In one of only a handful of deals by the firm taking a minority stake in a hybrid registered investment advisory firm and office of supervisory jurisdiction, LPL Financial invested in the Independent Advisor Alliance.
LPL purchased a 20% stake in Charlotte, North Carolina-based
"We've been in this process for probably close to two years," Russo said. "We had a lot of different options, and, at the end of the day, LPL just made the most sense for our advisors and our firm. It gave our advisors some certainty and the ability to control their future. LPL's goal is to retain advisors. Doing it with LPL versus maybe an outside party made them understand that there was no ulterior motive to the deal."
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The transaction will not give LPL any seats on IAA's board, and the firm never considered selling a majority as part of its due diligence process, he noted. Russo's team aimed to ensure that there would be no cost increases for the advisors and zero disruption to their teams and clients. IAA plans to deploy LPL's capital toward growth by in turn making its own minority investments in advisory practices in its network.
LPL is trying to "support what we're doing, rather than drive what we're doing," Russo said.
"They like, obviously, what we've done in the past," he said. "LPL doesn't want to get in the way and change that. They just want to be behind the scenes and be a partner."
IAA operates from corporate offices close to one of LPL's three main campuses in Fort Mill, South Carolina, and the firm has expanded to its current size from only seven original advisors at its launch in 2013.
OSJs, which are third-party companies, provide streamlined services
"LPL looks for opportunities to invest in firms and institutions focused on enabling advisors to deliver great advice whose leaders drive a culture aligned to that goal," Rich Steinmeier, LPL's divisional president of business strategy and growth, said in a statement. "IAA's long-standing commitment to empowering advisors to be independent business owners aligns with LPL's advisor-centric strategy and long-term growth plans, and Robert and his team exhibit the leadership and drive to utilize this partnership to further strengthen their support of advisors."
The firm's investment in IAA represents its latest bet on OSJs and, in general, the firm's ongoing approach in trying
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"You have this ongoing demand for advice, you have the ongoing preference to receive that advice from a financial advisor and then finally, you have this trend towards doing this type of business in the independent model,"
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The firm and other brokerages are also responding and adjusting to the ongoing threat of the shift led by advisors and clients flocking to RIAs, according to Jim Cahn, the chief investment and business development officer for Plymouth, Minnesota-based
"Having a relationship with a broker-dealer is really critical," Cahn said. "We don't want to have to have a firm that joins us tell their clients that, 'I can't help you any more with this product or service.'"
Russo's firm is taking a different trail from Wealth Enhancement and hundreds of RIAs changing hands each year by selling a stake in IAA to LPL rather than any potential private equity investors.
"If people are looking for a place where they know where they'll be 10 years from now, we're a great option," he said. "A lot of private equity is going to change hands in the next five to 10 years, and wherever they go may look very different from when they started there."