Star-QB-turned-adviser goes independent route

Star-QB-turned-adviser goes independent route
Billy Blanton went from gridiron to wirehouse; now he's going solo
AUG 16, 2012
Southern California football star William Blanton — better known as Billy Blanton — has joined a new team. Mr. Blanton, a wirehouse adviser at Merrill Lynch and Morgan Stanley for the past 13 years, has opted to go the independent RIA route, joining Washington Wealth Management LLC last week. “Over the last couple of years, I've felt there was a conflict of interest working for a public company,” said Mr. Blanton, who was named Southern California's top high school football player in 1991. “Going independent gives me a competitive platform and the flexibility to better serve my clients.” The former standout quarterback for Mater Dei High School —he still holds the record for touchdown passes there — and for San Diego State University, decided not to pursue an NFL career. “We had some offers, but I'm 6 feet, 175 pounds and I know the abuse that the body takes playing football,” he explained. “I had a great career at San Diego State, and I decided to end it on a high note.” Mr. Blanton has excelled in the advisory business since leaving the gridiron. He joined Merrill Lynch in 1998 several years after graduating from San Diego State. He moved to Morgan Stanley in 2007. Currently, he manages $170 million in assets and had trailing-12-month production of $750,000. Christy Pollack, a spokeswoman for MSSB, confirmed the departure. Mr. Blanton will join Washington's Carmel Valley office, and be reunited with Scott Wilson, a former complex manager at Merrill Lynch and Morgan Stanley. Mr. Wilson is currently western regional director for Washington Wealth. The signing of Mr. Blanton is a coup for the firm, which was launched just over a year ago to attract advisers from the wirehouse world. Chief executive Tony Sirianni said he started the firm specifically to help those advisers make the transition to independence. “A lot of wirehouse advisers have looked at the independent option, but it can be a big hassle,” said Mr. Sirianni, who has worked in management with Legg Mason Inc., Citigroup Inc., Smith Barney and Morgan Stanley. He said he offers advisers a “plug and play” environment and a 70% payout. “It's the reason I started the business.” The firm currently has $520 million in assets under management, but Mr. Sirianni said he expects to bring on a dozen more advisers over the next several months. Mr. Blanton, for one, is happy with his new team. “At the end of the day, I wanted to truly be proud of what I do,” he said. “This has given me that opportunity.”

Latest News

Mariner discloses cloud breach impacting nearly 9,000 individuals
Mariner discloses cloud breach impacting nearly 9,000 individuals

A November hacking incident involving cloud apps used by three employee exposed names, Social Security numbers, and other account data, the mega-RIA said.

Merrill broker, whose name was in the Epstein files, has left the firm: Reports.
Merrill broker, whose name was in the Epstein files, has left the firm: Reports.

Paul V. Morris worked at multiple firms across Wall Street and most recently in Manhattan for Merrill Lynch.

Andrew Left found guilty of securities fraud scheme
Andrew Left found guilty of securities fraud scheme

Convicted by an LA jury on 13 of 17 counts, the Citron Research founder and activist short seller now is now facing a statutory 25-year federal prison sentence.

Wealthspire's Ground Control targets UK golf market with Arena Wealth deal
Wealthspire's Ground Control targets UK golf market with Arena Wealth deal

The deal marks Ground Control's second UK transaction in under two years as US wealth platforms race to stake out overseas territory.

The most expensive investing mistake has nothing to do with markets
The most expensive investing mistake has nothing to do with markets

Investors' tendency to choose external goalposts can seriously impact their odds of long-term success – and they might not even know it.

SPONSORED Estate planning isn't a service add-on. It's your retention strategy.

As $84 trillion prepares to change hands, advisors who treat estate planning as peripheral are quietly building a sieve, not a book.

SPONSORED Why strategy matters more than performance

In volatile markets, the advisors who win aren't the ones with the best calls - they're the ones whose clients stay the course.