Subscribe

Schwab nabs dividend growth manager for $85 million

Charles Schwab, managed accounts, dividends, dividend-growth, asset manager

Deal to help expand firm's managed account offerings as traditional commission biz stays soft

The Charles Schwab Corp. today said it had agreed to buy ThomasPartners Inc., a money management firm with $2.3 billion in assets in a dividend-growth strategy.

The purchase price was $85 million in cash, according to a statement from Schwab.

The deal is expected to close by the end of the year, at which time ThomasPartners will no longer directly market to individual investors.

Gregory Thomas, chief executive at ThomasPartners, and the firm’s investment team, will remain in place, the Schwab statement said.

“ThomasPartners’ dividend strategy complements Schwab’s existing asset management lineup and helps provide our clients with a more complete range of money management solutions,” Schwab chief executive Walt Bettinger said in the statement.

The purchase adds to Schwab’s stable of managed account offerings, the most prominent being its Windhaven Portfolios, which runs $12.5 billion in ETF allocation strategies.

Like Windhaven, ThomasPartners’ strategies will be made available to Schwab RIAs.

Once the deal closes, Schwab said it will waive commissions for ThomasPartners’ managed accounts held in custody on Schwab’s Advisor Services platform.

Assets in what Schwab calls “advised accounts,” which includes several managed account programs, stand at $124 billion. Schwab has a total of $770 billion in individual investor assets.

Independent advisers who hold assets in custody at Schwab had $762 billion at the firm as of the third quarter.

With its traditional commission business still in the doldrums, Schwab has been pushing its more profitable managed accounts.

Schwab’s net income for the nine-month period ended Sept. 30 grew just 2% over the same period a year ago, with a 3% growth in net revenue to $3.7 billion, the company reported today in a separate announcement.

“We know that this environment continues to impact our clients’ confidence in making investment decisions, reinforcing the importance of sustained investment in our full-service model,” Mr. Bettinger said.

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Turning advice on its head

United Capital's Joe Duran is hellbent on changing the industry.

Florida advisers sue CFP Board

Husband and wife balk over a disciplinary case the board raised for using the term “fee-only” to describe their compensation.

BofA Merrill agrees to $39M gender discrimination settlement

Lawsuit alleged a "deep rooted and pervasive gender discrimination" existed at Bank of America and Merrill Lynch

Supremes give Schwab a boost over Finra in arbitration scuffle

A recent Supreme Court decision allowing class action waivers tips the scales in favor of Charles Schwab in its scuffle with Finra over the tactic.

DeWaay settles with Finra over sales practices

Pays fine, accepts suspension but B-D already closed, securities license dropped.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print