If Barry Sommers' compensation package is any sign, his bosses at
Under Sommers, according to the statement, Wells' client assets under management rose to
Sommers' compensation package puts him in the top five best-paid executives at
Beyond the scandals
It's all a sign that things are going more or less as planned at an institution still trying to come out from
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Part of the firm's goal in promoting Sommers in 2020 was to slow a steady outflow of financial advisors. The firm stopped reporting its advisor headcount after the fourth quarter of 2022, when the number stood
A recent report by the recruiting firm
"They should be an attractive home for top advisors, but too many balk at the prospect of having to call clients and prospects using the Wells name," according to the report.
But another industry recruiter, Philip Waxelbaum, the founder of Masada Consulting, said
Waxelbaum, who works with Wells, said the firm has largely been able to move past the scandals in the public mind.
"They were the largest consumer bank in the world when this started," he said. "They're still the largest consumer bank in the world. So this supposed reputational damage does not resonate out to the general public."
Streamlined and simplified
Waxelbaum credited Sommers and his team for bringing Wells' three distinct advisory channels under unified management. The firm now offers its traditional wirehouse,
Ron Edde, another industry recruiter and the president and CEO of Millennium Career Advisors, said Wells took a step toward simplification when it divided the U.S. into four regions and made a single director in charge of recruiting in each one. That reorganization gave advisors a single point of contact to learn about the firm's various advisory channels.
Edde, who also works with Wells, said wealth managers who are on the verge of leaving a firm are often unsure if they want to go independent or step into another wirehouse role. Before the reorganization, recruiters for the separate channels did not necessarily have much of an incentive to work together.
"If I was one of the FiNET recruiters and someone asked me, 'Tell me about the wirehouse,' I'd wonder if I said something positive about the wirehouse if I'd be cutting my own throat," Edde said. "So there was an internal conflict."
Advisors now coming to the firm first talk to one director who tries to work out which of three channels is the best fit. That helps streamline recruiting by preventing wealth management prospects from having to hear from representatives of different aspects of the business.
"Let's give credit where credit is due," Waxelbaum said. "There was no firm that had this kind of unification until now."
One of the firm's biggest draws continues to be FiNET, short for
"We really do believe that five years from now the independent channel will be our biggest channel," Sommers said in an interview with Bloomberg last year. "We're not sitting there worrying about margins. We're worrying about building the right platform for advisors and clients."
Sommers' changes have also come along with further shuffling in the executive ranks. In May 2022, the firm announced it had made
Wells is now known for some of the most generous recruiting deals on Wall Street. It also is known for having one of the
Proxy points
In his few years as head of wealth management, Sommers has
The firm's proxy statement also credits Sommers for various technological improvements. He, for instance, helped reintroduce its online brokerage, WellsTrade. Its mobile app now allows investors to trade after markets close and in fractional shares.
Sommers has also helped develop a system for opening digital accounts and introduce a new client review center "providing financial advisors with an enhanced, single client reporting tool." The proxy statement further credits him for working on the firm's Priority Credit Line, which lets clients use stocks and other securities as collateral for loans.
Perhaps most significantly for someone at a firm still seeking to distance itself from past scandals, Sommers comes in for greatest praise in his work to respond to regulatory risks. The proxy credits him for "setting a tone at the top, including expectations for his leaders to identify, understand, escalate and work with appropriate urgency to address risk issues and events."