Still working through its
The Westlake, Texas-based brokerage and banking firm reported Monday that it brought in $19.6 billion in net new advisory assets for its custody business, Schwab Advisory Services, in the three months leading up to the end of September.
Schwab has seen its net new asset totals fall following the completion of its merger with Ameritrade over Labor Day weekend. Roughly $1.3 trillion in assets and 7,000 advisory firms were then moved from Ameritrade to Schwab.
Schwab CEO Walt Bettinger said in an earnings statement that Schwab has now taken on 3.6 million retail client accounts and roughly 7,000 RIAs, or about 80% of the former Ameritrade's business. Some customers, though, have left and taken their assets with them.
Bettinger said the rate of attrition has actually not been as bad as initially expected. And there are signs that things are starting to turn around,
"In addition to these favorable retention trends, engagement levels across recently converted clients has also picked up — including positive new account formation and net asset flows across both retail and RIA clients," Bettinger said in a statement.
Schwab meanwhile reported that its net income fell by 44% year over year to just over $1.1 billion in the third quarter. Much of the decline was attributed to clients' "cash sorting" — or moving their money out of low-interest-bearing bank accounts and into higher-yielding money markets and similar products.
Schwab Chief Financial Officer Peter Crawford noted that the firm's net interest revenue — the difference between money made on its loans and money it pays to depositors — was down 24% year over year to $2.2 billion.
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"However, cash realignment activity decelerated further during the quarter — even with the brief uptick in August and an increase in long-term interest rates," Crawford said in a statement.
Schwab's stock price has been pummeled in recent months. Shares in the firm are down about 28% for the year, although they rose on the news that clients' cash sorting had shown signs of slowing.
Some of Schwab's struggles result from the complexities of offering a retail brokerage business, corporate retirement plan services, custodial services for financial advisors
For a look at the key takeaways for financial advisors from Schwab's third-quarter earnings, scroll down the slideshow. To read about its second quarter,