Subscribe

Merrill Lynch hires 475 advisers; revenue off 1.9%

Bank of America Merrill Lynch hired 475 net new financial advisers in the third quarter, but revenue from the largest business unit of Bank of America Corp.'s global wealth and investment management division fell 1.9% to $3.43 billion

Bank of America Merrill Lynch hired 475 net new financial advisers in the third quarter, but revenue from the largest business unit of Bank of America Corp.’s global wealth and investment management division fell 1.9% to $3.43 billion.

And while the firm had a record $1.56 billion in fee-based revenue for the quarter, that level may not be seen again in the next few quarters.

The quarter was tumultuous for Merrill, as Sallie Krawcheck, leader of the wealth management division, was ousted as part of a management restructuring at parent BofA. Despite unrelenting bad news from the country’s largest bank, Merrill both added to its adviser ranks and attracted $4.5 billion in new long-term assets to the firm.

Spokeswoman Selena Morris, said many of the new advisers are trainees without books of business.

Merrill also hired 31 “financial solutions advisers” — salaried employees who serve self-directed investors in the Merrill Edge financial platform. That, in part, explains the drop in productivity to $854,000 per adviser at the end of last month, from $893,000 per adviser in June.

Revenue from brokerage transactions also was down, however, reflecting lower market activity, according to the company’s earnings presentation. Merrill said that it earned record asset management fees for the quarter but did not disclose brokerage revenue separately.

The quarter could be a high-water mark for the fee-based side of the business, though, as fees are charged in arrears on assets at the end of the previous quarter, said Alois Pirker, research director for Aite Group LLC.

Assets in fee-based accounts fell to $617 billion at the end of the third quarter, from $661 billion at the end of June.

Email Andrew Osterland at [email protected]

Related Topics:

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Athletes finish out of the money

From NFL star Terrell Owens to boxing legend Mike Tyson, too many professional athletes have gone from sudden wealth to financial ruin in a flash. What can advisers do to help protect sports stars and their assets?

Berkowitz bets on Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac

Betting on Congress to do anything is about as risky a bet as you can make, but Bruce Berkowitz is willing to make it.

Brokers, advisers facing uphill battle in finding new recruits

Attrition, retirement combine to keep reducing the number of active advisers. Is there fresh blood set to be injected into the workforce, or will this reduction continue?

ARCP throws in the towel on Cole III bid

American Realty Capital Properties on Thursday announced it is abandoning its high-profile — and contentious — bid for Cole III.

Genworth sale short list would be long list

A number of firms would likely be interested in buying Genworth's wealth management business — if it's on the block, that is.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print