People Moves
Summary Of Global Executive Moves In Wealth Management - January 2014

January is often one of the busiest months of the year for moves as wealth management firms kick off the year by naming new teams. The start of 2014 was no different.
Offshore firm Mourant Ozannes appointed Jim Edmondson as head of
its international trusts and private client practice. He will
take up the role as a consultant on 1 May when the present holder
of the role, Douglas Close, steps down. Close has held the
position for three years.
Multi-tie mortgage and financial advice network Openwork Group
appointed Christopher Rodrigues as chairman. Rodrigues was
formally chairman of consumer lending business International
Personal Finance, and was president and chief executive of Visa
International from 2004-2006, as well as serving as group CEO of
Bradford and Bingley for the eight years previously.
Newly launched wealth management firm RiverPeak Wealth appointed James Powell as managing director. Powell, with over 20 years of experience in private banking and financial planning, works alongside former colleague and founder Nick Parker. He joined from Banque Havilland, where he was director of private banking and responsible for establishing and growing the bank’s London branch. Prior to this, he was a wealth structuring specialist and then a private banker at Citi Private Bank.
The firm also appointed Trevor Brown, managing director at Throgmorton, the financial and administrative outsourcing firm, as a member of its advisory board. Prior to joining Throgmorton, Brown spent 12 years with Salomon Brothers and Citigroup, where he was head of European taxation within the investment banking division.
Additionally, RiverPeak appointed Richard Grainger to its advisory board. Grainger has over 25 years of experience in the City of London, and was chief executive of Close Brothers Corporate Finance between 2001 to 2007 and sat on the management board of Close Brothers Group between 2003 to 2009.
David Douglas-Home, the Earl of Home retired as chairman of the UK private bank Coutts & Co. He continues as chairman of the board for the firm’s international business, Switzerland-based Coutts & Co Ltd. Having served as chairman of the UK board for the last 14 years, Lord Home left his position on 31 December 2013. He was replaced by Lord Waldegrave of North Hill, who joined the Coutts UK board as a non-executive director in December 2012, and who assumed the role of chairman.
Brooks Macdonald International appointed Jeremy Stubbs to lead
its investment advisory and dealing teams. Stubbs joined from
Cannacord and reports to Matt Watson, the head of BMI’s office on
the island.
Skandia International appointed David Denton to manage its
technical sales team. Denton was made redundant at the firm in
October 2012 following an internal restructure. After a brief
spell working in a technical sales role with Prudential, he
returned to Skandia International in London. He will report to
Darren Jones, head of technical sales.
Nigel Wray, chairman of Saracens rugby club and an industry
entrepreneur, joined the online wealth manager Nutmeg after
having made a significant investment in the firm. Wray has
invested in and developed successful organisations across a range
of sectors, particularly the investment, property, fund, media
and sport industries.
JP Morgan Asset Management appointed Tim Mitchell to lead its
four-person investment trust sales team at JPMAM in London. He is
responsible for sales and investor relations activity for the
firm’s range of trusts across the institutional, private client,
advisory and execution-only channels, as well as aiding any
future investment trust launches.
Geneva-based Argos Investment Managers appointed former investment banker and asset manager Nick Hamwee to head its Argos UK wing in London. Hamwee has been in the industry for 25 years, specialising in building businesses both at home and abroad. He was previously of co-head of CSFB’s US Cash Equity business in Europe, where he helped increase the firm’s market share on the continent.
Mirabaud appointed Kirill Pyshkin in London as fund manager of global equities. He leads the new global fund, reporting to Aru Narula, head of global equities. He joined from Aviva Investors, where he served as a senior fund manager of global equities, seeing over £1 billion ($1.66 billion) of active global equity funds.
Salamanca Group, a London-based operational risk management and merchant banking firm, recruited former Goldman Sachs employee Martin Devenish as group head of strategy in a newly created role. At Goldman Sachs, he held a number of senior roles in equity capital markets in a career of over 20 years.
SEI, the US-listed investment solutions firm, appointed Brett Williams as UK managing director, SEI Wealth PlatformSM. Williams has worked in financial services for 30 years and joined SEI from LW2 Private Equity Partnership, where he was partner. SEI also named Jim London as UK chief operating officer. A long-term employee of SEI, he will continue to lead SEI Wealth Platform solution development efforts in the UK and oversees operations and change management.
Henderson Global Investors promoted Paul O’Connor to co-head of its multi-asset team. O’Connor works with Bill McQuaker, who leads the 13-strong team managing £6 billion in assets. In addition, Rob MacQueen joined Henderson’s property business as a senior portfolio manager for the £1.3 billion Henderson UK Property Unit Trust.
Asset management firm Quilter Cheviot appointed William Reid as head of its billion-pound charity division. A partner at the London-based Cheviot since 2006, he will oversee approximately £1.3 billion ($2.13 billion) of assets in his head of charities role.
SVM Asset Management, the UK-based investment house, promoted Craig Jeruzal and Alasdair Birch to become deputy fund managers of two of its funds. Jeruzal was appointed deputy fund manager for the £108 million ($177.3 million) SVM UK Opportunities fund after being promoted from his role of UK investment analyst to support lead manager Neil Veitch on portfolio strategy and allocation. Jeruzal joined in 2006 from Kempen Capital Management.
bfinance, the UK-headquartered investment consultancy, appointed Derek Williams as managing director, private markets. He previously worked at Russell Investments where he was head of private real estate managing a team of eight investment professionals. During his eight years at the firm he managed two global REIT funds as well as two segregated mandates and was responsible for the allocation and management of more than $1.8 billion in discretionary client assets.
JP Morgan Asset Management appointed Andrea Hohlachoff as head of insurance and platforms within the global strategic relationships management team of UK Funds Sales, reporting to Andrew Larkin, head of global strategic relationships. In the newly created role, Hohlachoff is responsible for developing and advancing key strategic partnerships with life insurance companies, fund supermarkets and wrap platforms.
The UK-based bank Brown Shipley, which saw its parent KBL European Banks acquired by Qatari-based Precision Capital in 2012, appointed Hugh Titcomb as head of private banking. Titcomb is based at the firm's London office and replaces Julian Hardiman, who stepped down from his role in December. Titcomb has over 28 years of experience and has held a number of senior executive roles including vice chairman and group chief executive at Sanlam Private Investments UK, group CEO of the Ansbacher Banking Group and managing director positions at Bank of New York and Flemings/JP Morgan.
In addition, Brown Shipley appointed chief financial officer Andrew Curran to the board of directors and Jim Willens re-joined as a non-executive director. Robert Kitchen and Bob Smoker stepped down from the board of directors with their management roles at Brown Shipley remaining unchanged, while recently appointed chief risk officer, Mike Hudson, takes reporting responsibility for the firm’s compliance function.
Toby Hampden-Acton stepped down from his role as chief executive of the London-based F&C business, Thames River Capital. Hampden-Acton has served with the boutique asset manager since 2004 and was its chief compliance officer prior to becoming chief executive.
Societe Generale Private Banking Hambros appointed ex-JP Morgan Private Bank portfolio management head Anthony Hourdé. Hourdé worked at JP Morgan Private Bank for eight years; most recently, he was an executive director in the portfolio management group, a spokesperson for the French firm confirmed to this publication in an email.
HSBC Private Bank (UK) appointed Paul O'Donnell to the new role of head of UK Domestic, HSBC Private Bank (UK). O’Donnell has more than 25 years' experience in the wealth management industry, holding positions including those of head of private banking at EFG, head of sales for the UK, Northern and Eastern Europe at UBS Wealth Management, and group business development director at Brewin Dolphin, to whom he sold his own wealth management partnership in the 1990s.
HSBC Private Bank (UK) also appointed Charles Boulton as global market head, UK International. Holding this position on an active basis since April last year after the post was vacated by his predecessor, he is responsible for the UK International business globally, including the teams in Guernsey, Luxembourg, Switzerland, Hong Kong, Singapore and New York. Boulton has over 20 years of wealth management experience both in the UK and abroad. He joined HSBC Private Bank in 2006 from Bank of Bermuda.
Frankfurt-headquartered Deutsche Asset & Wealth Management added Hugo Vere as a head of asset management and director of its real estate investment business in the UK. Based in London, Vere reports to head of UK at DeAWM Real Estate, James Petit, while overseeing real estate asset management in the UK, in addition to developing new real estate services for DeAWM's global clients.
Santander Asset Management appointed Adam Harnetty as head of credit research, European Fixed Income. Harnetty heads a team of four fixed income analysts and is responsible for enhancing the credit investment process and supporting stock-selection decisions for the euro and sterling portfolios. He is based in London and reports to Adam Cordery, global head of European fixed income.
Mark Churchill joined the financial planning website and app, YourWealth.co.uk as paid acquisition manager in a newly created role. He previously worked at Hargreaves Lansdown, where he led its PPC advertising, retargeting and paid content marketing campaigns, and introduced paid content marketing campaigns and display retargeting to the firm. Churchill reports to the Bristol-headquartered firm’s founding director Toby Hughes.
UK-headquartered Sesame Bankhall Group chief executive George Higginson left after three years with the company. Finance director Paul Hooper also left the group and was replaced by Jim Kelly, who has 30 years of industry experience and has held senior roles with Lloyds Abbey Life, RBS and Aviva.
Royal London Asset Management, the investment subsidiary of the mutual life and pensions firm, Royal London, appointed Tracy Fennell as head of marketing, reporting to Rob Williams, head of distribution. Fennell was previously head of marketing & communications at F&C Asset Management and prior to this she held marketing roles at Scottish Widows Investment Partnership, AXA Investment Managers and Newton Investment Management. The former head of marketing, Susan Spiller, took up a new role as head of proposition, responsible for product strategy, development and management.
The Edinburgh-headquartered asset manager Kames Capital appointed Carolyn Bell to its international equities team as investment manager. Bell joined Kames as an investment manager with responsibility for idea generation and portfolio management across North American equities. Based in Edinburgh, she reports to Kames’ head of North American equities, Marcus Chandler. Director of property investment David Wise was appointed the new chairman of the Association of Real Estate Funds.
Barclays Wealth and Investment Management appointed Mark Richards to the new private clients team which will support clients in the UK with assets of less than £500,000. The bank also cut the number of regional heads to two from four with the appointments of Calum Brewster and Ben Gulliford. Brewster is regional head for North, covering Scotland, Northern Ireland and the North of England, while Gulliford is regional head for the South, covering the Midlands, South West, South East and Wales. Gordon Scott is responsible for covering West of Scotland and Northern Ireland, while John Godfrey is responsible for the team covering the East of Scotland. Alan Edwards is responsible for the team covering the North West of England, while Martin Cuthbert heads the North East of England. All four report to Brewster.
Ignis Asset Management, the London-headquartered emerging markets investment specialist, appointed Jamie Horton to its UK commercial property trust team in the role of asset manager, while Lucy Williams joined as a real estate product specialist. Horton joined from the Glasgow office of DTZ where he was an associate director on the investment agency team. Williams was previously responsible for business development and investor relations at Lothbury Investment Management.
Dalton Strategic Partnership, the global investment management firm, appointed Mark Greenhoff to the Melchior European equity team as a senior analyst for the long and short strategy, managed by Leonard Charlton. Greenhoff has 18 years of experience of managing European equities and began his career at BZW Investment Management in 1989, before moving to Royal London Asset Management.
The head of compliance at the UK-listed brokerage and wealth manager Charles Stanley, Venetia Malpas, left the firm to take early retirement. In the interim period, chief operating officer for financial services Ben Money-Coutts has taken over, supported by Grant Thornton auditor Peter Kelk.
Pictet Asset Management, part of Swiss banking house Pictet, appointed Luke Chua as senior investment manager for emerging corporate bonds to the London-based team. He previously worked at Schroder Investment Management. He began his career as a credit analyst in 1996 at Axa Investment Managers and in his previous job, Chua managed the Emerging Markets Corporate Bond fund in Singapore.
Henderson Global Investors appointed Steve Jenner as head of customer strategy and Calyn Chan Gardner as product development manager for Europe and Asia. Both report to James Bowers, Henderson’s head of product. In a career spanning over 20 years, Jenner has previously held positions at Gartmore and Invesco.
Legal & General Investment Management appointed Willem Klijnstra and Chris Jeffery as strategists within the tactical asset allocation research and strategy area, reporting to Emiel van den Heiligenberg, head of asset allocation. Klijnstra and Jeffery will work closely with LGIM’s portfolio management and investment teams, both in fixed income and asset allocation. Klijnstra was previously head of research and acting chief investment officer at BNP Paribas Investment Partners.
Michael Lee joined Frankfurt-headquartered Deutsche Asset & Wealth Management as a director and head of consultants UK for the firm’s global client group. Based in London, Lee reports to the global head of consultant relations, CGC, Mark Bolton. Lee previously held similar roles at Scottish Widows Investment Partnership and BlackRock.
The Financial Conduct Authority appointed Robert Taylor as head of wealth management and private banking in its supervision division. As well as being the former CEO at Kleinwort Benson, a role he held until 2011, he previously worked at Merrill Lynch, SG Hambros and Coutts.
Throgmorton, a UK back office service provider to the investment management community, appointed Denis Jackson in the new role as business development director. Jackson joined from Tibra Trading, a private technology proprietary trading business, where he served as regional general manager for Europe and the United States, and was responsible for implementing strategy across its full range of operating departments. Prior to this, he held a number of senior positions for Salomon Brothers/Citigroup, for a period of 19 years.
Close Brothers Asset Management appointed Seton Craven as investment director to its bespoke investment management team, reporting to head of bespoke investment management Nancy Curtin. Craven joined from Psigma Investment Management, where he was responsible for managing multi-asset portfolios for high net worth families and trusts.
In addition, Close Brothers Asset Management also appointed Robert Alster as head of research, reporting to chief investment officer Nancy Curtin. In his new role, Alster is responsible for leading a centralised team of investment professionals dedicated to fundamental equity research supporting our investment managers.
Switzerland
Patrick Raaflaub stepped down as chief executive of the Swiss
financial regulator FINMA. Raaflaub had been responsible for the
supervisory authority's management for over five years. Deputy
chief executive Mark Branson took over the management of FINMA as
of February 2014 until further notice.
Vontobel Asset Management appointed Anton Oberhofer and Thomas
Haltner to its global balanced Switzerland team. Oberhofer has 18
years investment experience as a manager of balanced portfolios.
He joined from Swiss & Global Asset Management, formerly part of
the Julius Baer group, where he was responsible for the
management of institutional mandates, indirect real-estate
investing and served as a member of the investment committee.
The chief financial officer at Switzerland’s Banque Profil de
Gestion, Lionel Lafeuille, resigned from the firm; it gave no
further details.
Mirabaud has added eight new members to the boards of its private
banking and asset management businesses. Those appointed include
Luc Thévenoz, Suzanne Wettenschwiler and Antonio Vegezzi to the
Mirabaud & Cie SA board of directors, while Vegezzi also joins
the board of directors of Mirabaud Asset Management's Switzerland
and London-based subsidiaries, alongside new directors Yvar
Mentha and Christopher Fawcett. The group also appointed Pierre
Bongard, Bernard Vischer and François Sunier to the supervisory
board of Mirabaud SCA, the firm's newly created umbrella
structure. The firm said that all the new board additions have
expertise across finance, law and accounting.
EFG International said its chief financial officer, Giorgio
Pradelli, took on the added role of deputy chief executive to
allow his colleague and CEO, John Williamson, to focus more time
on developing the firm’s five private banking operations.
Pradelli will now concentrate on EFGI’s operational and risk
platform as well as take on the deputy CEO role; the change takes
place immediately. The composition of EFGI’s executive committee
were unchanged.
A ninth managing partner has been appointed at Lombard Odier
Group.
Dr Hugo Bänziger joined from derivatives exchange Eurex, where he
is the chairman of the board of directors. When not in the
boardroom, Dr Bänziger is involved in teaching across the globe.
He is adjunct professor at the University of Chicago Booth School
of Business, visiting professor of the Lew Kwan Yew Institute for
Public Policy, National University of Singapore and visiting
professor at the London School of Economics.
Europe
Vontobel Asset Management hired Christian Hoeg as its new country
manager in Germany. With the appointment, Hoeg took on the role
as head of fixed income sales for Germany and Austria, as well as
becoming executive director at Bank Vontobel Europe. Hoeg has
over 20 years of experience in institutional relationship
management, joining from Swiss & Global Asset Management,
formerly Julius Baer, where he was head of institutional sales.
Prior to this, Hoeg worked in the institutional business of DG
Bank. The role of head of the German fund client business was
previously managed by Beate Meyer, who took over responsibility
for the strategic partnership between Vontobel and Australia’s
ANZ Group in Sydney with effect from April 2014.
EFG International’s business in Luxembourg appointed a team head
covering Greece - a newly created role. It appointed Lena Lascari
and she will be a member of the management committee and report
to François-Regis Montazel, managing director of EFG Bank
(Luxembourg). Lascari focuses on development of Greek high net
worth individual business. She was most recently chief executive
and managing director of Eurobank Private Bank, based in
Luxembourg. Prior to this, she was head of wealth management at
HSBC in Athens, Greece from 2001 to 2002 and, before that, spent
15 years at Credit Commercial de France, culminating as country
CEO, Greek branches.
The president and chief executive of the Swedish financial
services group, Catella, was appointed as the new head of
corporate finance, as the current corporate finance head resigns.
Leading one of the firm’s two operating segments, former CEO
Johan Ericsson will share the role with a person who has yet to
be recruited.
Saxo Bank added two new members to its board of directors,
appointing Lone Fønss Schrøder as vice chairman and Jacob Polny,
a former alternate member, who continued on as a full member of
the board. The new members take over from Asiff Hirji, partner in
TPG Capital and Kurt K. Larsen, chairman of the international
transport group DSV, who both left the board.
Luxembourg-headquartered KBL European Private Bankers, which is
owned by the Luxembourg-based bank holding group, Precision
Capital, announced a top-level management reshuffle. Yves Stein,
who for the past year has overseen the group’s pan-European
private banking activities in his capacity as a member of the KBL
epb executive committee, was appointed Group CEO. Stein
previously held the position of CEO of Union Bancaire Privée
(Europe) in Luxembourg. He earlier served as director general,
Private Banking, at BNP Paribas (Switzerland).
He took over from Jacques Peters – who had been in the role
during the global financial crisis and firm’s acquisition in 2012
by Precision Capital. Peters continues to serve as chairman of
the board of directors of Puilaetco Dewaay Private Bankers in
Brussels (which is part of KBL).
Marc Lauwers, who joined the group in 2013 as chief operating
officer, assumed additional responsibility as deputy group CEO,
working directly alongside Stein.
Previously a member of the executive committee at Belfius Bank in
Belgium, responsible for retail and commercial Banking, Lauwers
earlier served as chief operating officer at Belfius and, before
that, as CEO of Dexia Banka Slovensko, based in Slovakia.
Three new members were appointed to the board of directors of KBL
epb: Ernst Wilhelm (Bill) Contzen, former CEO of Deutsche Bank
Luxembourg and current President of the Luxembourg Bankers’
Association, who assumed chairmanship of the board following the
retirement of current KBL epb chairman Jan Huyghebaert in March
of this year; Alfred Bouckaert, former chairman of Belfius Bank,
as well as former chairman of AXA Belgium; Nicholas Harvey,
deputy CEO of Precision Capital, the Luxembourg-based shareholder
of KBL epb, and former chief risk officer and member of the
Management Board at Amlin Europe.
Jersey-headquartered JTC Group announced two senior appointments
in its technology and marketing operations. Adam Jeffries, who
was previously global head of IT operations at Appleby, joined in
Jersey as chief information officer and David Vieira, who was
head of marketing at Jersey Finance (the promotional agency for
the island’s financial sector), was appointed group head of
business development and marketing.
Luxembourg-headquartered NPG Wealth Management appointed Marc
Stevens as group chief executive and general manager of Private
Estate Life and Altraplan Luxembourg, businesses that are part of
NPG. Stevens took over from Stephen Bright who decided to retire
from the post at the end of December last year. Stevens has
worked for the last 12 years for Vitis Life, initially as sales
and marketing manager and from 2009 as CEO and general
manager.
Boston Consulting Group veteran Elmar Wiederin left the company
and was named as a senior partner at wealth management group
Kaiser Partner. Purchasing a 15 per cent stake in the
Liechtenstein-based Kaiser Partner, Wiederin joined as a senior
partner and vice chairman. He worked at BCG for 20 years.
Coutts made two “pivotal senior appointments” for its
international trust business in Jersey: Debbie Sebire and Naomi
Rive. Sebire joined as non-executive director of Coutts Trustees
(Jersey). She was previously a director for the Jersey
Financial Services Commission. Prior to this, she was a director
of Cititrust (Jersey) Limited, establishing and administering
high net-worth structures. Rive was named chief trust officer,
taking on the post on 1 April; she was previously a partner and
head of international private clients and trusts at law firm
Appleby in Jersey, and a director of its trust business,
responsible for advising on all aspects of trust law and
foundation, wealth and estate planning issues. Rive joined the
Coutts Trustees (Jersey) Board and lead the development of trust
policies and standards. She will work with Martin Hall, managing
director.
Deutsche Bank hired Klaus Stoltenberg as the firm’s global head
of shipping. Stoltenberg is responsible for coordinating all
Deutsche Bank activities with shipping industry clients, in
addition to managing the coverage team. Based in Hamburg,
Stoltenberg reports to Raj Bhattacharyya, head of capital markets
and treasury solutions for Western Europe, and Armin von
Falkenhayn, co-head of corporate banking & securities for
Germany. Most recently he served as the global head of ship and
aircraft finance at the German landesbank, NORD/LB.
Saxo Bank appointed Matteo Cassina to the newly created position
of global head of institutional business. He is based at Saxo
Bank’s London office in Canary Wharf, and reports to the co-chief
executives and co-founders, Kim Fournais and Lars Seier
Christensen. He has served as the head of prime access SM for
Goldman Sachs and head of total trader for Merrill Lynch. He
later served as president of Citadel Execution Services, the
broker dealer of the US Hedge Fund. As a former member of the
Boerse Berlin Exchange Council and the Boerse Berlin Supervisory
Board, Cassina also brings regulatory and market control
experience.
SBKG & associés, the French law firm, appointed Damien Billet to
its Marseille office, to develop a team working in areas
including personal tax issues.
Damien, as well as the other partners in the Marseille office,
works with both French and international clients. He advises
corporations and their managers on corporate and personal tax
issues. He also advises investment funds as well as companies
regarding capital investment operations.
Carmignac Gestion Group, the European asset manager and private
bank, appointed a new European equities team, headed by Muhammed
Yesilhark. The four-man team joined from SAC Global Investors and
will be based in Carmignac Gestion Luxembourg’s London branch.
Yesilhark started his career as an analyst at Lazard in
Frankfurt. He then helped to build York Capital’s hedge fund
business.
Deutsche Asset & Wealth Management added Philip Poole as the
firm’s new head of research. In this newly created role, Poole
leads research activity across DeAWM's investment platforms
globally. Based in London, Poole is a managing director and
reports to DeAWM's co-chief investment officers, Randy Brown and
Asoka Wöhrmann. Poole was most recently global head of macro &
investment strategy at HSBC Global Asset Management.
International
Brazilian bank, Itaú Unibanco appointed Ken Casey, a new head of
its asset management business in London, only 18 months after
securing UK regulatory approval. Casey took on the role having
served as the director of operations for asset management Europe
& Middle East Itaú Unibanco since 2011, based in Dubai.
South Africa-headquartered Standard Bank appointed Mark Hucker as
chief executive of its Personal & Business Banking International
division, which includes offshore businesses in Isle of Man,
Jersey and Mauritius, as well as distribution and support in
London and Johannesburg. Hucker joined Standard Bank in 2011 as
chief risk officer of PBBI.
South Africa's Standard Bank bolstered its international private
clients investment division, Melville Douglas, with the hire of
Justin Maloney as a senior portfolio manager. Maloney joined the
private clients investment team in the Channel Islands, as part
of the division’s expansion. Maloney spent three years as a
senior investment manager, managing global equity funds for South
African based clients with the UK asset management boutique Four
Capital Partners. Previously he also held portfolio management
roles with Artefact Partners, Oakside Capital and Foreign &
Colonial Management.
The London and Johannesburg-listed bank and asset manager, Old
Mutual, added Zoe Cruz and Adiba Ighodaro to its board as
independent non-executive directors, effective immediately.
Middle East and Africa
Old Mutual Asset Management, the US-based global asset management
business of Old Mutual, has hired Richard Souri as senior vice
president and head of Middle East sales to lead the firm's
marketing efforts in the Middle East. In his new role, Souri
focuses on introducing OMAM’s affiliates’ investment capabilities
to institutional investors in the region, including sovereign
wealth funds, local pension funds and family offices. Working out
of Old Mutual’s London office, his primary area of responsibility
is in Gulf Cooperation Council countries, including Bahrain,
Kuwait, Oman, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates and Qatar.
Julius Baer appointed John Dagher as the head of its Lebanon
business, Dagher based in Beirut and focus on further developing
the Zurich-listed bank’s business in the country and the Levant
region. He will report to Fred Hilal, Head Middle East Domestic.
Dagher has more than 30 years’ experience in advising ultra-high
net worth individuals, family offices and foundations.
Naveed Ahmed joined Credit Suisse as a managing director in
Dubai. Ahmed was previously a senior figure at UBS, holding the
role of managing director - global emerging markets; and prior to
that, he was a managing director at Citi Private Bank.
Asia-Pacific
Australia
Joe Hockey, the treasurer of the Commonwealth of Australia,
announced the appointment of four members to the Financial System
Inquiry panel, which include some senior wealth management
figures. Chaired by David Murray, chief executive, the panel now
seats Professor Kevin Davis of the University of Melbourne, Craig
Dunn, CEO for AMP, Carolyn Henson, former Schroders director, and
Dr Brian McNamee, former CEO of CSL. In a statement, the firm
said the choices reflect the importance of the wealth management
industry to the economy's growth.
SFG Australia announced that Tony Fenning, managing director and
chief executive, temporary left the company in 23 December 2013
and is expected to return in late January 2014, without citing
reasons. John Cowan, chief operating officer, had stepped in as
interim CEO.
Zurich Financial Services Australia named Andy Marshall as head
of sales strategies and research, life risk, responsible for
developing, promoting and distributing the firm's life insurance
service in the country. Marshall previously the regional manager
for life risk in Victoria, replaced Marc Fabris, who was promoted
to the global role of head of new distribution.
Wilson HTM Investment Group announced changes to its senior
management ranks following the departure of Karen Penrose from
the chief financial officer and company secretary roles. Don
Mackenzie took over as company secretary. Meanwhile, Philippa
Abbott continues as assistant company secretary, while Todd Curby
and Shaun Sanders retain their roles as joint group financial
controllers. Penrose's departure was first announced in August
2013 when AWE Limited announced it was taking her in as an
independent non-executive director.
NAB Asset Servicing named Peter Hele as its new business
development head for Australia and New Zealand. Hele has been
with NAB for 14 years and previously served as a member of the
asset servicing team. He reports to Suzanne Smith, general
manager for sales and relationships.
Kardinia Capital hired former Nomura Australia executive Peter
Lucas as a portfolio manager, to work alongside current managers
Mark Burgess and Kristiaan Rehder. The now three-person team
manages the Bennelong Kardinia Absolute Return Fund, a long/short
Australian equity product for which Bennelong is the responsible
entity.
Melbourne-based OC Funds Management announced the appointment of
John Clothier as general manager of distribution, after serving
on the advice network of BT Financial. In this role, he is
responsible for leading and building a new sales team and for
introducing the Odey International Fund for the Australian retail
market.
Australia and New Zealand wealth manager AMP named Helen Livesey
to the newly-created role of director for brand and marketing to
boost consumer engagement. Livesey assumed the role after holding
a number of position within the firm for the past 15 years. She
is credited for leading the development and introduction of the
company's new logo in 2011.
China
Chinese wealth manager Noah Holdings added Zhiwu Chen to its
board as independent director. Chen was a professor of finance at
Yale University and also sits as independent non-executive
director at Bank of Communications and Lord Abbett China Asset
Management. With this appointment, he becomes part of Noah's
corporate governance and nominating committee, replacing Ji Liu
who has resigned.
Newedge, the joint venture between Societe Generale and Credit
Agricole, welcomed Eric Shi as its new commodities head in China.
Shi rejoined the firm after a two-year stint as global head of
commodities at BOC International. Before that, he led Newedge's
energy business in China for eight years. Based in New York, he
now reports to Robert Vujtech, global co-head of energy.
HSBC Bank bolstered its China business with the hire of
Montgomery Ho as deputy chief executive and executive director.
Ho has been with the company since 1983 and has since held key
management positions. He replaced Chris Davies, who is now the
CEO international of the bank.
State Street, the global investment management firm, expanded its
range of alternative investment solutions with the opening of a
new office in Shanghai. The new branch reports to Eric Chow, head
of relationship management for the AIS unit in Asia-Pacific.
Hong Kong
PineBridge Investments hired industry veteran Stephan van Vliet
for the newly-created role of head of insurance asset management
based in Hong Kong. Van Vliet was previously the head of
investments at ING Insurance Asia-Pacific. While his position is
based in Hong Kong, his coverage is global. He reports to David
Jian, global chief executive, and Rajeev Mittal, CEO of Asia.
ABN AMRO Private Banking added four senior private bankers to its
team in Hong Kong. Aditya Jayarama is now regional head of
private banking for North Asia, reporting to Ian Pollock. He
joined the bank from Standard Chartered Bank in Singapore.
Raymond Cheung joined in December as North Asia team head, after
spending the past 11 years providing advice to clients in Greater
China on business development, fund raising and financial
planning. Reporting to Cheung is senior private banker Connie
Lam, who moved from VP Bank. Steven Lee also joined the Greater
China team as senior private banker, reporting to Angela Wu,
market manager for China.
UK-headquartered Alquity Investment Management appointed Mike
Sell as head of Asian equities. Sell joined from F& C Investments
where he was a senior fund manager in the emerging markets
equities team.
BNY Melon named former news correspondent and presenter Kyoko
Altman as head of Asia-Pacific communications and public
relations for its investment business. This is a newly-created
role made to highlight the US firm's efforts into the
Asia-Pacific region. Based in Hong Kong, Altman is now part of
the Asia-Pacific investment management executive committee and
reports to Alan Harden, CEO for BNY Mellon Investment Management
Asia-Pacific. She previously worked at Goldman Sachs Asset
Management.
Global investment consulting firm Mercer bolstered its Hong Kong
office with the hired of Adeline Tan as investment advisory head,
responsible for advising clients on long-term investment strategy
and portfolio construction. She reports to Deborah Bannon,
investments business leader for Greater China. She joined from
Towers Watson in London, where she managed a team specialising in
fiduciary services.
Deutsche Asset & Wealth Management hired former BEA Union
executive Elke Schoeppl-Jost as its new chief investment officer
for Asia-Pacific. She replaced Chris Siniakov, who is leaving the
firm. In her new role, Schoeppl-Jost will be based both in Hong
Kong and Singapore and reports to Sean Taylor, head of emerging
markets, and regionally to Ravi Raju, head of DeAWM in
Asia-Pacific. She leads the active equity, fixed income and
multi-asset investment teams in the region.
Herbert Smith Freehills, the international law firm, appointed
Richard Norridge to lead its Asia private wealth practice. In
this newly-created role, Norridge acts for high net worth
individuals, their families, private banks and other advisors
trust and probate issues, together with charitable and family
company matters. He joined the firm in 2011 and has worked with
Asia managing partner Mark Johnson and Hong Kong-based head of
litigation Gareth Thomas to grow the private wealth practice.
UBS Wealth Management Hong Kong appointed Adeline Chien as
managing director and country team head of HK Team 1. Chien
succeeded Becky Li who will retire at the end of March this year.
Li leaves the firm after having been at UBS since 2002. At the
start of 2014, Vicki Lee, managing director, was named country
team head of Hong Kong Team 6. As part of the changes, Francis
Hung, desk head of HK Team 5, and his team, moved to the
newly-created HK Team 6 and report to Vicki Lee. Both Chien and
Lee report to Jean-Claude Humair, regional market manager for
Hong Kong. Among other appointments, Yu-Kyung Whan, executive
director, transferred from Ernst Schuler's team to head a new
desk in HK Team 6, reporting to Lee. Henry Lau, executive
director, joined from Shanghai Commercial Bank to head a new desk
in HK Team 1. He reports to Chien.
Marcus Leese, who moved to Hong Kong in 2010 to establish the
Ogier Channel Islands' practice in Asia, had returned to Guernsey
after having been the first such lawyer to operate in Asia. In
his change role, Leese divides his time between Guernsey and Hong
Kong, as Asia will remain a key focus for him and for the firm.
Richard Bennett, his associate lawyer in Hong Kong, continues to
work with Leese in promoting Guernsey and will be available to
assist Guernsey Finance, the island's promotional agency.
Coutts, the private bank, appointed two senior managers to
newly-created roles at its products and services team in Asia.
Eng Ming Hoe joined as executive director and head of treasury
for Singapore, with responsibility for the strategic and risk
management of the Singapore and Asia treasury desk balance
sheets. Alex Ng was named executive director and head of foreign
exchange, joining from Julius Baer in Singapore where he was
director of foreign exchange advisor. Both report to Jonathan
Lee, the head of treasury services and dealing in Asia.
Hong Kong-based REORIENT Group expanded its Asian equities arm
with two key appointments. Jeremy Gray joined the firm as
managing director from Standard Chartered, where he was the head
of resources equity research. Andrew Mullins was named senior
equity sales trader after serving as a senior Asian equity trader
at Wellington Management, where he worked for 11 years.
JP Morgan Asset Management appointed Travis Spence as head of the
global strategic relationship group for Asia-Pacific ex-Japan.
Based in Hong ong, he now works with various teams while
overseeing the regional and local client relationships in Asia.
He reports to Jed Laskowitz, the Asia-Pacific CEO. His old role
was filled by Paula Stibbe, managing director and client
portfolio manager, who will relocate from New York to Hong Kong
in early 2014.
The chief executive of Standard Life in Hong Kong, Roy Halliday,
left the firm to go on gardening leave until 31 March 2014. In
the meantime, his responsibilities were assumed by Neal
Armstrong, who is also the current CEO in Singapore. Armstrong's
own appointment change is subject to regulatory approval.
US global private equity manager Hamilton Lane strengthened its
Asia business with the appointment of two senior executives.
Mingchen Xia was named principal of the fund investment team,
while Yen Li Chew became the vice president in the business
development group. Both are based in Hong Kong. Xia was
previously a fund manager at Tokio Marine, while Chew joined from
Oaktree Capital, where she was VP for marketing and client
relations.
International law firm Lathan & Watkins hired former Freshfields
Bruckhaus Deringer partner Howard Lam as partner for its finance
department in Hong Kong. In this new role, Lam focuses on
banking, cross-border debt restructuring and insolvency work and
complex financing transactions. He also handles private equity
funds and corporate in both Hong Kong and Mainland China.
Sun Life Hong Kong named Greg Kwan as its new chief financial
officer to replace Hannah Chan, who has left. Kwan was previously
the vice president for internal audit at Sun Life Financial Asia.
He now reports to Wim Hekstra, CEO for Hong Kong. The company did
not say to where Chan is moving.
DLA Piper bolstered its Hong Kong practise with the hire of Mark
Fairbairn as head of restructuring for Asia. Fairbairn joined
from O'Melveny & Myers and focuses on distressed and alternative
investments, financial restructurings and insolvency matters. He
was joined by Ashley Bell, also from O'Melveny, who was named
counsel in the restructuring division.
US-based international law firm K&L Gates added Greg Heaton
as partner to its Hong Kong investment management practice.
Heaton joined from the Hong Kong office of Deacons, another law
firm. In his new role, he will focus on investment management and
financial services regulation. He is the fourth partner
appointment into K&L Gates' Asia business in 2014.
India
Bank of America Merrill Lynch named former Goldman Sachs director
Vikram Sahu as head of Southern Asia equity research, responsible
for ASEAN and India equity strategy. He is based in Singapore.
Meanwhile, Jyoti Jaipuria continues in his role as head of India
equity research and as India equity strategist. He reports to
Sahu and remains located in Mumbai. Ching Seng Tay was also named
deputy head of ASEAN equity research, reporting to Sahu. He is
based in Singapore covering ASEAN financials while supporting the
equity strategy unit.
Japan
Mizuho Financial Group announced that, effective 1 April 2014,
current deputy president and deputy president-executive Nobuhide
Hayashi becomes the new president and CEO of the firm. He takes
over from Yasuhiro Sato, who takes the role of director on the
same date.
Nikko Asset Management announced that David Semaya will take over
as the new chairman effective 1 April 2014. Semaya, who joins
from Barclays, replaces Charles Beazley, who is stepping down in
April for family-related reasons. Also newly-appointed is Takumi
Shibata as president and CEO of Nikko AM. In addition to these
roles, he continues as executive chairman until Semaya officially
steps in.
Fullerton Asset Management, the Singapore-headquartered
investment firm, named Fumio Izumi to lead the newly-opened
office in Japan. Izumi is the representative director for the
Japan business. He reports to Manraj Sekhon, the CEO and CIO
based in Singapore. He is accompanied initially by one staff
member.
BoA Merrill Lynch named Timothy Latimore as representative
director and president of Merrill Lynch Japan Securities
effective 1 February 2014. He also becomes the country executive
for Japan. Latimore, who has been with the firm for 20 years,
replaced Jiro Seguchi, who takes up a regional leadership role as
head of Asia-Pacific global corporate and investment banking. The
currenty deputy branch manager, Koichi Kagawa, was appointed
acting branch manager of BoA in Tokyo.
Mizuho Financial Group announced that, effective 1 April 2014,
current deputy president and deputy president-executive Nobuhide
Hayashi becomes the new president and chief executive of the
firm. He takes over from Yasuhiro Sato, who takes the role of
director on the same date.
Nikko Asset Management boosted its sales team with the hire of
three senior executives and a new investment head. Takuya Koyama
was named global head of sales, responsible for global
institutional sales and international retail sales. Hideyuki
Omokawa is now head of strategic product innovation to oversee
the development of products globally, while managing the
interation between the sales and investment teams through a
newly-established office of the chief investment officer.
Motonobu Hasegawa is now global head of request for proposal, to
lead a team of specialists in Japan and in overseas offices. In
the investment management division, Yu-Ming Wang was appointed
global head of investment, while Japan CIO Hiroki Tsujimura will
continue to be responsible for investment management in the Tokyo
branch. Omokawa's ang Wang's roles took effect in 31 January,
while Koyama and Hasegawa joined officially in 1 February.
Singapore
The Monetary Authority of Singapore, the city-state's financial
regulatory body, announced two reappointments to its board of
directors. Lim Chee Onn, senior international advisor for
Singbridge Private, and Peter Ong, permanent secretary of the
Ministry of Finance, joined the now nine-member board. The MAS
board is led by Tharman Shanmugaratnam, deputy prime minister of
the Ministry of Finance, as chairman, and Lim Hng Kiang, minister
of trade and industry, as deputy chairman.
Bank J Safra Sarasin bolstered its South East Asia business with
the hire of Jennie Hananto as vice chair for client advisory in
South East Asia. Hananto joined from BSI Bank, Singapore, where
she served as deputy head of South East Asia since 2010. She
reports to Eric Morin, CEO for the Singapore branch and South
East Asia.
Pinsent Masons MPillay, the Singapore joint venture law partner
of UK law firm Pinsent Masons, hired eight corporate lawyers from
its local rival as part of efforts to further build its corporate
practice in Asia. The lawyers, all from Singapore law firm
KhattarWong, left amid a major restructuring within the firm. The
exodus included Perry Yuan, head of corporate and securities,
Kelvyn Oo and Bethia Su, partners, while the other five are
junior associates. Yuan's old role at KhattarWong was assumed by
Yoong Nim Chor.
Principal Real Estate Investors, the real estate investment arm
of US-headquartered Principal Global Investors, appointed two
portfolio managers to its Singapore arm. Shern-Ling Koh and
Julian Mittag have take the responsibility for identifying
investment opportunities in the Asia-Pacific region. Koh
previously served as chief executive and chief investment officer
at OSK International Asset Management, while Mittag joined from
SEB Asset Management, where he was an Asia real estate securities
portfolio manager.
UK-listed Aberdeen Asset Management promoted its Australian
executive, Victor Rodriguez, to lead its Asia-Pacific fixed
income business. Rodriguez succeeds Anthony Michel, who leaves
the firm after 18 years. He reports functionally to Brad Crombie,
global head of fixed income, and geographically to Hugh Young,
managing director for Asia-Pacific. His old role will be taken
over by Nick Bishop, the senior investment manager, while Adam
McCabe, current deputy, assumed Bishop's duties.
RBC Wealth Management in Asia added two new positions to its
Singapore team. Soh Chye Guan was appointed managing director and
market manager, reporting to Grace Barki, the managing director
and head of RBC Wealth Management for South East Asia. Also
appointed was Leslie Goh as investment counsellor, reporting to
Febby Avianto, managing director and market manager for South
East Asia.
Singapore wealth management firm CrossInvest "parted ways" with
British banker Anton Casey after the executive made derisive
comments about the Singaporean locals. In Casey's posts on his
social media page, he referred to locals as "poor people" and
used "the stench of public transport" to describe commuting on
the metro. CrossInvest issued a statement saying it does not
condone the offending comments. Media reports say Casey has
already fled to Australia.
M&G Real Estate, the real estate fund management arm of
UK-based M&G created a new acquisitions post in Singapore and
named Ng Chiang Ling to the role. Ng was previously the managing
director within the merchant banking division of Goldman Sachs.
In her new post, she is responsible for the business's real
estate acquisition activities in the city-state, Hong Kong and
Australia.
North America
Fieldpoint Private named Timothy Tully as its new chairman of the
board, succeeding Daniel Donahue, who retired.
Donahue, who has been chairman since co-founding Fieldpoint in
2008, will continue to serve as a member of the board of
directors.
Tully is managing partner of Tully Capital Partners and Tully
Investment Fund, which are private investment partnerships. He
has been a Fieldpoint Private director since 2012, leading the
board's compensation committee, as well as serving on its asset
and liability committee and loan committee.
BNY Mellon hired James Horvath as senior director for business
development, responsible for the firm’s non-profit wealth
management practice in New York.
Reporting to managing director Katia Friend, Horvath steps into a
newly-created position that is part of BNY Mellon Wealth
Management’s previously-announced intention to grow its sales
force by 50 per cent by year-end 2014.
Horvath was previously a senior vice president at Atlantic Asset
Management, responsible for marketing alternative investments to
institutional investors. Before that, he was managing director at
Commonfund, serving non-profit organizations. Earlier in his
career, he was a consultant to financial advisors targeting
institutions in the non-profit and pension markets.
Stifel, Nicolaus & Co, the brokerage firm, appointed Michael
O’Keeffe as a managing director of investments in Florham Park,
NJ. O’Keeffe will partner with managing directors Michael
Sullivan and Josh Bledsoe.
O’Keeffe’s past experience includes serving as chief investment
officer for Merrill Lynch Global Wealth Management and CIO/head
of Wilshire Funds Management Group at Wilshire Associates, the
global advisory firm specializing in investment products,
consulting services and technology solutions.
New York-headquartered Tiedemann Wealth Management added Robert
Hormats - former Under Secretary of State for economic growth,
energy and the environment – to its investment committee.
Hormats – currently vice chairman of New York City-based
international consulting firm Kissinger Associates - will advise
Tiedemann on policy, economic and investment issues.
Before joining Kissinger Associates in 2013, Hormats served as
Under Secretary of State for Economic, Energy and Environmental
Affairs from 2009 to 2013. Other roles in government he has held
include Assistant Secretary of State for Economic and Business
Affairs; Ambassador and Deputy US Trade Representative; Senior
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Economic and Business Affairs; and
senior staff member for international economic affairs on the
National Security Council. Hormats also served for 25 years as
vice chairman of Goldman Sachs, International.
Fieldpoint Private, the wealth advisory and private banking firm
serving ultra high net worth families and institutions, appointed
Nicole Bonica as a managing director and senior advisor in New
York City.
Bonica was latterly a managing director at Sterling Bank, having
previously been a senior private banker with Capital One and its
predecessor, North Fork Bank.
Palo Alto, CA-based wealth management firm Sand Hill Global
Advisors appointed its president and chief investment officer,
Brian Dombkowski, as chief executive.
Jane Williams, Sand Hill's co-founder and former CEO, will become
chairman.
Over the past two decades, Dombkowski has held a variety of
senior investment and operational leadership roles throughout the
asset management industry.
In his role as CEO and CIO of Sand Hill Global Advisors, he
provides overall strategic direction and leadership to the
investment management, client services, finance and operations
groups.
Before joining the firm, he was co-CIO of Stafford Capital
Management, where he actively managed funds for a client base
comprising high net worth individuals, family offices and
institutional investors.
UBS Wealth Management Americas hired Paul Allen as head of
corporate business development within its equity plan advisory
services group.
Allen will lead a sales team that will work with UBS financial
advisors who specialize in the equity compensation space.
A 30-year veteran of the equity compensation industry, Allen has
served as a consultant to UBS for the past year and has held
leadership positions at a number of financial services firms
including Fidelity Investments, Merrill Lynch and Smith
Barney.
Industry veteran Steve Lockshin joined Carson Wealth Management
Group’s executive board to help grow the firm's three companies:
Carson Wealth, Peak Advisor Alliance and Carson Institutional
Alliance.
Lockshin, founder and chairman of Convergent Wealth Advisors, was
elected to the executive board at the group's most recent
meeting.
Morgan Stanley appointed Erskine Bowles as lead director of the
New York-listed firm’s board of directors, taking over from C
Robert Kidder.
Bowles has served as a Morgan Stanley director since December
2005 and as chair of the compensation, management development and
succession committee since 2010. He was named co-chair of the
National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform in 2010,
and served as president of The University of North Carolina from
2006 through 2010.
Additionally, Bowles has been a senior advisor to private
investment firm Carousel Capital since September 2001, and served
as a managing director from March 1999 to September 2001. Between
1999 and 2001, he was a general partner of Forstmann Little & Co,
a private investment firm.
Fusion Family Wealth hired Fred Gold, a former partner at Arthur
Andersen, as head of business development for Metro New York.
With offices in New York City and Long Island, Fusion Family
Wealth is an investment management firm founded last year by
former UBS senior vice president Jonathan Blau. Gold will be
based in Long Island and will report to Blau.
Gold spent 32 years at Arthur Andersen, serving as
partner-in-charge of the Metro New York enterprise group audit
division and partner-in-charge of Andersen’s audit division in
the Long Island office.
Gold spent his first 13 years at the firm as a member of the
small business audit division in New York. He has been a member
of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants and the
New York State Society of CPAs since 1972.
Baird promoted Jarrett Kovics, previously director of the Texas
market, to regional director (Western), based in Dallas.
Kovics will oversee Baird’s wealth management offices in the
Western region, which includes Texas, Arizona, Oregon and
California. He joined Baird in 2010 as branch manager of the
Dallas wealth management office.
Kovics started his career as a financial advisor at Morgan
Stanley before moving to Citi Smith Barney. At Smith Barney, he
spent 11 years in numerous roles, including assistant branch
manager of the private client/institutional headquarters office
in New York and complex manager of the global wealth management
offices in Hawaii.
Kinetic Partners, an advisor to the global financial services
industry, added Todd Kaplan to its New York office as an
associate director within the regulatory compliance practice.
Kaplan will work alongside Kinetic Partners’ compliance team and
provide regulatory compliance services to hedge fund and private
equity firms.
A licensed attorney in the state of New York with over seven
years of investment management experience, Kaplan joins Kinetic
Partners from Kleinberg, Kaplan, Wolff & Cohen, where he was an
associate in the hedge fund group.
There, Kaplan advised clients on various aspects of their
businesses, covering areas including complex regulatory and
compliance issues such as insider trading and protection of
personal data. Before that, Kaplan was an investment management
attorney at Schulte Roth & Zabel.
RBC Wealth Management looked across the Atlantic for a new trust
director for its Grand Cayman branch, reporting to Brian Taylor,
head of trust management, Caribbean.
Moving from Farrer & Co in London, Alison Parker left her
international private client associate role to help direct RBC
Wealth Management’s Caribbean Trust.
Parker will work with RBC’s trust officers and managers to
provide fiduciary solutions to international high net worth
clients.
A new managing director for strategic relationships was named by
asset management company Whitebox Advisors.
Based in the New York/Tri-State area, John Olstein will be
responsible for building strategic relationships for the firm’s
global clients.
Olstein joined from Waterstone Capital Management, where he was
in charge of global and sales and investor relations as director
for business development.
Ronald O’Hanley, head of asset management at Boston, MA-based
Fidelity Investments, is stepping down after less than four years
in the role.
Confirming O’Hanley’s departure, a note to employees from
president Abigail Johnson revealed that Fidelity plans to replace
O’Hanley with an internal successor, who will be named in the
coming weeks. O’Hanley, in a separate memo, said he plans to
spend more time with his family and non-profit organizations,
before considering a new professional challenge.
O’Hanley has already begun working with the CEO of Fidelity’s
family office, Geoff von Kuhn, to transition the corporate
services functions. The memos added that O’Hanley will depart the
firm by the end of February.
O’Hanley joined Fidelity in 2010 from Bank of New York Mellon,
where he also oversaw money management. He was hired at a time
when Fidelity was struggling to recover from the 2008 financial
crisis and investors fled the firm’s actively managed stock
funds.
INTECH Investment Management, the global investment manager,
created a new senior role as the firm expands its client services
team.
Richard Yasenchak became the first client portfolio manager for
the Florida-based firm.
Yasenchak will work with INTECH's client and consultation
relations teams as an investment expert. He will also be involved
with sales presentations and other campaigns, both in the US and
globally.
Moving from opposite ends of the country, Yasenchak left Russell
Investments after eight years based in Seattle, WA, to join
INTECH in West Palm Beach, FL. He served as US equity portfolio
manager at Russell Investments, overseeing approximately $5
billion.
A new president and chief investment officer was appointed at
VisionQuest Wealth Management in Raleigh, NC.
Steven Laska will lead the firm's acquisition strategy, as
VisionQuest gears up to acquire nearly $1 billion in assets under
management through M&A activity.
He will also take charge of the firm’s asset management business,
and both its private and public investment strategies.
Laska joined from Gerstein Fisher in Florida, where he was
director of global advisor distribution for the firm's mutual
funds and separate accounts. Prior to entering the financial
world, Laska served in the US Army as an armor officer during the
first Gulf War.
Dynasty Financial Partners appointed Ronald Sallet as senior vice
president of network development, reporting to Shirl Penney,
president and chief executive.
Sallet will be responsible for growing Dynasty's network of
independent advisory firms and will target RIAs, large-scale IBD
reps and captive employee advisors who are looking to explore
independence.
He joined from Wells Fargo's independent channel, FiNet, where he
was a managing director, co-leading the branch development and
marketing team.
Prior to Wells Fargo, he worked at Citigroup/Smith Barney for 14
years, where he was senior vice president and director of
financial services groups in NYC at Citigroup Global Markets.
Before this, he worked in various roles including financial
advisor, national training officer, assistant branch manager and
branch office manager.
The drive for internal succession is ripe at a wealth management
firm in San Rafael, CA, as Private Ocean expanded its equity
ownership.
The Marin County-based firm made four of its leaders new equity
owners: Justin Hult, director of investment operations and chief
compliance officer, as well as advisors Sarah Wotherspoon, Alex
Gangl and Charles Pyfer.
RBC Wealth Management recruited The Kerr Wealth Management Group,
which works with business owners, in San Antonio, TX.
The Kerr Wealth Management Group helps business owners with
succession planning and investment management, and also
specializes in company-sponsored retirement plans.
Kelly Kerr has more than 14 years of industry experience and is
latterly of UBS. Kerr has assets under management of more than
$115 million, with $850,000 in production. Joining Kerr is Audra
Kerr, an investment associate with seven years of industry
experience.
Milford, CT-based Beirne Wealth Consulting, a Focus Financial
Partners firm, hired two former Allentown, PA-based Morgan
Stanley advisors: Christopher Englebert and Daniel Reitz.
This is the third office that BWC has opened in two years. The
firm has expanded from seven to 19 employees and now has eight
financial advisors. It has satellite offices in Allentown and
Miami.
Elizabeth Garnto and Jamie Englebert joined Englebert and Reitz
at BWC to provide consulting services on defined benefit public
pensions and defined contributions, as well as retirement,
educational, tax and estate planning issues.
A former Olympian was appointed as managing partner of Hemenway &
Barnes in Boston, MA.
Kurt Somerville, who previously rowed for the US team, will
continue to serve clients in the firm’s private client group and
as a professional fiduciary. He has advised high net clients for
over 30 years, serving as both a lawyer and a trustee.
Specializing in the trust and estates, Somerville has a number of
relations with charitable trusts, foundations and private family
trust complexes. This includes serving as a co-trustee of Jane's
Trust, a charitable trust in New England.
Chief executive Mohamed El-Erian is leaving Pacific Investment
Management Company, the US-based asset management subsidiary of
Allianz, as the firm reorganizes its leadership structure.
El-Erian, chief executive and co-chief investment officer of
PIMCO, has resigned from his functions effective end-March and
will leave the firm at the same time. He will stay on the
international executive committee of parent company Allianz and
will advise the firm’s board on global economic and policy
issues. In his new role, El-Erian will report directly to Michael
Diekmann, CEO of Allianz SE.
William Gross, founder of PIMCO, will remain chief investment
officer, while managing directors Andrew Balls and Daniel Ivascyn
will help lead the firm’s portfolio management in their new roles
as deputy chief investment officers.
PIMCO also elected Douglas Hodge, managing director and currently
chief operating officer of PIMCO, as CEO and Jay Jacobs, managing
director and currently global head of talent management, as
president. In addition, Craig Dawson, managing director and
currently head of PIMCO Germany, Austria, Switzerland and Italy,
will assume the position as head of strategic business
management.
UBS Wealth management Americas recruited The Apex Group – with
$500 million in assets under management - from Morgan Stanley in
Atlanta, GA.
The team consists of Adam Thomas, Mike Hennessy, Araya Mesfin,
Brandon Brown, Jansen Bailey and Julie Bailey.
Thomas, executive director and senior portfolio management
director, has been a financial advisor with Morgan Stanley Smith
Barney since 1999, while Hennessy, also executive director and
senior portfolio management director, has been a financial
advisor with the firm since 2006.
Mesfin, vice president and portfolio management director, has
been a member of Morgan Stanley’s Pacesetter’s Club for 2010,
2011 and 2012. Mesfin is a member of the Atlanta Association of
Corporate Growth.
Brown, second vice president and senior portfolio manager, has
also been a member of Morgan Stanley’s Pacesetter’s Club for
2010, 2011 and 2012.
Jansen Bailey, a chartered retirement planning counselor and
chartered retirement plans specialist, has been in the financial
services industry for over nine years.
Lastly, Julie Bailey serves as a financial advisor, portfolio
manager and chartered retirement planning counselor.
Support staff for the group include Lynn Pattison, senior client
service associate; Jeannine Brookman, registered client service
associate; Elle Pineda, client service associate; and Louise
McMahon, registered client service associate.
US Bank Wealth Management hired Hank Zewald as a wealth
management consultant for The Private Client Reserve of US Bank
in Portland, OR, and named John Paul Sweeney as a senior trust
officer in Chicago, IL.
Zewald has over 25 years of experience with a background as a
certified public accountant, financial services professional,
managing principal and institutional business consultant. For
over 18 years he ran his consulting business, Quantum Financial
Partners, working with large financial services organizations,
independent brokers and registered investment advisors.
Meanwhile, in Chicago, Sweeney will provide administration for
trusts of high net worth clients, including the coordination of
financial, tax, investment and legal services. Sweeney was
latterly a managing director and senior trust officer with the
Private Bank and Trust Company. He has also worked at Chicago
Trust Company and Northern Trust Company.
Manulife Asset Management appointed Gary Li as a managing
director and portfolio manager in Boston, MA, responsible for
derivatives portfolios.
Li reports to Barry Evans, president of asset management in North
America and chief investment officer of asset allocation.
Li helps manage some $34 billion in John Hancock wealth
management portfolios, as well as developing and managing
synthetic asset exposures inside certain asset allocation
portfolios. He also provides advisory and risk support to the
firm's equity and fixed income portfolio managers with respect to
their derivative positions.
Previously, Li worked at MetLife Insurance Corporation as an
assistant vice president and manager of derivatives risk
management. Before that, he was director of risk management and
asset allocation for the South Carolina Retirement Investment
Commission. Earlier still, he was director of derivatives and
alternative strategies for Wells Fargo Capital Management.
First American Trust, which provides investment management, trust
and wealth planning services to high net worth individuals,
families and foundations, appointed Eric McMullen as executive
vice president and chief fiduciary officer.
McMullen, who has more than two decades of wealth management and
investment experience, will oversee the firm's wealth management
and trust activities. He will also help lead First American
Trust’s growth efforts as it expands in the West.
McMullen previously held executive management roles in the
financial services sector, primarily in the Midwest. Past
positions include managing director of the trust and wealth
management division of a publicly-traded bank in Chicago, IL, and
president of a Midwest-based broker-dealer.
BBVA Compass appointed a new market executive of trust and wealth
management in San Antonio, TX.
Mary Mahlie, who serves as the bank’s wealth management market
executive in Beaumont, Corpus Christi and College Station, TX,
will continue to oversee operations in the former two cities.
Northern Trust expanded its alternatives group with two hires
focused on investment opportunities in venture capital and
secondary markets for private equity.
James Hart, who is responsible for sourcing and analyzing venture
capital investment opportunities in the US and Asia, joined
Northern Trust from Greenspring Associates, a global venture
capital fund-of-funds based in Baltimore, MD.
Adam Freda, who focuses on sourcing, valuing and executing
private equity and venture capital transactions on the secondary
market, was previously at Wind Point Partners, a middle-market
leveraged buyout fund based in Chicago, IL.
Brown Advisory, an independent investment management firm with
some $46 billion in client assets, hired Edward Tune as a
portfolio manager and partner in North Carolina.
Tune will advise private clients, non-profits and other
institutions, while working to expand Brown Advisory's business
in the Carolinas and throughout the US.
Tune joined Brown Advisory after 14 years at Brown Brothers
Harriman, where he was a managing director and chief operating
officer/chief financial officer for the firm's wealth management
business.
Prior to that role, he headed BBH's Chicago, IL, wealth
management office in addition to advising private clients and
families. Before joining BBH, he served private clients at Stein
Roe & Farnham in Chicago.
Ogier, the international legal and fiduciary firm, added Shameer
Jasani as a partner within the Cayman Islands corporate and funds
team, while naming Ray Ng as partner and head of litigation for
the British Virgin Islands and Asia.
Jasani joined Ogier in 2007 from Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer
and Taylor Wessing in London. Jasani’s practice is focused on
investment funds, including hedge funds, funds-of-funds and
private equity funds.
He advises investment managers on all aspects of their
structuring, formation and ongoing operational requirements, as
well as regularly advising strategic and seed investors.
Ng has detailed experience in the area of complex
multi-jurisdictional commercial disputes relating to shareholder
rights, directors' duties, corporate governance, cross-border
restructuring and insolvency, trusts and commercial fraud.
Peapack-Gladstone Bank appointed Gary Todd Pancoast as a senior
managing director of wealth.
The move followed the retirement of Craig Spengeman, president
and chief investment officer of Peapack-Gladstone Bank Trust &
Investments, earlier in January. John Babcock was brought in
shortly after as a senior executive vice president and president
of private wealth management, effective March 10, 2014.
Pancoast has 20 years of experience in the wealth management
industry, with expertise in portfolio management, client
acquisition, estate planning and private banking.
Since 2004, he has held various roles at US Trust/Bank of America
Private Wealth Management, directing teams focused on client
development strategies, portfolio management, asset allocation,
tax and estate planning, and private banking services.
Toronto-listed Canaccord Genuity Group appointed Stuart Raftus as
president of its wealth management arm in Canada.
Raftus, who has held senior roles at a raft of companies, took up
the post at Canaccord Genuity Wealth Management in Canada.
Additionally, John Rothwell was the previous president at the
wealth management business. He left the business.
Rockville, MD-based Highline Wealth Management, the $1.3 billion
RIA, hired Aviva Pinto and Micheal Moritary from OpenArc and
Morgan Stanley respectively.
Pinto, who joined in New York City, has over 25 years of
experience as a financial advisor, while Moriarty, who stepped
into the Rockville, MD, office, has over 20 years of experience
as a financial advisor. Together, they manage around $2 million
in client assets.
Pacific Alternative Asset Management Company, the Irvine,
CA-based fund of hedge funds investment firm, promoted Ronan
Cosgrave, Putri Pascualy, Anne Gaelle Pouille and Jeffrey
Willardson to partner.
All four appointments were in Pacific’s Irvine office and brought
the total number of active partners at PAAMCO to 18.
Cosgrave is the sector specialist for convertible bond hedging
and joined PAAMCO in 2005, while Pascualy is the senior credit
strategist for PAAMCO and joined the firm in 2006.
Pouille is the portfolio manager for PAAMCO’s Pacific Corporate
Opportunities commingled fund and joined PAAMCO in 2007. Before
this she was at UBS.
Willardson joined the firm in 2007 and is a portfolio manager
within the portfolio solutions group, as well as a member of the
portfolio construction group.
BNY Mellon Wealth Management opened its doors in San Diego, CA,
and made three appointments in Chicago, IL.
The new Del Mar office is headed by Paul Thiel, senior director
for business development, who reports to Southern California
regional president Shannon Kennedy. The move was the latest step
in the firm’s expansion in Southern California, having made 25
key hires serving Los Angeles and Orange and San Diego Counties
in 2013.
Thiel said the San Diego office represents one of the top wealth
markets in the US and is one of the fastest-growing regions for
the business. BNY Mellon has six wealth management staff
dedicated to San Diego County and the firm plans to hire an
additional private banker this year.
The firm appointed Neil Kohler and Michael Castronovo as mortgage
bankers in Chicago, while also naming Jennifer Lucas as senior
director for business development – a newly-created role –
there.
The three appointments were part of a “robust local hiring
effort” that has more than doubled the size of BNY Mellon Wealth
Management’s Chicago staff over the past two years.
Lucas was latterly a senior vice president at the Chicago office
of US Trust, Bank of America Private Wealth Management, where she
had business development, relationship management and team
leadership responsibilities. Prior to that, she served for six
years at BoA in a different role within its derivatives group. In
her new role she will report to regional president Michael
DiMedio.
Both mortgage banker appointees report to managing director Erin
Gorman, who is head of the firm’s national mortgage sales
division.
Kohler, who has 23 years of experience in financial services, was
for nearly four years vice president and a private banker with
Morgan Stanley. There, he provided residential mortgage and other
loan products to financial advisors and their high net worth
clients. Prior to that, he served as a senior mortgage consultant
in originating and refinancing mortgages with Wintrust
Mortgage.
Castronovo has 29 years of experience in financial services, and
at two different time periods served as a sales manager with
Wells Fargo Private Mortgage Banking for a total of 13 years. In
his most recent tenure there, he helped rebuild the Chicago
private mortgage banking office. Between 2006 and 2008, he was a
private mortgage banker responsible for establishing a new office
in Lake Forest for PERL Mortgage.
Nicole Cost joined Convergent Wealth Advisors as a managing
director in New York.
Prior to joining Convergent, Cost was a managing director at
Evercore Wealth Management, where she managed several hundred
million dollars in client assets for some 62 high net worth
relationships.
Atlas Private Wealth Management, a Williamstown, MA-based Focus
Financial Partners firm, hired two wealth advisors in Albany,
NY.
Michael Hickey and Donald Carman are latterly of Albany Financial
Planners, where they spent the past 30 years. Atlas manages
approximately $1 billion in client assets and offers wealth
management, financial planning, investment management and tax
services across the US.
Hickey will serve as executive vice president, a member of the
Atlas investment committee and managing director of the Albany
office. He has over 30 years of wealth counseling experience,
particularly with clients who have received sudden wealth from an
inheritance, legal settlement, lottery winnings or sale of a
substantial asset, for example.
Meanwhile, Carman will serve as senior vice president and
director of tax and financial planning. He has around 30 years of
experience in tax preparation services for individuals, small
businesses, estates and trusts. Carman specializes in retirement
plan allocations, long-term care costs and education funding
needs.
GrizzlyRock Capital, an alternative asset management firm which
specializes in the credit and equity markets, appointed Chris
Ricciardi as managing partner and head of business development,
and Doug Laux as chief financial officer.
Ricciardi has worked in the alternative investment space for
around eight years and was latterly director of strategic
relationships at Altegris Investments. There, he distributed
private and public investment solutions to investors, wealth
managers, banks and financial services platforms.
Laux has detailed knowledge of private and public companies,
balance sheet and operational restructuring, initial public
offerings, bankruptcy situations and mergers and acquisitions. He
spent 20 years at Ernst & Young in Chicago, IL, where he was a
partner for nine years.
Canada’s Dundee Goodman Private Wealth, a division of Dundee
Securities, bolstered its wealth management business with the
addition of 60 investment advisors – collectively managing $2
billion - and their related staff from wealth manager Richardson
GMP. The addition of 60 people more than doubled the firm's
roster of advisors.
Geneos Wealth Management, a Denver, CO-based broker-dealer,
appointed its former senior vice president of recruiting and
business development, Ryan Diachok, as its new president.
Russell Diachok, who served as the firm’s president and chief
executive, remained as CEO and is involved in all strategic
decisions while handing over the day-to-day operations of the
firm to his successor.
Although stepping back from some in-office functions, Russell
will spend more time meeting face-to-face with Geneos advisors at
their home offices.
BNY Mellon Wealth Management tapped the upcoming millionaire
markets of Arizona and Nevada by hiring two new staff in those
states.
Both latterly of Wells Fargo’s Private Bank, David Dasari and
Chad Maze joined BNY Mellon Wealth Management's Western market
division.
Dasari will serve as senior portfolio manager, while Maze will
lead business development efforts.
Raymond James hired financial advisors S Benjamin Weiner, Michael
Hlavek, Duke Marsh and Daniel Iosue - the independent Winter Park
Wealth Group - in Winter Park, FL.
The group is latterly of Morgan Stanley, where they managed over
$550 million in client assets and had annual fees and commissions
of over $2.3 million. The team focuses on financial planning and
wealth management.
Weiner began his financial services career with Shearson
Lehman/American Express as an options strategist in the
commodities department. He became a financial advisor in 1986 and
remained with the firm through the various name changes.
Hlavek began his career as an analyst for Smith Barney in
Atlanta, responsible for money manager research and analysis. He
moved to Winter Park in 2001 as a financial advisor with Smith
Barney to become a partner with Weiner.
Marsh, meanwhile, began his advisory career in 1977 with Merrill
Lynch, transitioning to Shearson/American Express two years later
and then spending over 33 years with the same firm as it merged
into Morgan Stanley. Marsh became a partner with Weiner and
Hlavek in 2009.
Lastly, Iosue began his financial services career in 2011 with
Morgan Stanley in Winter Park. Iosue formally became a partner
with Weiner, Hlavek and Marsh as they all transitioned to the
Winter Park Wealth Group.
Independent wealth advisory firm Snowden Capital Advisors
appointed Caesar Cepeda as a vice president in Pasadena, CA.
The addition of Cepeda, who has spent the past 26 years as a
financial advisor at Merrill Lynch, came after a growth capital
investment from private equity fund Estancia Capital Partners in
November.
The profits from Estancia’s investment were also put towards the
hiring of vice presidents in New York, Connecticut and other
target markets.
Houston, TX-based wealth management firm Kanaly Trust named Drew
Kanaly – the son of Deane Kanaly, who founded the firm in 1975 -
as president.
Kanaly will oversee all client service and business development
activities firm-wide while maintaining his existing duties as
chairman of the board.
Meanwhile, Jeff Kanaly will continue to serve as vice chairman
and chief financial officer, working with the firm’s CEO, Bill
Rankin, on a number of strategic initiatives.
LPL Financial, the US independent broker-dealer, RIA custodian
and wholly-owned subsidiary of LPL Financial Holdings, added
Brookfield, WI-based Granite Financial Group as an independent
RIA.
Granite Financial Group is led by financial advisors Ellen
Duhamel and Thomas Dornoff, who oversee some $130 million in
client advisory and brokerage assets as of December 18, 2013.
The pair previously spent 26 and 22 years respectively at other
firms in the wirehouse space.
New York-headquartered Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors, the
non-profit organization, added four members to its board of
directors.
The appointees include: writer and historian Barbara Bellows
Rockefeller; Peter Rockefeller, a managing director of G2
Investment Group; Wendy Gordon, co-founder and chief executive of
3P Partners; and Sarah Teacher, a consultant at Sancroft
International.
The New York-headquartered financial law firm Richards Kibbe &
Orbe made Jennifer Grady and Craig Newman managing partners of
the firm. They succeeded Kenneth Werner who has served as
managing partner for the past four years.
Grady joined RK&O in 2004 and is a partner within the firm’s
corporate group, where she has represented banks, broker-dealers,
funds and other financial institutions in connection with
transactions in the derivatives, distressed debt and claims
trading markets. She has also advised trade organizations and
financial institutions on regulatory changes affecting loan-based
derivative transactions. In addition, Grady is a member of the
firm’s executive committee.
As a partner in the firm’s litigation group, Newman joined
RK&O in 2007 to represent global companies with an emphasis
on complex corporate and business litigation, cyber-security and
regulatory matters. Newman is also a member of the firm’s
executive committee.
Homrich Berg named William Bolen, who helps lead the firm's
family office practice and marketing efforts, as a principal.
Bolen works in the areas of investment strategy and alternative
investments, which involves writing economic and investment
commentaries for the firm and speaking regularly about these
topics.
Bolen joined Homrich Berg in 2009 as a director, having
previously served as chief financial officer of the Terwilliger
Family Office and as president/chief operating officer of the
Atlanta Dream WNBA sports franchise.
He started his career as a manager at McKinsey & Company's
Atlanta, GA, office before co-founding The DaVinci Group, a
strategy and marketing consulting firm.
Lisa Hudson joined People's United Bank Wealth Management as a
senior private banker in Boston, MA.
Hudson – most recently a SVP in commercial banking at Citibank in
Boston - is charged with expanding the firm's private banking
business in the Boston Metropolitan area.
Prior to her Citibank role, Hudson was a regional director in New
England at Alliantgroup, responsible for working with company
owners and executives on the subject of tax regulations. She has
also worked at Keybank in Boston as vice president in the
middle-market commercial group, and before that was vice
president and head of the financial institutions group at Credit
Lyonnais in Boston.
OppenheimerFunds named Mary Ann Picciotto as its new chief
compliance officer to succeed Mark Vandehey, who is retiring
after 31 years at the firm.
Picciotto will be responsible for all aspects of regulatory
compliance for the firm’s five affiliated investment advisors in
addition to its three commodity pool operators and advisors, two
transfer agents, broker-dealer, and state-chartered trust
company.
Based in New York, she will provide compliance services to over
100 mutual funds and dozens of institutional accounts. She will
oversee some 30 compliance professionals in three US locations,
reporting to Ari Gabinet, general counsel.
Picciotto previously worked at Morgan Stanley Investment
Management, where she most recently served as global head of
compliance and chief compliance officer for the Morgan Stanley
funds. Before that, she worked for PricewaterhouseCoopers on the
assurance and business advisory services team in the investment
management services division. Picciotto’s appointment will be
effective in the first quarter of 2014.
Deepak Sharma, who has been chairman of the private bank at
Citigroup since 2009, has decided to retire from the US-listed
banking firm at the end of April this year, capping 38 years at
the same firm.
Sharma, whose almost-four decades of work for the same firm sets
him apart from many peers in the revolving-door culture of some
financial institutions, started his career in 1976 as a Citi
management associate in India.
He has held management positions within operations and
technology, treasury, strategic planning, electronic banking and
private bank and investment management.
His leadership positions include serving as CEO of Citi’s Global
Wealth Management-International business, head of Citi Smith
Barney, and as chairman of the private bank. Prior to his current
position in Singapore, he worked in Korea, Saudi Arabia, the US
and Switzerland.
International law firm McDermott Will & Emery named Laurelle
Gutierrez as a Silicon Valley-based partner within the firm’s
private client group.
Gutierrez designs and implements tax planning and wealth transfer
strategies while working to minimize the impact of estate, gift
and generation-skipping transfer taxes.
She advises on a range of domestic and multi-national estate
planning issues and was latterly a director at a California-based
law firm.
Gutierrez also prepares federal gift tax returns and federal
estate tax returns, and advises trustees and executors with
complex probate and trust administrations.
BNY Mellon, which is in the throes of a previously-announced
recruitment drive, hired Todd Carlton as regional president to
lead the firm’s wealth management business in Dallas and the
state of Texas.
This is a newly-created role in which Carlton, based in Dallas,
will report to David Emmes, president of BNY Mellon Wealth
Management's US Western market.
Carlton was latterly the Texas-area wealth executive at Regions
Private Wealth Management in Dallas. Previously, he was vice
president of private client services at First Horizon Bank and
earlier in his career provided personal financial services at JP
Morgan Chase. He has also served as a financial advisor with UBS
Paine Webber.
RBC Wealth Management appointed Tim Houghton to the newly-created
role as head of business development for the Caribbean and
British Isles.
Based in Jersey, Houghton will develop and lead a consolidated
business development function across the Channel Islands, UK and
Caribbean. He will distribute strategies across the firm’s key
target markets, while serving the “key facilitator” between the
business’ manufacturing solutions and distribution
activities.
Houghton joined the British Isles and Caribbean operating
committee, reporting to Stuart Rutledge, chief executive of RBC
Wealth Management for the British Isles and Caribbean.
Houghton, who joined RBC in 1999, has served as head of offshore
private client wealth management since 2011. In this role, he
oversaw the distribution teams in Jersey and Dubai, as well as
the banking platform in the British Isles.
The international law firm Withers appointed two partners with
experience in tax controversy, criminal tax law and tax
litigation from Hass & Hecht in New York and New Haven, CT.
David Moise joined in New York, while Seth Cohen will work out of
the New Haven office.
Moise has over 25 years of experience in the tax procedure and
controversy area. His practice focuses on federal, state and
local tax examinations and appeals, tax court litigation and
voluntary disclosure agreements.
He also has experience in tax collection procedures, including
tax liens and levies, as well as collection administrative
appeals, installment agreements and offers in compromise.
Moise is admitted to practice law in New York and before the US
Tax Court.
Cohen also has extensive experience representing clients in tax
controversies, including tax examinations and appeals, criminal
tax matters, tax litigation and voluntary disclosure
agreements.
He has worked in the area of tax collection defense, including
collection administrative appeals, installment agreements and
offers in compromise. Cohen is admitted to practice law in New
York, Connecticut and Massachusetts, and before the US Tax
Court.
The international law firm Withers, which is known as Withers
Bergman in the US, named trusts and estates attorney Louis
Mezzullo as a consulting partner.
Mezzullo, a US-based estate planning and business succession
planning attorney, has written extensively on taxation, estate
and business succession planning, and employee benefits
issues.
Based in Rancho Santa Fe, CA, Mezzullo will advise Withers'
national and international clients as well as help expand the
firm’s service to clients in California.
Mezzullo is the immediate past president of the American College
of Trust and Estate Counsel, where he has also served as chair of
the business planning, employee benefits in estate planning and
elder law committees, and will chair the organization’s
nominating committee this year.
He is also a former chair of the American College of Tax Counsel;
current chair of the chapter 14 subcommittee of the estate and
gift taxes committee of the American Bar Association section of
taxation; former vice-chair of publications of the ABA section of
taxation; and past chair of the ABA section of real property,
trust and estate law.
Six financial advisors joined Raymond James & Associates, the
traditional employee broker-dealer of Raymond James Financial,
representing a combined $308 million in client assets under
management and almost $4 million in annual fees and
commissions.
They joined branches in Portland, OR, St Louis, MO, and Dallas,
TX, said Tash Elwyn, president of RJA’s Private Client Group.
Joining the firm in Portland from Morgan Stanley was the team of
Saunders Kelly Acheson Wealth Management. The team is made up of
Jason Saunders, vice president of investments; Stephanie Kelly,
associate vice president of investments; and Kendall Acheson,
financial advisor.
Saunders began his career with A G Edwards, where he served as a
financial advisor and branch manager until the firm was acquired
by Wachovia Securities in 2007.
Kelly worked as a financial advisor at A G Edwards and Morgan
Stanley, starting her career in financial services in 2004.
Acheson began his financial services career in 2008 after
graduating from the University of Colorado at Boulder. He
specializes in helping mid- to late-career professionals,
particularly business owners.
Meanwhile, joining the firm in St Louis was senior vice president
of investments, Alan Spilker, who joined from Merrill Lynch. He
began his career in 1984 with E F Hutton and now specializes in
middle-market fixed income business.
Lastly, joining RJA’s Sherry Lane office in Dallas was Anthony
Vaccaro and Bill Callis - both senior vice presidents of
investments - as well as financial advisor Matt Ferrell. All of
them are latterly of Southwest Securities and the team operates
as the Advanced Planning Group of Raymond James.
BNY Mellon named Abigail Bensimhon as a senior private banker in
the Washington, DC, market.
Bensimhon was latterly a senior commercial loan officer at
Capital Bank in Rockville, MD. Prior to that, she was with PNC
Bank, where she served as a commercial relationship manager and
team leader.
In her new role at BNY Mellon Wealth Management, she reports to
managing director Arthur Grugan.
OppenheimerFunds appointed portfolio manager Michelle Borré and
her team of three analysts to the global multi-asset group,
reporting to Mark Hamilton, CIO Asseat Allocation.
Borré joined OppenheimerFunds in 2003 as a senior research
analyst on the value investment team. Prior to joining
OppenheimerFunds, Borré held various positions at J&W
Seligman, including managing director and and partner.
UK-listed Barclays appointed Stephen Thieke, a former senior
official at the US Federal Reserve and a divisional head at JP
Morgan, as a non-executive director.
Thieke has four decades of experience in financial services, both
in regulation and investment banking.
Thieke worked for the Federal Reserve Bank of New York for 20
years, where he held several senior positions in credit and
capital market operations and banking supervision. He became a
non-executive director at the UK’s Financial Services Authority,
the former financial regulator now replaced by the Financial
Conduct Authority.
He has also held senior roles in investment banking and risk
management with JP Morgan, where he spent ten years. Thieke was
head of the bank’s fixed income division, co-head of global
markets, president and chairman of JP Morgan Securities, and head
of the corporate risk management group, retiring from JP Morgan
in 1999.
He has spent seven years as a director of Risk Metrics Group,
where latterly he served as chairman of the board, and nine years
on the board of PNC Financial Services Corp.
Platinum Wealth Solutions, of Rosemont, CA, hired Ray Ortega as
director to work with existing advisors as well as bringing on
board new ones.
Ortega joined Platinum Wealth Solutions having spent eight years
in the financial services industry, four of which he worked as an
advisor and the other four in firm management.
Synovus, the Columbus, GA-based financial services company, named
Katherine Dunlevie as managing director of Synovus Family Asset
Management.
Dunlevie joined FAM in 2004 after two years in banking with
Columbus Bank and Trust, a division of Synovus Bank.
Atlanta, GA-based Angel Oak Capital Advisors, an SEC-registered
fixed income investment firm, appointed Chuck Baldiswieler as
president to focus on strategic initiatives for the firm.
Baldiswieler joined TCW in 1995 and recently served as group
managing director, president and chief executive of TCW
Funds.