Bain Capital’s Andrew Balson Starts New Private Equity Fund

BrokerDealer.com/blog update courtesy of extracts from today’s NYT DealBook

Andrew B. Balson, a longtime managing director at the Boston-based private equity firm Bain Capital, has left to start a new investment fund.

Mr. Balson, a 17-year veteran of Bain Capital, has hired his first employee, Lara Fox Moskowitz, who works in investor relations at the private equity firm General Atlantic, Ms. Moskowitz confirmed on Tuesday. She will be in charge of operations and strategy. The new fund, which will be based in Boston, does not yet have a name.

Bain Capital notified its investors of Mr. Balson’s departure last December, according to a person briefed on the matter who was not authorized to speak publicly about it. The move was not publicly reported at the time.

Mr. Balson, 47, joined Bain Capital in 1996 and was promoted to managing director in 2000, according to a biography that until recently was on the private equity firm’s website. He focused on investments in technology, media and telecommunications, as well as in the consumer, retail and dining businesses. Before Bain Capital, he worked at Bain & Company, the management consulting firm from which Bain Capital was created.

His new fund is expected to make private equity-style investments with a longer time frame. Private equity firms tend to hold investments for three to five years, but Mr. Balson’s fund intends to buy companies or equity stakes and hold them for 10 years or more.

The departure of Mr. Balson came as Bain Capital began investing a new private equity fund, which it finished raising in April. In general, the establishment of a new fund is a fresh chapter for a private equity firm and can give senior executives an opportunity to depart. Another longtime Bain executive, Mark Nunnelly, also retired this year.

The full article can be found at NYT DealBook.

A Hunt to Find the Next Generation of Financial Advisers

BrokerDealer.com/blog update courtesy of extracts from today’s NYT DealBook

Joseph H. Clinard Jr. is 76 and spends his days planning for retirement — just not his own.

Mr. Clinard has worked for more than 50 years as a financial adviser, and he has no plans to stop anytime soon, despite the fact that many of his clients have stopped working or soon will.

“I don’t think my wife wants me home, to tell the truth,” Mr. Clinard said.

Many of Mr. Clinard’s peers share his outlook. The average financial adviser in the United States is older than 50, a number that shows no sign of getting lower because relatively few young people are interested in the work. That is creating a problem for Wall Street, which after the financial crisis likes the idea of managing other people’s money more than it did before. As both independent firms and large broker-dealers attached to investment banks try to expand their asset management businesses, they must figure out how to attract and retain a fresh pool of talent that is increasingly looking to find its riches elsewhere.

“All of us in this industry are facing the same dilemma, which is, where is that next generation going to come from?” said Erica McGinnis, the president and chief executive of the AIG Advisor Group, where the average financial adviser is 54. “There certainly are people who are not being served by financial advisers because there are not enough of them.”

Of the 315,000 advisers working in the United States, only 5 percent are younger than 30, according to data from the consulting firm Accenture. Richard Stein, a partner at the executive recruiting firm Caldwell Partners, estimates that half of all advisers working today are within 15 years of retirement.

At the same time, firms like Morgan Stanley and Bank of AmericaMerrill Lynch, which rely on thousands of advisers to serve their clients, have made it clear that they intend to increase their wealth management businesses as traditionally more lucrative operations, like trading, have largely dried up.

“It’s a real problem for them because the only way they can grow their assets under management is by hiring new advisers, and there’s a limited supply,” Mr. Stein said.

As a whole, Wall Street is a less attractive place to work than it used to be for new graduates. Many Americans distrust the banking industry more now than they did before the financial crisis, and the paychecks aren’t as large. Fewer college students want to go into the financial services sector at all, Mr. Stein said. Instead, they are drawn to budding social media and technology start-ups, hedge funds and other fields beyond the financial services sector.

In one sense, that could mean less competition — and more opportunity — for younger people who choose to become financial advisers. But the compensation model has changed as well.

Advisers used to rely on commissions, meaning that they would make money from every transaction executed on a client’s behalf. But the industry has shifted more toward a fee-based model, which pays an adviser a percentage of the money under management. That may be fine for an older adviser who has a large book of clients, but it can be a deterrent for people just starting out in the business.

Big firms say that the fee-based model helps align the interests of clients and their advisers, but it is also contributing to their staffing problem. Big retail brokerage firms are increasingly losing advisers to independent firms, which offer a bigger cut of fees. According to Mr. Stein, more than $100 billion followed brokers from the big firms to independent ones last year.

The full article can be found at NYT DealBook.

British Roadside Assistance Company AA Raises $2.36 Billion in I.P.O.

BrokerDealer.com/blog update courtesy of extracts from today’s NYT DealBook

LONDON – The AA, the British roadside assistance provider, raised 1.39 billion pounds, or about $2.36 billion, in its initial public offering in London on Monday.

The AA priced its offering of 554 million shares at £2.50 a share, a price it had announced earlier this month, giving it a market capitalization of £1.39 billion.

Shares of the AA declined 4 percent to £2.39 in conditional trading in London on Monday morning. Unrestricted trading of the AA’s shares is expected to begin on Thursday.

The offering represents the final dismantling of Acromas, which was created in 2007 by the merger of the AA and Saga, a seller of travel and insurance packages focusing on people older than 50.

Saga was spun off in an initial public offering in May. Saga’s stock has traded below its offer price in recent weeks.

Acromas, which is owned by the private equity firms CVC Capital Partners, Charterhouse Capital Partners and Permira, had been expected to retain a 31 percent stake in the AA after the spinoff, but agreed to sell its entire stake in the offering, which was oversubscribed.

Separately, River and Mercantile Group, a British investment manager, raised about £41.5 million in its initial public offering on Monday. The company priced its public offering at £1.83 a share, giving it a market capitalization of about £150.2 million.

The company, which did not provide an expected share price range when it announced in May its plans to go public, was formed in February by the merger of River and Mercantile Asset Management and P-Solve, a fellow investment manager.

Through June 16, 55 London I.P.O.s have raised £9.4 billion, compared with £2.5 billion during the same period in 2013, according to Thomson Reuters.

The AA, founded in 1905 as the Automobile Association, is Britain’s largest provider of breakdown assistance, with about a 40 percent share of the roadside help market. About 16 million drivers subscribe to the AA’s products.

Its roadside assistance packages start around £95 a year for the first year of coverage. The company also provides breakdown coverage for businesses, as well as a variety of home, travel and other insurance products.

The full article can be found at NYT DealBook.

Crowdfunding Requires New Type of Broker-Dealer Says Michigan

Thanks to JD Alois, an author at Crowdfund Insider, for providing valuable insights in to a new type of broker-dealer being defined by the State of Michigan. The goal behind this move is to introduce more opportunities for licensed professionals on Main Street, not just Wall Street.

Michigan has been one of the states at the forefront of allowing intrastate investment crowdfunding to occur as Title III retail crowdfunding remains in a regulatory holding pattern.  The state has found capable champions in the legislature and within the business community who are embracing crowdfunding as a part of their economic policy.  The Michigan crowdfunding exemption was signed into law by Governor Rick Snyder at the tail end of 2013.  The legislation was introduced by Representative Nancy Jenkins who envisioned investment crowdfunding as a much needed catalyst to aid in the economic recovery of a state that has gone through a difficult decade.

The Michigan Invests Locally Exemption or MILE experienced their very first crowdfunding success this past month as the Tecumseh Brewing Company raised $175,000 from area residents to help finance their young company.  The offer was listed on LocalStake – an investment portal – and the  goal was reached about halfway through the stated campaign period.  Both accredited and non-accredited investors came together to finance the business.  A total of 21 investors participated with the smallest amount invested being $250.

As part of their economic policy to boost the competitiveness of  their state and increase jobs a new bill creating a local stock exchange was discussed.  Representative Jenkins stated at the time; “..Local businesses—the very ones growing the Michigan economy—may not be up to the national stock exchange level, but they are in need of funding just like any business.”

The objective was to give citizens the opportunity to invest in Main Street – not just Wall Street.

Now advocates have taken a different tack.  While the original bill was designed to create a state stock exchange for these crowdfunded companies, advocates have chosen a different path to address the issue. A spokesperson for Jenkins stated; “..Through researching and talking with the SEC and various individuals, we discovered the simpler and more appropriate route was to create a new type of “intrastate broker-dealer” under Michigan law that would be titled “Michigan Investment Markets.” These MIM’s will connect buyers and seller of intrastate securities.”

 

Read full article here

“Stay Away From Chinese Stocks” Says Group Commissioned by US Congress; Bankers and BrokerDealers Dismayed by Report

BrokerDealer.com blog post courtesy of extracts below from weekend edition of WSJ.

A U.S. government commission warned that investors face “major risks” if they buy shares in Chinese companies like e-commerce firm Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.

The report said the corporate structure of Chinese firms like Alibaba is a 'highly risky scheme of legal arrangements.' Reuters

The report said the corporate structure of Chinese firms like Alibaba is a ‘highly risky scheme of legal arrangements.’ Reuters

A report released this week by a commission that advises Congress on U.S.-China economic issues took aim at the legal structure underpinning Alibaba as well as a host of other Chinese Internet firms, calling it “a complex and highly risky scheme of legal arrangements.” It warned that the structure could lead to losses by shareholders in the U.S.

“U.S. shareholders face major risks from the complexity and purpose” of the structure, said the report, released on Wednesday by the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission. The group, an independent agency directed by Congress, has in the past issued critical reports about China.

While the commission doesn’t directly make policy, its research can inform the work of policy makers and regulators, from members of Congress to agencies focused on securities listings, acquisitions and the U.S. economy.

For the full article from WSJ, please click here.