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Summary Of Global Executive Moves In Wealth Management - February 2013
8 March 2013
UK
moves Investec Wealth & Investment appointed Dawn Kendall as
senior bond strategist, a newly created post. She reports to Darren Ruane, head
of fixed interest. Kendall joined IW&I
from Architas, a subsidiary of AXA Wealth. Brooks Macdonald Funds appointed Linda McLaren in the new
role of international business development manager. McLaren is based in the
firm’s London office and promotes BMF funds to offshore
markets, focusing predominantly on Asia and Europe.
McLaren joined from VAM funds in Mauritius. Jersey-based JTC Group appointed Iain Johns joins as head of
international development and Paul Weir as director – private client services.
Both are newly-created roles. Johns joind from TMF Group, where he was global
head of private clients, a member of the global executive committee and
managing director of TMF Jersey. Weir joined from TMF Jersey, where he was head
of private clients, providing multi-jurisdictional solutions for high net worth
individuals. Towry appointed Elen Davies and Minaz Kasmani as advisors in
its Bristol
office. Davies previously worked at HSBC Global Bank, where she spent seven
years as a senior financial planning advisor for private clients in the south Wales area. Towry
also appointed two new advisors to its Aberdeen
office. The advisors are Irene Smith and Carol Stanger. Smith joins from The
Royal Bank of Scotland.
Stanger has 25 years of experience in the financial sector, most recently with
Oval Financial Services as a senior consultant. The firm also hired Ed Colyer as manager of products within
its client proposition team, based for the most part in Birmingham. Colyer joined after a 15-year
stint at Coutts, where he was most recently financial planning product team
director. Charles Stanley appointed Edward Rust and William
Bonner-Davies - latterly of Brewin Dolphin - as a senior investment manager and
investment manager respectively. Bonner-Davies worked at Brewin since 2005,
while Rust started in 2001. They report to Michael Clark as part of the London team. ACPI Investment Managers, an independent London-based asset
manager, made two senior appointments to support its private wealth management
and fixed income operations. Ana Rebec joined as executive director and the
firm’s current head of fixed income, Steve O’Hanlon, was named as head of asset
management. Rebec had a 30-year career with Citi Group, is a specialist
in wealth structuring and estate planning. O’Hanlon has been at ACPI since its
inception in 2001 and also manages the firm’s International Bond and Global
Fixed Income UCITs fund. Nucleus, the IFA-owned and controlled wrap platform, made
appointments to its legal, risk and compliance team. Nicola Megaw joined as
head of legal and Rachel Mullin joined as solicitor. Megaw previously was at
UK-wide law firm Shepherd and Wedderburn, where she held the role of corporate
finance solicitor. Mullin joined from Glasgow and Edinburgh-based law firm
MacRoberts. Before that she worked as a legal executive at Shepherd and Wedderburn,
alongside Megaw. Societe Generale Corporate & Investment Banking
appointed Zak de Mariveles to the newly-created role of head of UK
independent financial advisor sales at the firm’s Global Markets business. He
previously worked at Royal Bank of Scotland, where he was managing director,
head of UK IFA sales, markets and international banking, as well as being
responsible for the UK-listed products business. He is also founder and first
chair of the UK Structured Products Association. Geneva-based Banque Privée Edmond de Rothschild appointed
Hervé de Montlivault to head its private banking department as deputy chief
executive, effective from April. De Montlivault joined from Credit Suisse, where he had
worked since 2005. After having initially joined the Swiss banking giant in Paris, he then went on in 2010 to work in Geneva
in charge of products and then in Zurich
as market area head. Before Credit Suisse he worked for JP Morgan and Citibank.
De Montlivault succeeded Michel Lusa, who served as interim head of Edmond de
Rothschild’s private banking department since the summer of last year. Andew Bailey, former head of the prudential business unit at
the UK’s
Financial Services Authority, was appointed deputy governor of the Bank of
England, with effect from 1 April. In this role, Bailey will be chief executive
of the Prudential Regulation Authority at the BoE and a member of the BoE’s
court of directors and its financial policy committee. The Bank of England has
been put in charge of prudential regulation of the banking system, as part of a
shake-up to how financial services are regulated in the UK in the wake of the 2008
financial crisis. Baring Asset Management brought in Angus Woolhouse to take
over from George Harvey as global head of distribution. Harvey retired after over 14 years at the
firm. Woolhouse has over 20 years of international experience in
the asset management industry, having held a number of senior roles at firms
including Gartmore, Invesco and HSBC Asset Management. AWD Chase de Vere appointed Andrew Stevenson as advice team
manager at its Bath
office. Stevenson manages a team of 14 independent financial advisors who work
with private and corporate clients in Bath, Bristol and the wider
southwestern region. Stevenson was latterly based in Jersey
as a vice president at the wealth and investment management division of
Barclays. The wealth management arm of Royal Bank of Canada recruited Luke Dugdale from Deutsche Bank
Private Wealth Management to be a director in its London-based UK private
client wealth management team. At Deutsche Dugdale was a senior director in
charge of the London
ultra high net worth desk. He also held senior roles at Citi Private Bank and
UBS Wealth Management. Threadneedle Investments named Campbell Fleming to take over
as chief executive. The firm's previoius CEO, Crispin Henderson, became vice
chairman of global asset management for Ameriprise Financial, the parent
company of Threadneedle. Both men report to Ted Truscott, CEO of global asset
management for Ameriprise. The wealth and investment management arm of Barclays
recruited two senior managers to its team serving the Manchester
area of the UK,
recruiting former employees of UBS and Coutts. Elizabeth Bird joined from UBS,
where she spent six years as a director managing the wealth of private clients
in the northwest and London.
The other recruit was Samantha Beach, formerly of Coutts. She is a specialist
in wealth management services for entrepreneurs and business owners. Fleming Family & Partners appointed Mark Sullivan as a
client relationship director in its asset management business. In this
newly-created role, based in London,
Sullivan manages existing client relationships and be responsible for business
development. Sullivan joins from family office, Buckland Capital Partners,
where he was marketing and business development manager. He has previously
worked at UBS Wealth Management, Rathbones and Albert E Sharp, where he trained
as a stockbroker. Societe Generale confirmed that it has taken on former RBS
global banking and markets structured product director Zak de Mariveles as head
of UK
advisor sales. Mariveles reports to managing director of sales for the UK and Ireland,
Didier Imbert, and Alexandre Houpert, who is head of distribution for listed
products and exchange-traded funds in the UK,
Nordics, France
and Benelux. Mariveles left RBS in December
2012 and previously worked as managing director of the bank’s structured
products division. The London
office of Smith & Williamson, the accountancy and investment house, appointed
Guy Swarbreck as a partner in the assurance and business services team. For the
previous two years, he was a partner at UHY Hacker Young, where he had worked
for 12 years. McGuireWoods expanded its private wealth services practice
in London,
adding Hed Amitai as a partner and Claire Trotel as an associate. Amitai
provides tax and wealth structuring advice for internationally mobile high net
worth individuals and their families. Most recently, he was a partner with
Maitland in London.
Trotel joined from Snow Hill Legal, where her work included wills, probate,
trusts and inheritance and lifetime tax planning. London Wall Partners, which was founded in December last
year, appointed David Lovell as a partner. Lovell is a former colleague of
London Wall founder and chief executive, Nick Fletcher; the pair worked
together for 18 years at private client advisory firm, Saunderson House. London-based Thurleigh Investment Managers added Jeremy
Charles as a portfolio manager within its investment team. Charles formerly
worked at Scottish Widows and before that at Aviva and Royal Dutch Shell
Pension Funds in London and Bermuda. Schroders brought in Scott Lothian as senior strategist,
global strategic solutions, while also promoting Lesley-Ann Morgan as head of
the unit. Lothian was latterly head of multi-asset at BEA Union Investments in
Hong Kong, having previously been a senior consultant at Towers Watson in both
the UK and Hong
Kong. Lothian reports to Morgan in his new role. Morgan succeeded
Neil Walton, who was appointed head of Schroders’ institutional business
development group and chair of the UK institutional management
committee. Quilter Cheviot added Jane Seymour to its senior marketing
team, as the newly-combined asset management firm continued to make hires. Seymour was formerly
group marketing director at Rathbone Brothers and assumes a similar title at
Quilter Cheviot. F&C Investments hired Ben Fox as director of its
multi-alternatives business. He was previously a founder and fund manager at
Goodhart Partners. Henderson Global Investors appointed Derek Brydon as a UK advisory sales manager, to oversee the
northern region of England.
Brydon, who has more than 25 years’ financial services experience, reports to
Sam Mettrick, head of UK
advisory sales. Brydon joined from Skandia, where he was a senior sales manager
for two years. Tenet brought in Caroline Bradley as group finance director,
following the resignation last September of Graeham Sampson, just before he was
fined £17,850 (about $28,000) by the UK regulator in relation to
failures to ensure his previous employer, Montpelier Pension Administration
Services, was meeting capital requirements. Bradley joined Tenet in October of
last year. HSBC appointed Manveen Pam Kaur as group head of internal audit and a
group managing director, effective from 1 April. Kaur joined HSBC from Deutsche Bank, where was global head of group
audit since 2011. Before that, she held senior audit, compliance, finance and
risk management roles at Citigroup, Lloyds TSB and the Royal Bank of Scotland. She
began her career at Ernst and Young in 1986. Kaur is now part of the group management board, where she succeeded Paul
Lawrence, and reports to Stuart Gulliver, group chief executive, and to the
risk and audit committees of the HSBC Holdings board. Corporate and finance lawyer David Moore joined Guernsey
law firm Bedell Cristin. His practice is in corporate, finance, insurance,
offshore funds, trusts and regulatory matters. He is also a non-executive
director of a number of investment and insurance companies, listed and
unlisted. Moore, well-known in his
field, joined Bedell Cristin from another Guernsey
law firm, Mourant Ozannes; he has been practising on the island since 1993.
Before that he spent 10 years in London,
mainly with Ashurst Morris Crisp (now Ashurst). The Alternative Investment Management Association, the global hedge fund
association that has lobbied on issues such as the proposed European Union regulation
of hedge funds, named two deputy chairmen from its existing directors and also
an investor-appointee to the AIMA Council. The new deputy chairmen were Andrew Bastow, head of government and
regulatory affairs and general counsel, Winton Capital Management; and Chris
Pearce, Asia chief operating officer at
Marshall Wace Asia. The new investor-appointee is Robert De Rito, who is head
of financial risk management, APG Asset Management US. JP Morgan appointed Jose Berenguer as senior country officer for Brazil - a market which the firm describes as
one of its most important in Latin America. Berenguer takes up his role on 1 April and will report jointly to Mary
Callahan Erdoes, chief executive of JP Morgan Asset Management, and Martin
Marron, CEO of JP Morgan’s Latin America
business. Berenguer was latterly CEO of structured credit at Gavea Investimentos,
having joined the firm in March 2012. In October 2010, JP Morgan Asset
Management purchased a majority interest in Gavea. ING Investment Management hired Hans Stoter as chief investment officer
and member of its international management committee. Stoter took over from Mark Weber, who has returned to ING’s US office to
resume his responsibilities as executive vice president of structured assets,
loans and alternatives. As CIO, Stoter also chairs the firm’s global investment leadership team,
which oversees the investment teams, investment processes, portfolio
performance, and risk characteristics of mandates and funds managed by ING IM
International’s investment boutiques. Middle East Africa specialist investment firm Scipion Capital hired Georgina
Fleming, George Sanders and Ben Storrs in its London office. Georgina Fleming joined Scipion to oversee product management and
development, a newly-created role focused on sourcing investment opportunities
and developing investor relations. George Sanders and Ben Storrs joined as analysts. Sanders previously worked at London Research International, a boutique
Japanese energy, infrastructure and commodities research firm. As part of
Scipion’s trading desk, he deals with origination and commodity research. He
also works to develop relationships with Asian investors. Storrs focuses primarily
on commodity and energy research, alongside Scipion’s pan-African portfolio of
commodity trade finance transactions. He has worked as an economic researcher
at London-based think-tank the Institute
of Economic Affairs. JP Morgan named Jonathan Conner as head of its Middle
East private banking team, and Ramsey Jallad was appointed an
executive director and senior banker for the team, the US-headquartered banking
group said. Conner was previously a senior banker on the Middle
East team. Based in Geneva,
he reports to Pablo Garnica, head of JP Morgan Private Bank EMEA. Jallad primarily concentrates on advising and cultivating relationships
with private clients in the Middle East region, with a particular focus on Kuwait, Bahrain
and Oman.
Based in London,
reports to Conner. Europe The ultra high net worth team at the private bank of Credit Suisse
appointed another former JP Morgan private bank manager, Alison Bishop, to work
in the UK/international market group, holding the title of director. Bishop reports to Matthew Haimes, UHNW segment head for the market group
UK/international. Haimes joined in November last year, as this publication also
revealed last August. He had been UK head of family office solutions
in the financial sponsor team at JP Morgan Private Bank. Carmignac Gestion continued its growth strategy in Northern
Europe, naming Mikael Fellbom as its Luxembourg-based head of countries
for the Nordics region. Fellbom’s role reinforces the firm’s presence among professional
clients, while serving new and existing clients through a regional approach. He
reports to Davide Fregonese, global head of sales. Meanwhile, Mischa Cornet,
who previously covered the Nordic countries, focuses on the Netherlands and Luxembourg. VIRTUS Trust, which is based in Guernsey,
appointed two new directors to its board, Jon Seymour and Steve Kirk, who had
already been at the firm for just under three years. The company now has a
board of five locally-based directors Kirk joined VIRTUS in May 2010 as its management accountant, having
previously spent over 25 years working in the Guernsey
finance sector. Seymour has spent time working
in various jurisdictions as well as in Guernsey’s
fiduciary sector, where he began as a graduate trainee. JP Morgan hired managing director Andrea Levantini as private banker for
its Italy
team. Based in Milan, Levantini focuses on
clients located in central Italy,
and reports to Riccardo Pironti, head of JP Morgan Private Bank in Italy. Levantini previously worked at Banca IMI – Intesa Sanpaolo Group, where
he was the head of international equity capital markets based in London. Prior to that, he
was a managing director in the corporate finance team at Deutsche Bank in Rome and London. AXA Investment Managers named Christian Gissler as global head of risks
and controls – a role in which he oversees a department covering risk
management, legal affairs, compliance, and lobbying. Gissler joined from CNP Assurances, where he had been head of investment
strategy. Previously, he served as head of risk at Natixis and IXIS Corporate
& Investment Bank. In his new role Gissler reports to Christophe Coquema, AXA Investment
Managers’ global chief operating officer. Carmignac Gestion added to its team in Italy, with the appointments of
Michele Scolletta and Zaccaria al Jundi. This brings the French asset manager’s
Italian sales team to nine. Scolletta joined as business relationship director. He was previously
head of extra captive retail distribution at Eurizon Capital, where he was in
charge of the relationships with banks and financial advisor networks. Before
that he had worked at Cassa di Risparmio di San Miniato, Banca Toscana and
Aureo Gestioni. Al Jundi joined as business relationship executive. He previously worked
in a sales support position at Eurizon Capital. Carmignac Gestion appointed Benjamin Boyer as sales manager in its Swiss
team. Boyer works to strengthen the firm’s relationships with independent
financial advisors, family offices, banks, insurance companies and other
third-party channels in French-speaking Switzerland. Boyer previously worked at HSBC Global Asset Management as head of
wholesale in Switzerland.
He also launched the firm’s Swiss branch in Geneva. Before that he had worked in France for CDC
IXIS and SINOPIA AM. Amundi Asset Management, part of French bank Crédit Agricole, hired Bernard
de Wit as director of support and business development. He took over from Jean-Paul
Mazoyer, who moved to Crédit Agricole as head of group information technology. De Wit has been director of risks and a member of the executive
committee at Amundi since 2010. Before that, he was financial director for
Crédit Agricole’s international retail banking network, having previously been
deputy director of international development. In his earlier career he also
worked for KPMG Peat Marwick in Paris
and Fortis. Switzerland The Credit Suisse Group board of directors nominated Kai Nargolwala for
election to the board at its annual general meeting on 26 April. In addition,
Jassim Al Thani and Noreen Doyle, whose terms of office end at the AGM, were
proposed for re-election. Three board members – Robert Benmosche, Aziz Syriani
and David Syz – have retired owing to the statutory age limit. Nargolwala is lead independent director of Singapore Telecommunications,
Singapore's largest listed
company, a non-executive director of Prudential in the UK and a
non-executive director of PSA International. He is also chairman of Clifford
Capital, a Singapore
government-supported company to finance overseas projects by Singaporean companies. Following shortly after its launch of a consulting service aimed at
wealthy families and businesses, law firm Withers announced it was setting up a
pan-European investments funds practice. Matthew Feargrieve, formerly of Appleby’s, who advises managers, private
clients and investors particularly in Switzerland
and the UK, is based in
Withers’ Zurich
office. The Swiss subsidiary of Liechtenstein-headquartered private banking
group, LGT, appointed Heinrich Henckel as its chief executive designate.
Henckel took over from Hans Roth, who headed LGT Bank (Switzerland)
since 2004, on 1 April. Henckel joined LGT’s Swiss operation in the spring of 2009. As a member
of the executive board, he is responsible for LGT locations in Switzerland and
clients from western Europe. Before joining LGT, he worked for the Swiss Stock
Exchange in Zurich and London, and was its CEO from 2001 to 2008. He
had previously worked as an attorney in Hong Kong,
Indonesia and Switzerland. North America Thomas Nides, former deputy secretary of state and a chief
operating officer of New York-listed Morgan Stanley before that, rejoined the
firm as vice chairman. Reporting to chairman and chief executive James Gorman,
Nides will focus on Morgan Stanley’s global clients and other key
constituencies around the world. He will also work with senior management on
issues related to external and government affairs, while serving as a member of
the firm’s operating and management committees. Gorman said Nides will also work on client issues with
Morgan Stanley's institutional securities group president, Colm Kelleher, and
global wealth management president Greg Fleming. Baird recruited an advisor group with $145 million in assets
under management based in Portland, ME. The addition of The Glenn Group - comprised of vice
president Robert Glenn and Chad Schauman - closely followed news that the firm
had brought in The Lipe Group to expand its wealth management practice in North
Carolina. Union, NJ-based Center Bancorp promoted its senior vice
president of retail banking services, Mark Cardone, to the newly-created role
of first senior vice president. Cardone will remain as head of retail, but will focus on the
bank’s “strategic niches,” managing certain markets and the bank’s private
banking and wealth management division. As such, Cardone will oversee the entire private banking
division and its team of executives who provide investment management and
fiduciary services to clients including individuals, businesses, corporations,
non-profit and religious organizations, retirement accounts, and trust and
estate relationships. Investors’ Security Trust Company, a trust and estate
management firm in Florida, appointed Gregory Blurton as vice president, wealth
strategist. Blurton will advise clients on investment, trust and estate
services that can preserve and transfer wealth, working closely with clients’
legal and tax teams. Baird brought in The Lipe Group to expand its wealth
management practice in Charlotte, NC. Father-son team Joseph Lipe and John Lipe are based in
Charlotte, while Kevin Phillips operates from a new wealth management office in
Lake Norman, NC. Wilmington Trust, part of M&T Bank, brought in Frederick
Hopkins as a Baltimore-based senior relationship manager, as the firm looks to
target more high net worth individuals throughout Maryland. Hopkins joined from Legg Mason Investment Counsel, where he
was a principal and advised high net worth clients in Baltimore. Will Garlow, group vice president of Wilmington Trust's
Maryland-based wealth management team, said the firm is expanding its office
there to serve HNW clients in Baltimore and throughout Maryland. JP Morgan named Jonathan Conner as head of its Middle East
private banking team, and Ramsey Jallad was appointed an executive director and
senior banker for the team. Conner was previously a senior banker on the Middle East
team. Based in Geneva, he will report to Pablo Garnica, head of JP Morgan
Private Bank EMEA. Jallad will primarily concentrate on advising and
cultivating relationships with private clients in the Middle East region, with
a particular focus on Kuwait, Bahrain and Oman. Based in London, he will report
to Conner. The previous head of the Middle East team, Paolo Moscovici,
is now head of the emerging markets team at the private bank. The Carlyle Group, an alternative asset manager, hired
Jacques Chappuis from Morgan Stanley as a managing director and head of its
solutions business. At Morgan Stanley Chappuis was president of Alternative
Investment Partners, a $29 billion fund-of-funds business employing around 220
people. He joined Carlyle in May, based in New York, and will look at how to
consolidate the firm’s products and launch new ones to match investor demands. Genworth Financial appointed its chief financial officer as
executive vice president of the business, with responsibility for driving key
strategies such as growing the wealth management business and creating more
value. Martin Klein, who took over as CFO in May 2011, has
operational responsibility for Genworth’s international protection and wealth
management segments, its corporate and “other” division, and for corporate
development activities. At the wealth management business he will help the team develop
new products and services to foster growth among financial advisors. McInerney took over as CEO on January 1, 2013. He was
previously an advisor at The Boston Consulting Group. Before his appointment
Klein had been serving as acting CEO since May 2012, when former CEO and
chairman Michael Frazier resigned. At the time, James Riepe became acting non-executive
chairman of the board, a role he has maintained. Newport Beach, CA-headquartered United Capital Financial
Advisers brought in Rob Brown as a senior vice president and chief investment
strategist to enhance the firm’s investment and advice platform. Brown has over 25 years of experience in portfolio
management for large foundations, endowments, pensions and ultra high net worth
investors. His past roles have included senior positions at Genworth Financial,
SEI and Envestnet. JP Morgan named Jose Berenguer as senior country officer for
Brazil - a market which the firm said is one of its most important in Latin
America. Berenguer takes up his role on April 1 and will report
jointly to Mary Callahan Erdoes, chief executive of JP Morgan Asset Management,
and Martin Marron, CEO of JP Morgan’s Latin America business. Berenguer was latterly CEO of structured credit at Gavea
Investimentos, having joined the firm in March 2012. In October 2010, JP Morgan
Asset Management purchased a majority interest in Gavea. Beacon Trust Company, a Morristown, NJ-based subsidiary of
The Provident Bank, hired Maria Di Zio as a vice president and portfolio
manager. Di Zio is responsible for portfolio restructuring and
analysis, working with the firm’s chief investment officer to create and manage
asset allocation strategies for trust and high net worth clients. She has nearly 20 years of experience in the financial
industry, having previously spent eight years as a vice president and portfolio
manager at BNY Mellon Wealth Management in New York City. Three former Bank of America Merrill Lynch advisors joined
Hilliard Lyons, the Kentucky-headquartered wealth manager, in North Carolina. Peter Shanahan, Dwayne Powell and Deane Gauthier operate as
the SPG Group and managed $165 million in client assets at Merrill. They joined
Hilliard Lyons in Hendersonville, where they launched a new office for the
firm. The trio was joined by client service associates Ann Lamb
and Kelly Maumenee, also formerly with Merrill. Los Angeles, CA-headquartered Cohen Asset Management, which
specializes in real estate, hired John McNamara from Goldman Sachs to lead its
East Coast asset management division. McNamara will be based in Edison, NJ, while the firm's East
Coast regional office is located in Rutherford, NJ. McNamara will oversee the analysis of new investments across
the firm’s East Coast target markets: New Jersey, Eastern Pennsylvania and
Baltimore/Washington. He will also provide asset management services for
company-owned properties within those target locations. Minneapolis, MN-based Ameriprise Financial boosted its
advisor force in Florida with the addition of veteran Morgan Stanley Wealth
Management advisor Chris Barley. Barley had worked at Morgan Stanley since 1982 and was
latterly a senior vice president; he managed $170 million in client assets and
generated approximately $1 million in annual revenue. Barley joined Ameriprise’s traditional employee division,
which has some 2,300 advisors across the US. Ameriprise also has an independent
division made up of about 7,500 advisors who run their own practices and
function as business owners. Meanwhile, in a separate move the New York-listed firm hired
branch manager Mark Feiler - also from Morgan Stanley - in the Detroit region. Grayson Hall, president and chief executive of New
York-listed Regions Financial, was elected by the firm’s board of directors to
succeed Earnest Deavenport as chairman, with effect from May 16. Deavenport will retire from the board on the eve of the
company’s 2013 annual meeting of stockholders. Deavenport had served as a director since 1999 and assumed
the position of non-executive chairman in 2010, while Hall had served as
Regions’ president and CEO since March 2010. The board also elected Charles McCrary, CEO of Alabama
Power, as chairman of the nominating and corporate governance committee, also
effective from May 16. He will serve as the board’s lead independent director. The Alternative Investment Management Association, the
global hedge fund association, named two deputy chairmen from its existing
directors - including a leading figure from the Asian industry - and also an investor-appointee to the AIMA
Council. The new deputy chairmen were Andrew Bastow, head of
government and regulatory affairs and general counsel, Winton Capital
Management; and Chris Pearce, Asia chief operating officer at Marshall Wace
Asia. The new investor-appointee was Robert De Rito, who is head
of financial risk management, APG Asset Management US. Bastow had been Winton’s general counsel since 2005 and
leads its engagement with regulatory bodies and lawmakers in Europe, the US and
the Far East. Pearce had been COO of Asia for global long-short manager
Marshall Wace since 2006. De Rito has global risk-management responsibility for APG’s
hedge fund and fixed income investments, as well as responsibility for real
estate and other alternative investments for the Americas. Irving, TX-based Jones Colby & Tondre named Dustin
Tondre as a managing director and financial advisor, responsible for the
day-to-day operations of the firm. Prior to founding Jones Colby & Tondre, Tondre worked
with high net worth clients at USAA Wealth Management. Meanwhile, Brad Little also joined as a wealth manager,
having previously spent about two years at USAA Wealth Management. His
responsibilities at JCT include guiding affluent individuals and families
through all stages of wealth planning. HighTower opened up in the Philadelphia market after having
signed up The Sarian Group to its partnership. The Sarian Group is led by Gregory Sarian and Francis Masse,
who both joined HighTower as partners and managing directors. It specializes in working with emerging life science
companies and the entrepreneurs who lead them in the Philadelphia area. The team manages $650 million for high net worth clients.
Sarian worked for Merrill Lynch from 1992 until 2013, founding The Sarian Group
in 1997. Masse joined Merrill Lynch in 1999 and became part of the Sarian team
in 2003. UBS Wealth Management Americas hired Henry Berkley as a
financial advisor in New York from Morgan Stanley Wealth Management. Berkley, who has over 30 years of industry experience,
joined UBS’s Madison Avenue office in Manhattan. He previously had annual
revenue production of nearly $1 million and was based in Morgan Stanley’s New
York Plaza office. Berkley worked as an advisor at Citigroup and joined Morgan
Stanley following the merger of Citi’s Smith Barney and Morgan Stanley’s wealth
unit in 2009. Morgan Stanley Wealth Management brought in a trio of
financial advisors from Bank of America Merrill Lynch in California. Nikesh Kadakia, Joseph Pastore and Kirk Snyder joined in El
Segundo. They previously had annual revenue production of nearly $1.3 million. Kadakia and Pastore worked at Merrill for over a decade and
moved to Morgan Stanley’s Manhattan Beach branch, which is managed by David
Fahey. Citi Private Bank brought in Bruce Stewart as a director and
investment counselor in Boston, MA. Stewart will report to Michael Persinski, of Citi Private
Bank US investments, as team leader for the Boston office. As such, he will
handle all Boston-related investment business for the private bank. Stewart joined Citi from TD Wealth in Boston, where he spent
two years as co-head of investments, actively managing $10 billion in
third-party managers across equity, fixed income and alternative assets in 12
model portfolios. Bellevue, WA-based Clark Nuber, the chartered public
accountancy and consulting firm, hired Steve Brilling as director of family
business. Brilling latterly served as the executive director of
Seattle University’s entrepreneurship center and continues to lead the
university’s family business program. Clark Nuber said the addition of Brilling, who also serves
on the board of Northwest Family Business Advisors, will enable the firm to
expand its offerings in business succession and strategic planning to clients
in privately-held and family businesses. Dan Rezin and Dave Barton purchased ownership interests in
Rockford, IL-based Savant Capital, a national advisory firm. Rezin serves as chief financial officer, while Barton leads
the advisory team as director of advisory services and business development.
Rezin was appointed as CFO in August 2012. The Savant ownership group is now comprised of 18 of its
employees. Financial advisors Jeff Faucette and Tony Williams joined
the Huntington, VA, branch of Raymond James & Associates, the broker/dealer
subsidiary of Raymond James Financial. The team operates as The Williams Faucette Advisory Group
and came from Merrill Lynch, where they managed over $124 million in client
assets and had annual fees and commissions of close to $1 million. The pair
specializes in investment, retirement and financial planning for families and
business owners. Faucette started his financial services career 27 years ago.
He worked at Banc One Investment Management Group as the state coordinator for
institutional services before joining Merrill Lynch in 2002. Williams is a
34-year veteran of Merrill Lynch and has served as the resident manager of the
Huntington, VA, office for 22 years. Senior wealth managers George Padula and Adam Leone were
made partners at Boston, MA-based Modera Wealth Management. Padula and Leone joined owners Tom Orecchio, Greg Plechner,
Mark Willoughby and Robert Siefert as partners. Leone joined the firm in March
2006, while Padula started in 2008. The Private Client Reserve, a unit of US Bank that targets
high net worth clients with over $1 million in investable assets, brought in
Mary Justice to serve as market leader in the greater Seattle area. Justice will lead a team of wealth management professionals
providing investment management, private banking, trust and estate services and
financial planning to HNW clients. She has 25 years of experience consulting with and leading
teams who work with HNW individuals, families and foundations. Prior to joining
the PCR, she led asset protection consulting and insurance services as a senior
vice president for the Pacific Northwest region at Marsh. Janney Montgomery Scott brought in John Kline - latterly of
UBS - as executive vice president of wealth management in Raleigh, NC. Kline oversees $180 million in client assets and is joined
by account executive Joshua Brien and registered private client assistant
Nicole Apen, who together make up the Kline Wealth Management Group. Kline spent the past eight years at UBS, having previously
worked at Morgan Stanley Smith Barney (now Morgan Stanley Wealth
Management). National Philanthropic Trust named Wayne Walker as the new
chairman of its board of trustees, following the departure of Jeffrey
Lauterbach. Walker is a principal of Walker Nell Partners, where he
focuses on corporate restructuring and turnaround management, corporate
governance and fiduciary services. Lauterbach, who served for six years on NPT’s board, is an
independent trust and wealth planning consultant. Gumbiner Savett, a full-service accounting and consulting
firm, promoted two of its staff members to manager: Stanislava Niatylka is now
a tax manager and Joseph Ventura is an audit manager. Niatylka has been at the firm for five years and works with
high net worth individuals and middle-market companies in the areas of tax
planning, compliance and consulting in various industries such as real estate,
construction, manufacturing and professional services. Ventura is an audit and accounting specialist who works with
clients of various sizes such as venture-backed start-ups. He also specializes
in the audits of employee benefit plans. Minneapolis-based Marquette Asset Management, the wealth
management firm, promoted Adam Mans to president. Mans will be responsible for the day-to-day operations of
the firm and oversee investment research, portfolio strategy and relationship
management. He will report to John Beuerlein, chairman and chief investment
officer who oversees investments for Marquette Asset Management and the Pohlad
family (Marquette AM is part of Marquette Financial Companies and is owned by
the Pohlad Companies). Mans joined Marquette in 2005 and has worked at Piper
Jaffray, Securian Financial Services and Woodbury Financial Services on behalf
of clients at Marquette. New York-listed Prudential Financial named Robert Falzon as
executive vice president and chief financial officer, succeeding Rich Carbone,
who is retiring, and reporting to vice chairman Mark Grier. The firm also appointed Ken Tanji as a senior vice president
and treasurer, reporting to Falzon. Meanwhile, John Hanrahan will return to the
US to become senior vice president, chief administrative officer and CFO for
the international businesses, while Shoichiro Ichitani succeeds Hanrahan as
president of Prudential of Japan. Hanrahan and Ichitani will take up their new
roles on April 1. Although retiring from the CFO position, Carbone agreed to
continue serving as an executive vice president. In this role, he will provide
transitional support and strategic leadership on certain projects. Ichitani is currently director, executive vice president and
chief marketing officer at Prudential of Japan. New York-listed BlackRock appointed Gary Shedlin as a senior
managing director and chief financial officer, succeeding Ann Marie Petach, who
moved to BlackRock Solutions as a senior managing director within the client
solutions business. Shedlin joined from Morgan Stanley, where he was vice
chairman of investment banking and a managing director in the financial
institutions group. At BlackRock, he will serve as a member of the firm’s
global executive committee, reporting to chairman and chief executive Laurence
Fink. As CFO, Shedlin will oversee corporate finance functions
including business finance; accounting; finance operations; tax, treasury and
risk management; and investment products and controls. He will also be
responsible for investor relations and corporate development, as well as
strategy, co-reporting to Fink. He starts on March 11 and will work closely with Petach
through a transition period until she completes her tenure as CFO following the
reporting of BlackRock’s first quarter earnings results. Shedlin will assume
the role of CFO at that time. Meanwhile, in her new role Petach will help develop client
relationships and business initiatives, with a focus on offerings for public
and private pension funds. Baltimore, MD-headquartered Legg Mason, one of the largest
asset managers in the US, named Joseph Sullivan as its president and chief
executive. Sullivan, who was also appointed to the firm’s board of
directors, had served as interim CEO since October 2012 following the departure
of chairman and CEO Mark Fetting, who remained as a consultant to the company
through year-end. Sullivan joined BlackRock in 2008 as senior executive vice
president, chief administrative officer and was most recently head of global
distribution. He said in a statement that the firm is focused on growth,
both organically and via acquisitions of teams and firms that “build and
diversify” its affiliate managers and fill “product gaps.” Meanwhile, Dennis Kass was also added to the firm’s board of
directors. Kass, who takes up his new role on April 1, last year retired as CEO
of Jennison Associates, an asset management firm that is wholly-owned by
Prudential Financial. Schroders’ chief executive for North America since 2006,
Jamie Dorrien-Smith, is retiring on July 1 after 19 years at the firm and will
be replaced by Karl Dasher, head of fixed income. Meanwhile, chief investment officer, Philippe Lespinard,
will become co-head of fixed income and will join the group management
committee. Blackstone Alternative Asset Management, a division of New
York-listed Blackstone, appointed Anthony Maniscalco as a managing director
within its investment team. Maniscalco is the former head of alternative asset
management within Barclays’ financial institutions investment banking division.
In his new role at Blackstone, he will work with Greg Hall, a senior managing
director, and other team members in building out the firm’s platform to
purchase ownership interests in hedge fund businesses. Philadelphia, PA-based Janney Montgomery Scott merged its
Linwood and Margate offices in New Jersey, naming Stephen Marchel branch
manager of the newly-combined Linwood-based branch. Marchel previously served in the same role in Margate. He
has over 25 years of industry experience and joined Janney in 2008 as branch
manager. Members of Marchel’s team - The Marchel Wealth Management
Group - also relocated to the Linwood office. They include: Daniel Campbell,
assistant vice president of investments; Tracy Fiedler-Santoro, first vice
president of wealth management; Ted Khoury, account executive; and John Casale,
operations assistant. First Republic Bank appointed senior vice president Jason
Bender to the newly-created position of chief administrative officer. Bender currently manages First Republic’s finance department
but will assume additional responsibilities for lending operations and
servicing, as well as administrative services. He joined First Republic in 1999
and has led the bank’s finance department since 2001. Raymond James & Associates, the broker/dealer subsidiary
of Raymond James Financial, nabbed another financial advisor team from Morgan
Stanley, this time in Houston, TX. Financial advisors and senior vice presidents Marlene Fowler
and Christopher Fowler operate as the Fowler Financial Group and previously
managed over $70 million in client assets, with annual fees and commissions in
excess of $700,000. Prior to joining Morgan Stanley, the husband-wife team spent
a combined 29 years at AG Edwards, where they managed more than $100 million in
client assets and had annual revenues of some $1 million. They left AG Edwards
for Morgan Stanley when it was acquired by Wachovia in 2007. Columbia Management, a subsidiary of New York-listed
Ameriprise Financial, appointed Jeffrey Knight to the newly-created role of
head of global asset allocation. Knight joined from Putnam Investments, where he most
recently managed several mutual funds and institutional strategies as head of
global asset allocation. Citi Private Bank named Keith Gertsen as a managing director
and team leader in Greenwich, CT, with effect from March 18. Reporting to Paul Hubert, global market manager for the
eastern region, Gertsen will have responsibility for client acquisition,
managing client relationships and shaping a hedge fund and alternative
investments strategy. Gertsen has 22 years of experience in capital markets,
having held management and production roles on both the sell and buy side of
the business. Hubert said Gertsen’s experience will be instrumental in helping
to shape the bank’s approach to the alternative manager client base. Dynasty Financial Partners brought in Michael Moriarty as
director of investment platforms, while also adding to its investment
committee. Based in New York City, Moriarty will develop Dynasty’s
investment management solutions, including the firm’s separately-managed
account and unified managed account capabilities (these are delivered in
partnership with Callan Associates, a US institutional investment consulting
firm, and Envestnet). Moriarty has 20 years of experience in the financial
services industry, primarily in managing businesses investing in and allocating
to hedge funds. Reporting to Dynasty chairman Todd Thomson, he will also
drive a number of “major” investment initiatives, the first of which is
Alternative Direct Solutions - a platform for accessing hedge funds in both
limited partnership and mutual fund form - in partnership with Wilshire
Associates. Moriarty also joined Dynasty’s investment committee, along
with Jim Brown and Judah Kraushaar. Brown is a founder and managing partner of
Long Ridge Equity Partners, which is a private investment firm focused on the
financial services sector, while Kraushaar is a managing partner at Roaring
Brook Capital, a long-short equity fund launched in 2007. UBS Wealth Management Americas reinforced its broker network
in Providence, RI, with the addition of advisors Jamie Hilton and Kara Museler
from Morgan Stanley Wealth Management. Hilton, who has worked in the industry for 30 years, was a
senior vice president at Morgan Stanley. He and Museler were based out of
Morgan Stanley's Newport, RI, office. Brown Advisory appointed Porter Schutt and Bill Dugdale as
partners in Wilmington, DE. Schutt will oversee the Wilmington office and draw on his
expertise in global equities to develop solutions for private clients and
non-profits. Meanwhile, Dugdale will be primarily responsible for the office’s
client service and advisory functions, while also sharing his investment views
with the firm. Schutt joined from Marvin & Palmer Associates, a global
equity management firm, where he was a partner and portfolio manager for
emerging markets and domestic large-cap growth equity portfolios. Dugdale is
latterly of Friess Associates, a Wilmington-based investment firm where he most
recently served as client relationship manager and portfolio specialist. Charlotte, NC-based Capital Guardian, a boutique wealth
management firm, appointed C Michael Spivey as vice president of business
development to lead the firm’s West Coast expansion. Spivey will focus on growing the firm’s roster of
independent advisors and supervisory jurisdiction offices. He has over 30 years
of experience in the financial services industry. New York City-based OpenArc Asset Management appointed
Michael Warszawski as a partner. Warszawski is the former chief executive of Bank Hapoalim
Switzerland, having previously served as CEO of PAM Global Investments, a
London-based asset management boutique. DST Global Solutions, a provider of technology and data
management solutions for the investment management industry, bolstered its
North American business development team with two senior hires. Holli McCaffery, a director of business development, and
Karleen Fallon, a marketing manager, were brought in to steer growth for Anova,
the firm’s technology solution for investment managers. McCaffery has over eight years of industry and business
development experience, having most recently been a senior business development
manager at StatPro. Fallon has six years of business-to-business marketing in
financial technology solutions. The wealth and investment management division of Barclays
brought in 16 investment representatives from a host of firms including Goldman
Sachs, BNY Mellon, US Trust and Credit Suisse, across seven US offices. Ramon Hache, a managing director, and directors Stephen
Brazell and Joseph Chung joined in New York from Deutsche Bank’s markets
coverage group. Meanwhile, also in New York from Merrill Lynch’s global
wealth management unit is Steven Guggenheimer, a director, and vice president
George Zaki. Concluding the New York hires was Jonathan Mann, who started
as a director from AllianceBernstein. All six of the New York appointees report to Mark Stevenson,
managing director and regional manager for New York. Barclays also bolstered its foothold in Texas, bringing in
three directors from the private wealth management division of Goldman Sachs.
This team reports to Steve Head, managing director and regional manager for
Texas. Don Childress has some 14 years of experience serving HNW
clients and families and spent the five years prior to his stint at Goldman
Sachs in the tax accounting and investment banking divisions at Price
Waterhouse. Jeff Collins previously worked in real estate development at
Austin Capital Partners and has over 15 years of wealth management experience. Lastly, Neil Stone has about 14 years of experience serving
HNW clients and families and has worked within the investment banking division
at Prudential Securities and in loan syndication at Texas Commerce Bank,
Chemical Bank. In Beverly Hills, Watt Webb joined as a director from BNY
Mellon, where he was a senior director of portfolio management serving UHNW
families, executives, hedge fund managers and business owners. Warren Cohn, also a director, joined from US Trust, where he
was a senior private client advisor providing wealth planning and financial
management services to clients within the entertainment and sports industry. Webb and Cohn report to Brian Sears, managing director and
regional manager for the Los Angeles and Beverly Hills offices. In Los Angeles, CA, Adam Morgens was appointed as a vice
president. He reports to Sears and joined the organization from the
institutional sales division of UnionBanc Investment Services, which is the
broker-dealer subsidiary of Union Bank. In Boston, MA, Barry Pederson started as a director,
bringing with him 20 years of financial services experience. At his predecessor
firms - Morgan Keegan, Sterne Agee & Leach and AG Edwards - he was a
partner on the institutional sales and research teams. Pedersen reports to Marty Courage, managing director and
regional manager for Boston. Meanwhile, in Chicago, IL, Adam Strauss joined as a vice
president from the private wealth management division of Goldman Sachs, where
he served HNW individuals and families. He reports to Bill Scherr, director and
regional manager for Chicago. Rounding off the hires, Ileana Platt and Rafael Urquidi were
brought in in Miami, FL, as directors from the private banking division of
Credit Suisse. Platt and Urquidi report to Marilyn Gonzalez, director and
regional manager for Miami. Private Ocean, a wealth manager based in Marin County, CA,
changed its leadership structure to appoint co-founder Richard Stone as
chairman, a new role at the firm, and co-founder Greg Friedman as chief
executive. As chairman, Stone will continue to serve the firm and be
active in the local community in a number of board and committee roles. He has
been in the industry for over 40 years now. Meanwhile, Friedman will continue as president of Junxure,
which he founded in 2001, as well as being CEO of Private Ocean. Junxure is a
practice management firm that combines technology, training and consulting for
financial advisors. Sidley Austin, the international law firm that caters to the
financial services industry, made Andrew Auchincloss a partner within the
private clients, trusts and estates group in New York. Auchincloss focuses on estate and investment planning strategies
under US law for individuals and families in the US and globally. Prior to
joining Sidley, he was a director in the wealth management group at
AllianceBernstein. Citi Private Bank continued to ramp up its presence in key
markets, adding Amy Welzer as a managing director on the ultra high net worth
team in Chicago, IL. Citi hired Welzer from JP Morgan Private Bank’s office in
Chicago, where she was managing director, with responsibility for private
client relationships in the Midwest. She joins Citi’s team on March 7, reporting to Michael
Smith, general market manager of the Midwest region. The chairman of Goldman Sachs Asset Management, Jim O’Neill,
is retiring from the firm later this year, after 20 years of service. The role of chairman of GSAM was specifically created for
O'Neill, and therefore the firm does not expect to replace him. O’Neill, who is based in London, joined Goldman Sachs in
1995 as a partner, taking on the roles of co-head of global economics research
and chief currency economist. Morgan Stanley Wealth Management hired a financial advisor
from Wells Fargo and an advisory team from JP Morgan, in Pueblo, CO, and New
York respectively. Calvin Mason joined the Pueblo office from Wells Fargo and
reports to complex manager Thomas Octigan. Mason has a production of $1,426,000
and previously oversaw $144 million in assets. Meanwhile, the Sheresky/Samsen Group - comprised of Steven
Sheresky, Jeffrey Sheresky and Jeffrey Samsen - joined Morgan Stanley’s Midtown
Manhattan complex from JP Morgan, where they previously had $290 million in
assets. The trio reports to complex manager Ben Firestein. Capital Bank appointed F Britt Borders as a wealth
management executive to oversee its investment sales and trust businesses. Borders has 26 years of experience in the financial services
industry and previously served as director of wealth management for Community
& Southern Bank, charged with creating a high net worth division. Borders
held a similar position at Buckhead Capital Management in Atlanta, GA, and also
served as director of the wealth advisory group at First Citizens Bank. Henderson Global Investors took on credit manager Kevin
Loome and five US credit specialists from Delaware Investments. Based in Philadelphia, PA, the team reports to Loome, who in
turn reports to global head of credit Stephen Thariyan. The five credit specialists are: Charles Devereux, head
analyst; Devon Everhart, senior analyst; Douglas Zinser, senior analyst;
Matthew Fanandakis, analyst; and Gregg Gola, trader and analyst. Citi Private Bank brought in Luke Palacio as managing
director and regional market manager for the Southeast region, as the firm also
looks to expand its ultra high net worth Latin American business. Based in Miami, FL, Palacio is tasked with reinforcing the
firm’s presence throughout South Florida and beyond what Citi describes as the
“key locations” of Miami, Boca Raton and Palm Beach. He will also instigate a
strategic focus on UHNW Latin American clients based in North America. Palacio takes up his role on March 18 and will report to
Paul Hubert, global market manager for the Eastern region. Palacio has around
20 years of industry experience, of which a significant proportion has been
spent focusing on the UHNW market in the Southeast region and Latin America. Meanwhile, Palacio is also tasked with expanding Citi’s UHNW
group across Latin American markets such as Chile,
Argentina, Peru and Colombia. In this capacity, he will
report to Genaro Poulat, global market manager for Latin
America. Palacio joins Citi from JP Morgan Private Bank, where he was
a managing director and senior banker in Miami
and led a team that serves UHNW families. He also served for seven years as a
member of the private bank's Latin America
operating committee. Chicago’s
Strategic Philanthropy opened a West Coast office, appointing a long-time
Morgan Stanley wealth manager to head up operations there. Carola Barton will lead the new Santa Cruz, CA,
office, as managing director for the West Coast. She was latterly director of
commitments for the Clinton Global Initiative-Asia, a project run by the
Clinton Foundation, and also previously worked at Morgan Stanley for 16 years. At Strategic Philanthropy, which is a philanthropic advisory
firm, she will build relationships with legal and financial advisors based on
the West Coast and support client engagements. Meanwhile, the firm also promoted Mollie Bunis to the role
of director of philanthropic services. Bunis has worked at Strategic
Philanthropy for nine years. Going forwards, she will oversee the delivery of
services to ensure that best practices and the firm’s value proposition are
embedded into all contact with clients. Calamos Asset Management announced a change to its
leadership team. James Boyne took over as president and chief operating
officer. Boyne has been with the firm for
nearly five years. Most recently, he served as executive vice president and
chief operating officer since November 2011. It is not clear who he replaces in
his new role. In a separate move, Arthur Knight has retired from his
position on the board of directors at Calamos Asset Management after 10 years
of service. Knight retired on January 30 of this year. Highland Capital Management, a Dallas, TX-based investment
management firm, hired Andrea Lloyd as a credit trader and Scott Baker as a
director. Lloyd re-joined Highland
having once worked there for six years and now trades bank loans and high yield
bonds in the primary and secondary markets. Based in Dallas, she reports to Josh Terry, managing
director and head of structured products and trading. Meanwhile, Baker is responsible for identifying new
opportunities, assessing risk and conducting due diligence on the firm’s
investment ideas, as well as developing investment recommendations. He is also
based in Dallas
and reports to Martin Downen, managing director. Before joining Highland,
Baker worked as an investment associate for Sankaty Advisors, the credit
affiliate of Bain Capital. Charter Trust Company, a New England-based privately-held
wealth management firm, made a string of senior promotions. In Concord,
NH, Diane DeStefano was promoted
to senior vice president and wealth manager. DeStefano had been with Charter
Trust since 2000 and has over 25 years of experience in investments and
financial planning. Meanwhile, Jeanne Owens was named as vice president and tax
accounting officer, while John Carlson was promoted to senior vice president of
information technology. Carlson had been with Charter Trust since 1999 and has
27 years of experience in the IT field. Lastly, Elizabeth Kapp was appointed as a senior vice
president and wealth advisor. Kapp had worked at Charter Trust since 2001 and
is based in Meredith, NH. Kansas City, MO-based American Century Investments appointed
Edward Boyle as a vice president and co-portfolio manager of non-US fixed
income and global fixed income strategies. Boyle joined American Century from FX Concepts, where he
managed a portfolio of currencies and futures. Prior to that, he was a member
of the global macro trading and research team at Brevan Howard, having
previously served as a quantitative researcher and trader at Escher Capital. San Francisco, CA-headquartered Union Bank boosted its
network of private bankers in California, appointing Melissa Gough as a
regional director and Roy Martinez, Christopher O’Connor, Todd Stornetta and
Nancy Quackenbush as senior private bankers. Based in Santa Barbara,
Montecito and Monterey, the team of private
bankers will advise clients across California's
Central Coast region. They will provide wealth
planning, investments, risk management, trust and estate services, and banking
to professional services firms and high net worth individuals and families. Gough has over 20 years of experience working with HNW
clients, most recently as an executive director and regional manager at Morgan
Stanley Private Bank. Martinez
was latterly a private client manager at US Trust, while O’Connor joined Union
Bank following a 20-year stint at Santa Barbara Bank & Trust, formerly as a
senior vice president and senior relationship manager. Stornetta also joined from Santa Barbara Bank & Trust,
where he served HNW clients in the Monterey region. Lastly, Quackenbush was
latterly a vice president and wealth management banker at Bank of America
Merrill Lynch. Asia-Pacific Calastone, the global fund transaction network, appointed
Sharon Sweeney as managing director, Australia, bolstering its expansion
into the Australian managed funds marketplace. Henderson Global Advisors, the
UK-headquartered fund management firm, appointed a new chief operating officer
for its Australia
business. Sophia Rahmani joined the company after
spending seven years at Macquarie Funds Group, most recently serving as
associate director for the central management group. Bing Li, director of
Hong Kong-based Li Brothers Holdings, joined US fixed income investment manager
Cutwater Asset Management as partner. He brings wide industry experience having
held managerial positions at the likes of HSBC Securities in New York, JP Morgan Securities in Asia-Pacific
and Deutsche Bank Group. Brookfield Asset management, the
global alternative asset management firm, appointed a new private funds head
for Hong Kong. Neil Thassim joined the
company as head of Asia for the Hong Kong
private funds group. Royal Bank of
Canada's wealth management
arm bolstered its Asia team with three senior hires, based in Singapore and Hong Kong.
Febby Avianto, formerly at Sarasin bank, joined the firm as managing
director and market manager, Esther Quek joined as head of FX execution and advisory,
and Duncan She, formerly at Clariden Leu, joined as the head of structured
products advisory. McLagan, the consulting, productivity and performance benchmarking firm
owned by Aon, appointed Pathik Gupta as director, Asia Pacific Wealth
Management. Gupta has extensive experience in wealth management and consulting
in Asia Pacific and previously worked at Credit Suisse where he held roles in
product sales and development and business management.