BNY Mellon Wealth Management hopes to increase sales this year
by pitching its custody services to registered investment
advisers.
Peter L. Berg, hired this week as a vice president and sales
director to promote custody services to registered investment
advisers nationally, said he plans to cross-sell to existing
customers and target "breakaway brokers" leaving wire houses for
the independent channel.
"Certainly, we are looking to substantially increase revenue by
double digits," Berg said in an interview. "I hope that we can
increase our client base significantly.
"We want to be selective about that, but we are in a stage in
our business where we are relaunching a service that has been
around for some time. We have plucked some of the top people that
are real veterans that really know the custody business well. The
goal now is to get the word out."
Breakaway brokers are a big piece of this growth strategy, Berg
said. But BNY Mellon will face stiff competition from other large
companies that also want to custody these advisers' assets.
"The industry has certainly been moving in that direction," Berg
said. "With the disintegration of the wire house model, there
remains a number of significant producer groups that will be going
independent."
Some advisers hesitate to go independent because their custody
needs are complex, said Berg, who has worked at HSBC and Schwab
Institutional.
"There aren't a lot of companies that can fulfill all of their
needs," he said. "We can offer a nice package of solutions to
fulfill their broker-dealer needs and their higher-end bank custody
requirements. We are comprehensive."
The number of breakaway brokers transitioning to independent
channel has risen in the past year, according to Fidelity
Investments. The Boston company said it helped 50 teams of brokers
transition in the first quarter, a 20% increase from a year
earlier.
In April, Fidelity started a program designed to pair brokers
with independent broker-dealers and registered investment advisory
firms. The Boston company also launched a series of regional events
and web seminars to help brokers better understand the independent
business model.
Berg would not say whether BNY Mellon, a unit of Bank of New
York Mellon Corp., planned to come out with a similar program.
In addition to the potential to land new customers, Berg said
there are plenty of opportunities for BNY Mellon Wealth Management
to cross-sell its custody services to customers already working
with the parent bank or one of its affiliates.
These Bank of New York Mellon units include the custody services
arm Pershing in Jersey City, which is already servicing some
breakaway brokers.
Berg said it is critical to "partner internally to find the best
opportunities to cross-sell when appropriate."
"We have a strategy," he said. "It is all about trying to
increase penetration with larger existing clients and to identify
firms that we feel we can best service because of the array of
products and technology we have."
Analysts said in the past five years many companies have
launched back-office custody platforms for RIAs.
"Well-established providers like Schwab, State Street and BNY
Mellon are facing new competition, but scale remains their biggest
weapon," said Russ Prince of Prince & Associates in Shelton,
Conn. "They can keep prices low, but they still need to ramp up
their offerings to keep up."
Berg, who will report to Dan McCarron, head of the wealth
manager's national custody division, said that BNY Mellon, as "the
largest custodian in the world," is "well positioned with the right
products and services to cross-sell."
"Some of our largest clients are mutual fund companies and
institutional managers that also have private client or separate
account businesses," Berg continued. "We can work effectively to
custody all of those accounts. It is natural for us to service a
greater share of their wallet."