Subscribe

Merrill reels in $3 billion team

Two advisers reunite after worked together at Alex. Brown before splitting.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch hauled in $3 billion in assets from two advisers working at competitors UBS Wealth Management and Deutsche Bank Securities Inc.
The two, Howard Rowen and Halsey Smith, join Merrill Lynch’s private banking and investment group, which has around 150 adviser teams that cater to clients with $10 million or more in investible assets.
(See also: Wirehouses warm to bank channel recruits)
Mr. Rowen and Mr. Smith join as a team operating in the Los Angeles office. Both had spent time working together at Alex. Brown & Sons Inc., which was bought by Deutsche Bank in 1999.
Mr. Rowen moved to UBS in 2007, according to registration records with the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc.
Bank of America spokeswoman Ana Katherine Sollitto did not provide individual revenue or production numbers but said that both advisers had generated well over $1 million in fees and commissions in the previous 12 months at their prior firms.
They will report to Michael Rogers, regional managing director at Merrill Lynch’s PBIG group.

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

RIAs could be required to report suspected money laundering

Proposal from FinCEN would have investment advisers monitor and report questionable activity under the Bank Secrecy Act.

SEC fines RIA $2.8 million and bars owner in ‘Madoff of Main Street’ case

Regulator bars owner of Total Wealth Management, Jacob Cooper, known as 'Main Street Madoff' by former clients, and holds him liable in case where losses are expected to total as much as $44 million.

RBC, City National deal marries bank and brokerage

The $5.4 billion deal could have RBC's regional wealth management business looking more like a wirehouse or private bank than a regional firm.

Morgan Stanley hit with racial discrimination suit

As part of her claim, ex-broker alleges the wirehouse's recent move toward mandatory arbitration is an attempt to prohibit employees from publicly challenging unfair practices.

LPL faces reckoning from activist investor

With giant broker-dealer's stock down 25% from its high last year, experts say Marcato could push for major changes.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print