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Practice Management > Building Your Business

This Advisor Team Left a Big BD to Upgrade Its Retirement Planning

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What You Need to Know

  • Professionals who establish their own RIA often cite the need for flexibility and independence.
  • One RIA leader says the tremendous demand for sophisticated retirement income planning could drive more professionals toward the independent RIA model.
  • While often beneficial in the long run, the transition process is a significant project for the team and its clients.

Michael Leverty, founder and CEO of Leverty Financial, has been in the advisory business for 20 years, with the bulk of that time being spent as a managing director at Northwestern Mutual.

More than two years ago, however, Leverty announced that he and his team had formed a partnership with Dynasty Financial Partners to transition their firm, Leverty Financial Group, to become an independent wealth management firm. During the process, Leverty’s team launched a new registered investment advisory shop with some $400 million in client assets and seven team members, including two lead advisors.

In a new interview with ThinkAdvisor, Leverty explained that his independent firm specializes in two key areas. First, the firm helps younger clients establish and accumulate wealth, and second, the practice focuses on helping older clients transition into retirement, all with an emphasis on planning for corporate executives and their families.

“As our practice grew and become more complex, we decided that we needed a more customized approach,” Leverty says. “The transition offered an enhanced operational investment platform, including portfolio management and research. We also got better technology for both our team and clients, and access to elite industry practice management consultants.”

At the time of Leverty Financial’s launch, Shirl Penney, CEO of Dynasty Financial Partners, said his organization was seeing an increasing number of advisors coming from large broker-dealers and “choosing the road to independence.” In many cases, he said, the advisors have outgrown their home office platform and are ready to graduate to more sophisticated capabilities.

The Demand for Independent Planning Pros

“Our team works with executives and individuals considering retirement,” Leverty said. “We focus on preparing the client for the retirement transition, and then managing the income plan and distribution strategies in retirement. Our independence is an important part of this offering.”

Leverty said the focus on retirement transitions is rapidly becoming a focal point for the RIA industry, given the tremendous demand for such planning. Whether a client is a top-level executive nearing the end of their career or a rising star in middle management, there is much to balance across tax-deferred accounts, nonqualified deferred compensation plans, private brokerage accounts and other wealth accumulation vehicles.

“The days of the corporate executive retiree just walking out the door with retiree medical coverage, a sizable pension and a supplementary 401(k) for discretionary expenses are long gone,” Leverty said. “The compensation packages have become more complex, for example with the use of stock grants.”

According to Leverty, the advantage of being an independent RIA in this moment is that the client service effort can be genuinely holistic and not based on the need to place specific products or services to generate compensation. He said there will always be a role for traditional broker-dealers, for example in support of clients who are younger and are more focused on straightforward, long-term accumulation goals.

“But when it comes to income planning, clients need a true advisor and a true consultant, and they are seeking out truly independent advisors,” Leverty said.

The Process of Breaking Away

“We had spent 18 years with a broker-dealer that is owned by a large mutual insurance company,” Leverty said. “As our practice grew and became more complex, we often found that the large corporate structure was slow to move on new technology and often adjusted their platform deliverables to the common denominator of all practices affiliated with the organization.”

As his practice and client base became more specialized, Leverty knew he and his team needed a more customized and flexible approach.

“Dynasty provided the resources to successfully transition, while maintaining our own ADV and full ownership,” Leverty said. “Dynasty was a great partner for the transition and continues to assist with operational and technology support.”

While Leverty knew the transition process would be a significant project for the team, it was also clear that a change was needed.

“We did the best we could to prepare, and overall we had a very successful and positive transition,” Leverty said. “We currently utilize Pershing as our custodian, which was also the custodian for our previous platform. Selecting the same custodian for our new firm provided continuity for our clients and familiarity in operating systems for our team.”

New Challenges

“Although we have partnered with outside providers for compliance support, the added compliance responsibilities that come along with owning your ADV were more than expected,” Leverty admitted. “Certainly, part of this is a learning curve and adjusting to the new platform. The role of compliance within our firm is extremely important and will always be a top priority.”

Reflecting on the emerging competitive environment, Leverty said it will be critical for advisory shops to pivot and adjust to new technology.

“The benefit of a large broker-dealer is that these new technology changes are often made for you, while in an independent practice, the task of sorting through new technology enhancements can be daunting,” he said. “We believe the industry will continue to move towards full planning and clients will require more technical expertise.”

Planning Tips and Strategies for 2023

Offering a take similar to other advisory firm leaders, Leverty said 2022 and early 2023 have been both very difficult and very rewarding for independent advisory professionals.

On the one hand, the extreme volatility has been painful to watch and has hurt account values. On the other, the volatility presents significant planning opportunities that can be beneficial in the long term. Some broadly useful strategies to consider are Roth conversions and tax-loss harvesting, Leverty said.

Another opportunity is strategic rebalancing of the equity portfolio and the opportunity to buy equities at low prices.

(Pictured: Michael Leverty) 


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