the wirehouse also lost another $454 million team as a group of defectors moved to Wells Fargo.

SPONSORED How advisors can build for high-net-worth complexity

Orion's Tom Wilson on delivering coordinated, high-touch service in a world where returns alone no longer set you apart.

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.