People Moves
$900 Million Team Walks From Merrill As Top Brass Named

News filtered out that a team of
Merrill Lynch advisors left the firm with around $900 million
in client assets on the same day Merrill executives secured top
roles in the new entity following its integration into Bank of
America.
The team of four former Merrill advisors left the firm to start
their own independent advice practice in Connecticut before
learning that Bob McCann, Merrill's wealth management chief, will
run the combined financial advisor group.
Kevin Burns, William Lomus, William Loftus, and Jim Pratt-Heaney
— known as the LLBH Group at Merrill Lynch – left the firm to
start LLBH Group Private Wealth Management, Pershing Wealth
Solutions, the independent practice’s new custodian, confirmed to
WealthBriefing.
“They would have run the numbers and figured they can do a lot
better on their own than if they waited to accept the ‘stay
bonuses’ they would have most likely been offered,” said
compensation consultant, Andy Tasnady of Tasnady Associates.
The 16,000-odd Merrill advisors were promised “retention
packages” soon after BoA acquired the Wall Street brokerage firm
in September.
Mr Tasnady said a common “stay bonus” for top end advisors would
be in the vicinity of 100 per cent of yearly revenue.
“A $900 million practice would bring in yearly revenue of around
$5 million,” he said.
“Stay bonuses aren’t going to keep people from going who want to
go,” he added.
Merrill/BoA are understood to be offering its top advisors
retention bonuses within the next month.
Meanwhile asset custodians are helping breakaway brokerage
advisors set up their own independent advice practices: Pershing
spokesman Michael Geller confirmed the firm is currently in
active discussions with more than 90 wire house teams
representing more than $23 billion in assets under
management.
Mr McCann’s appointment as head of the advisor group was viewed
as part of Merrill Lynch’s advisor retention strategy.
Greg Fleming, Merrill's chief operating officer, Tom Montag, head
of Merrill's sales and trading operations, and Mr McCain joined
John Thain, Merrill's chief executive, who was previously
appointed to BoA’s top brass.