Subscribe

Battle rages over Credit Suisse brokers after Wells Fargo recruitment deal

Wells executive says 'feeding frenzy' taking place over some high-end producers.

Top Credit Suisse Group private bankers are being fought over by competitors after Wells Fargo & Co. struck a recruitment deal with the Swiss lender, the U.S. bank’s head of wealth management said.

“There’s a little bit of a feeding frenzy for some of the higher-end producers,” David Carroll, who runs Wells Fargo’s wealth- and investment-management division, said Wednesday at a conference in New York. He said Wells Fargo has entertained 211 of Credit Suisse’s 270 or so advisers at its St. Louis brokerage headquarters.

Wells Fargo reached an agreement last month with Credit Suisse giving it the inside track on recruiting the Zurich-based company’s private-bank employees as the firm retreats from managing wealth for U.S. clients. The deal would allow U.S. advisers and clients to move to San Francisco-based Wells Fargo by early 2016, the banks said.

“We’re going through the process of acquainting them with our company, our capability,” Mr. Carroll said. “The reaction we’ve gotten is very good.”

RETENTION BONUSES

The deal gives Wells Fargo access to more detailed information than it would normally get about customers, their investment portfolios and the products that Credit Suisse marketed to them, a person with knowledge of the arrangement said last month. Wells Fargo plans to offer retention bonuses to the advisers, the person said.

Still, Wells Fargo typically offers “much lower” retention bonuses when recruiting advisers from other firms than its competitors, Mr. Carroll said.

“We unabashedly tell people, if you’re out for the biggest check, there’s probably somewhere else that will write that for you,” he said. “We’re selling a long-term view, a partnership.”

Wells Fargo, the largest U.S. bank by market value, is seeking to boost the smallest of its three main divisions as Credit Suisse shifts strategy under new Chief Executive Tidjane Thiam. The business contributed more than 10% to Wells Fargo’s net income in the three months ended in September, up from roughly 8% two years earlier, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

Related Topics: ,

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Ether ETF aspirants take the starting blocks ahead of anticipated July approval

Earlier whispers of a fourth-of-July greenlight now look premature as the SEC gives applicants a new deadline.

Hints of jobs slowdown put Fed on the alert

Hints of impending weakness in the labor market add to the central bank's list of risks to manage.

Wall Street weighs impact on bonds if Trump wins

Strategists urge investors to hedge against inflation.

More American homeowners locked into mortgage rates above 5%

Older loans at lower rates are being replaced by costlier borrowing.

Take profits on five-year Treasuries now says JPMorgan

Selling pressures are elevated due to multiple risk events.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print