Subscribe

Merrill Lynch team managing $700M moves to HighTower

The new recruits represent HighTower's first Connecticut location

A team of Connecticut advisers who manage $700 million for clients has broken away from Merrill Lynch Wealth Management.
The Andriole Group, based in Madison, is joining HighTower Advisors. Charles Andriole, the founder, is making the move along with the firm’s other principals — Geoffrey G. Gregory, Robert A. DeLucca and Matthew J. Montana — who will all receive the title of partner and managing director at Chicago-based HighTower.
Three other advisers — Eric C. Hanson, Christopher P. McFadden and Alexandra J. Miele — and two senior client service associates are also part of the firm, which focuses on high-net-worth families, and related businesses and non-profit organizations.
Mr. Andriole was ranked in the top 10 Connecticut advisers by Barron’s this year.
Ana Sollitto, a spokeswoman for Merrill’s owner, Bank of America Corp., declined to comment on the departure.
The team is the 40th to join HighTower, founded in 2008, and is HighTower’s only Connecticut outpost.

Related Topics:

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Ken Fisher plans to step down as CEO of firm

Billionaire behind Fisher Investments has discussed his intentions for years, but succession plan isn't clear.

DoubleLine’s Jeff Gundlach plans new global bond fund

DoubleLine's Jeffrey Gundlach plans a new global bond fund just as a potential Fed hike could create new risks and opportunities for managers.

Massachusetts’ Galvin investigates fund pricing glitches

Massachusetts' top securities cop is investigating the failure of an accounting platform he said delayed correct pricing for billions of dollars in mutual funds and ETFs.

Voya restricts variable-annuity sales under regulatory pressure

In response to Finra's warning on suitability, the firm's affiliated brokers will no longer sell certain types of L share annuities, a move that puts the company in line with other B-Ds.

ETFs are the next frontier for liquid alternatives

Mutual funds have been the go-to wrapper for alternative strategies, but that's changing.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print