Soul-searching wealth advisors ponder banking turmoil: Where do I want to work?

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It's the best of times and the worst of times for wealth management firms amid the fast-moving bank crisis.

Advisory and brokerage shops are playing defense, rushing to reassure and educate clients worried about financial contagion from the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank. At the same time, some are going on the offense to attract displaced advisors and others who may be reassessing their own employers.

It's all shaping up to be something of an existential crisis for some wealth managers.

"I do think that advisors really need to take stock as to where they currently affiliate, where they're thinking about affiliating, that other name on their business card," Manish Dave, the senior vice president of Business Development and Experienced Advisor Recruiting at Minneapolis-based regional firm Ameriprise Financial, said.

"What do they represent? What's their financial foundation, what's their financial stability?" 

The shock collapse of the nation's 16th-largest bank one week ago — followed by scares at West Coast bank First Republic, which secured a $30 billion lifeline from Wall Street banks yesterday — is prompting many advisors to think hard about their futures. While the soul-searching may lead some advisors at SVB and other troubled banks to the big wirehouses, it could also down the road accelerate migration to regional broker-dealers and independent advisory firms.

The market-rattling events of the last week have "turned that dial further, much more quickly," Dave said. 

Take an advisor whose firm is what Dave called "1% or 2% off-course from how they're thinking about the business." While that mild disconnect may not affect what an advisor will do career-wise in the short term, "over the long term, you find yourself in waters that you weren't expecting to be in," he said. "And I think a lot of people right now are finding themselves there." 

On Friday, the parent of Silicon Valley Bank, SVB Financial Group, filed for bankruptcy to protect its remaining assets and help repay creditors. First Republic stock continued to fall on Friday despite its peer banks' lifeline. Whether or not an advisor works at a bank in the eye of the storm, the drama has quickly created several takeaways from both a career and practice management standpoint.

Chief among them: Teach clients what is really happening, delineate how your firm is different from the ones in the headlines, ensure deposits are protected, consider your options and keep in mind the longer-term possibilities for your career, as well as your clients' best interests. 

Keeping communication open  
Clients often take their cues from headlines about SVB, the second-largest bank failure in U.S. history, without reading the article, according to Nick Juhle, the chief investment officer at Kalamazoo, Michigan-based Greenleaf Trust. 

"A lot of our clients, they're not necessarily super sophisticated." Juhle said. 

"Late last week, and then over the weekend, in particular, Monday and Tuesday of this week, we just had an overflowing of incoming calls from our clients."

Greenleaf, a Michigan chartered trust only bank, is a wealth management firm that offers trust administration, financial planning and asset management services. It doesn't have a lending business, and is not a depository institution like Silicon Valley Bank — a fact many Greenleaf advisors have to remind their clients of, Juhle said.

With banking and market news coming thick and fast, advisors need to be on call and prepared to hold clients' hands — and educate them about the crisis. A customer's first question, of course, is whether their own money is safe. 

"Anything above $250,000, you might want to start to spread it out a little bit, but if you're under $250,000 in deposits in a bank, you're safe," said Scott Nasca, the president and founder of Generation Capital Management, a registered investment advisor in Rochester, New York.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation guarantees insurance for bank deposits up to $250,000 per depositor, per bank account, for each account ownership type. 

Regulators took the unusual step last Sunday of making depositors at SVB and collapsed Signature Bank of New York whole. At SVB, the vast majority of deposits from its affluent customers and tech companies — almost 96% at the end of 2022 — were uninsured.

For clients with funds in excess of the FDIC insurance limit at wobbly banks, things get complicated. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said on Thursday in remarks to Congress that the government would not prop up depositors at every bank that failed going forward, only ones that officials believed would "create systemic risk and significant economic and financial consequences." SVB and Signature met that threshold, Yellen said. 

It's also a good time to communicate with clients about whether their current portfolio strategy needs adjustment. "For clients, you just want to make sure that you're in the right investments and have the right risk tolerances for your goals," Nasca said. 

The long-term fallout of the still–unfolding crisis may include increased interest by advisors in ditching a brokerage to go independent, adding to an already-strong movement towards independence as they consider how to best serve their clients going forward. 

The last week may have made advisors "more comfortable with going independent," said Dana Wilson, the CEO and founder of Black and brown financial professional networking service CHIP (Changing How Individuals Prosper) in New York. "They might feel like they have more control over their business, over their clients. 

"Larger institutions really need to be mindful of that."  

Making moves
Near-term, industry recruiter Jason Diamond said that wirehouses are most likely to gain from any exodus of advisors at collapsed institutions.

"You have to recognize that the biggest and most established firms are probably the most immediate beneficiaries of this," Diamond said, adding that the wirehouses "are among the firms best prepared to facilitate a fast move, to alleviate client concerns." 

"Your clients have just been through something fairly traumatic," he added. "And if you're going to ask your clients to come with you, I think you have to offer relative stability and a known entity." 

Said Ameriprise's Dave: "We think that consolidation will probably be a likely outcome in this environment. Advisors at regional banks will be well served to consider how they may benefit from partnering with a firm like ours, that is a full-service, financially strong wealth management firm."

Some SVB advisors are taking a wait-and-see approach to what will happen as the bank is auctioned. The FDIC held a failed round last week for the bank and is trying again with separate bids due March 17 for both SVB and fellow failed bank Signature Bank, anonymous sources told Reuters. 

The FDIC, reached for comment on this story, declined to respond. 

Jason Miller, a partner and the chief operating officer at RIA Crewe Advisors in Salt Lake City, said SVB advisors have a unique skill set that would be valued at many firms, given their expertise in serving entrepreneurs. "You can deliver a lot of value to clients when you have a specialization." 

He urged advisors in these situations to not rush their moves and still conduct due diligence. 

"Advisors have to be really careful [with] the home that they choose, because if they're doing it for their clients, then they need to make sure it's the right home for those clients. Or they may not have a successful transition." 

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