M and A
Raymond James Agrees To Buy M&A Specialist; Profits Rise
The agreement is part of a wider M&A trend changing the North American wealth management industry.
Wealth management mergers and acquisitions have taken a new
twist, with Raymond James
Financial agreeing to buy an M&A specialist investment
bank, Silver Lane Advisors. Separately, Raymond James
Financial reported fourth-quarter and full-year results for
2018.
Silver Lane’s business focus is the financial services sector and
the firm was founded in 2007.
The transaction is expected to close by April, subject to
customary conditions and approvals. Financial terms were not
disclosed.
“Integrating their deeply experienced professionals into our
existing financial services practice further positions us to
capitalize on the growing demand for asset and wealth management
expertise, while offering clients a broader range of
capabilities,” Jim Bunn, president of Raymond James global
equities and investment banking, said.
Silver Lane’s team will form and represent the asset and wealth
management group within Raymond James’ financial services
investment banking practice, comprising almost 50 investment
bankers.
M&A activity in the North American wealth sector has been
brisk, driven by a variety of forces. An expected $30 trillion
shift of wealth from the aging Baby Boomer generation - creating
a big demand for advice - and the sense that wealth management is
a more lucrative business to be in than some more
capital-intensive financial sectors, has made firms in the space
an
attractive target.
See here for the latest
M&A data from ECHELON Partners.
Results
The firm, which operates in North America and the
UK, reported fourth-quarter net income of $164 million,
rising by 6 per cent from a year earlier and rising 25 per cent
from the previous three months. Revenues at $1.36 billion
were a record, rising by10 per cent on the year. The private
client group’s assets under administration stood at $690 billion,
unchanged from the level at the end of 2017. At the end of last
year there were 7,815 advisors, rising by 278 over 12 months.
“Despite the challenging market environment, the private client group segment, asset management segment and Raymond James Bank generated record net revenues during the quarter,” chairman and CEO Paul Reilly said. “We acted opportunistically during the quarter to deploy capital through share repurchases, as well as the recently-announced niche acquisition of Silver Lane Advisors to complement and expand our investment banking business.”
At the private client group, revenue growth during the quarter was mostly driven by higher assets in fee-based accounts at the beginning the quarter partially offset by the decline in brokerage revenues. As assets in fee-based accounts are billed primarily on balances at the beginning of the quarter, the 8 per cent sequential decline of assets in fee-based accounts during the quarter will negatively impact asset management fees in the fiscal second quarter, the firm added.