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Author: rafferty

Financial Advisor IQ a Financial Times Service

John Hancock’s IBD Looks to Cut More Deals Next Year

16:13 15 December in In the News

December 15, 2015

By Murray Coleman, Financial Advisor IQ

 

As more insurance companies move away from acting as independent broker-dealers to focus on core financial products, one big industry name going in the opposite direction is John Hancock Financial.

Executives of Hancock’s independent broker-dealer, Signator Investors, say they see the coming year as an opportunity to pump up mergers and acquisitions in wealth-management.

“We expect consolidation in the independent IBD marketplace to continue into 2016,” says Brian Heapps, John Hancock Financial’s president. As more big carriers look to refocus on insurance, he adds, “we’ll be looking with an opportunistic eye on expanding our presence with advisors across the U.S.”

Hancock rebranded its IBD two years ago to separate itself from the firm’s largely proprietary and insurance-based platform.

ThinkAdvisor

4 Factors That May Cause a Flood of Broker-Dealer Sales

17:40 07 December in Articles Written by Jon Henschen

December 4, 2015

By Jon Henschen, as featured on ThinkAdvisor

 

With 9,500 Cetera Financial Group reps, 470 NEXT Financial Group reps and 4,925 AIG Advisor Group reps looking to “get bought,” we may be headed for a floodtide of broker-dealer sales as prospects for their future profitability fade.

The current motives to sell are unique to these particular firms, with Cetera needing to either partially or fully sell its broker-dealers to generate revenue to cover its debt load, activist investor Carl Icahn wanting AIG to split up into three entities and focus on core business while NEXT Financial, a rep-owned broker-dealer, is looking for a liquidity event.

When firms look out over the next five years, many may determine that the risk-reward model has the risks pulling ahead,

ThinkAdvisor

SEC Agrees to FINRA’s BrokerCheck Change on Posting Firings

00:23 02 December in In the News

December 1, 2015

By Melanie Waddell, ThinkAdvisor

 

FINRA will reduce from 15 days to three the release of disclosure information filed on Form U5

The Securities and Exchange Commission approved Monday the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority’s plan to reduce from 15 days to three the release of disclosure information filed on Form U5 through BrokerCheck.

Firms use Form U5 to terminate broker registrations with self-regulatory organizations and the states.

Most of the information that FINRA releases through BrokerCheck generally is made available the day after it is filed with the Central Registration Depository system.

FINRA’s Rule 8312, however — which governs the information FINRA releases to the public via BrokerCheck — provided for a 15-day delay in disclosing terminations.