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Author: rafferty

The New Face of the Super OSJ

16:28 01 March in In the News

March 1, 2016

By Diana Britton, Wealth Management Magazine

 

In the late 1990s, Pete Bush was working for Cetera Advisors under an office of supervisory jurisdiction (OSJ), as was most every other independent rep paying for the privilege of having a supervisor. These offices were mandated by FINRA to more effectively distribute the oversight of an independent broker/dealer’s scattered network of affiliated reps.

Bush and a few others from the firm eventually decided it made sense to start their own OSJ; it remained small, just three partners and six advisors, and stayed that way until 2011. But to Bush it still felt like more like a burden than an efficient way to share back-office functions and compliance mandates.

“I was questioning the sanity and the financial viability of being a Super OSJ,” Bush says.

Does the MetLife Deal Signal the End of the Insurance Agent?

16:13 01 March in In the News

February 29, 2016

By Diana Britton, Wealth Management

 

MetLife said goodbye to its insurance agents this week, with the announcement to sell its Premier Client Group to MassMutual for about $300 million. The move could lead other insurers to divest their captive broker/dealers, as they focus their product distribution elsewhere.

“We could see more insurance broker/dealers go by the wayside, while those companies really concentrate on their core competency in manufacturing those policies and annuities,” said Bill Butterfield, senior analyst of the wealth management team at Aite Group.

Many insurers have shed their independent b/ds over the years—AIG being the most recent. In April 2013, MetLife sold its independent b/ds, Tower Square and Walnut Street Securities, to Cetera for an undisclosed sum.

ThinkAdvisor

DOL Fiduciary Rule Will Accelerate Broker-Dealer Closings

16:55 22 February in Articles Written by Jon Henschen

February 22, 2016

By Jon Henschen, as featured on ThinkAdvisor and FSI NewsBrief

 

Since 2008, we’ve seen a steep and consistent drop in the number of broker-dealers. As reported by data aggregator Fishbowl Strategies, we were down to 4,578 BDs in 2010. By February of 2014, that number was down to 4,181. We ended 2015 with 4,034 broker-dealers, with the largest segment of firms closing by far being equity trading firms. September 2015 turned out to be a false flag of hope where we had 14 new firms admitted and only 5 firms withdrew. Nevertheless, fourth quarter results continued the downward trend.

Looking at the fourth quarter of 2015, we had 16 new firms that were admitted and 53 firms that withdrew.