In comparison, large firms in other regions appeared to thrive in a remarkable year that saw the broader stock market drop by 37% over a few weeks in February and March only to rebound to record heights; a presidential election that took weeks to settle; and an unprecedented modern pandemic that had resulted in 270,000 deaths at the time this article was written.
RIAs typically file Form ADVs after the close of their fiscal year, mostly in March with a smattering in the summer. This year the March deadlines were extended, so assets were reported when the broader market had recovered some of its winter losses.
Aided by lower state taxes and warm weather, which made common practices like meeting clients outdoors for lunch easier, RIAs in the South posted the strongest annual increase in assets, with 736 firms posting average assets of $558 million, for a growth rate of 14.1%.
Meanwhile, firms in the West and Midwest, respectively, compiled year-over-year growth rates of 12.9% and 11%. The 698 firms in the West on average have assets of $884 million, while the 505 RIAs in the Midwest have $743 million.
One caveat: Firms in the South, on average, are smaller than those in other regions when tallying size by assets. That means it takes a smaller increase in assets to raise the overall percentage of growth.
There is no doubt the pandemic severely challenged the ability of large RIAs in the Northeast to woo wealthy clients over dinner and drinks, compete fully in the current Rock Em Sock Em mergers and acquisitions market, and execute plans to increase staff. Clients were also withdrawing money from their RIA accounts to pay for children who lost jobs and apartments during the pandemic and moved home with mom and dad. That undoubtedly hurt asset levels at firms as well.
We have seen some faster growth over this year with firms in the Southeast and the South, said Shirl Penney, CEO of Dynasty Financial Partners, a technology and wealth management services firm that works with advisers leaving wirehouses and starting their own RIAs. And I do think there is a correlation between some of the locations, he said, with advisers in warmer climes in 2020 benefiting from simple practices like avoiding New York City subways and meeting new prospects in outdoor restaurants.
Its easier to talk M&A in such an environment, Penney added.
Money is such a personal thing for people, he said. And trusting someone is not going to happen unless you have a relationship. It would be difficult for high-net-worth individuals to get comfortable with a new adviser if theyre only talking on Zoom.
Dynasty, which recently moved its corporate headquarters from Manhattan to St. Petersburg, Florida, works with 46 RIA firms that control more than $40 billion in client assets.
I personally know boomers in retirement who literally moved out of New York City, said Dennis Gallant, senior analyst at Aite Group, who is located outside Boston. In the Northeast, we were caught flat-footed by the pandemic. And by the time we realized how bad it was, it had already spread.
I think its tougher to win new business in the wealth management channel during the pandemic, said Danny Sarch, an industry recruiter. Would you give your money to an adviser you never met?
Others offer a much more sanguine outlook on RIA geography. During a conference call last month with analysts, Rudy Adolf, CEO of Focus Financial Partners Inc., was asked whether Focus was targeting certain areas or regions for RIA purchases. A leading RIA aggregator, Focus Financial reported $1.2 billion in revenue in its 2019 fiscal year.
We have been really geographically agnostic in many ways, Adolf said. In this industry, there are excellent firms just about everywhere. We have eight firms in California, Massachusetts, New York, six firms in Georgia, five firms in Illinois and of course, in many, many other geographies. You can find fantastic firms in many locations. They almost always operate in multiple states and, quite frankly, many of them are, of course, operating on a national level.
The pandemic hit the Northeast like a storm in March and April, and New York City basically closed its doors, with offices shut and advisers working from home the norm. That made adding new business extremely difficult for RIA firms, which traditionally have faced obstacles in the region, one executive noted.
Its not just one issue, said Brian Hamburger, president and CEO of MarketCounsel, which advises breakaway brokers. That said, the old sectors of financial services, the wirehouses, banks and trust companies, continue to have a relative stronghold in that region that they are losing more quickly in the rest of the country. The traditional money centers, New York, Boston and others, have lagged in the transition to the RIA wealth management model.
The hotbeds for RIAs are in places that Wall Street has ignored, Hamburger said. Look at Omaha, Nebraska, or Overland Park, Kansas, right outside Kansas City. Theres a slew of firms located in that corridor.
The post RIAs see business go south appeared first on InvestmentNews.
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