$1B Former First Republic Workforce Joins Residents From JPMorgan

One other advisory group that joined J.P. Morgan Wealth Administration after the agency purchased First Republic is opting to depart. 

On this case, a Boston-based group led by Brian Nagle, which manages about $1 billion in consumer belongings, is leaving J.P. Morgan for Residents. 

Nagle’s departure follows that of a San Francisco group of former First Republic advisors with about $5 billion in managed belongings, who additionally determined to hitch Residents from JP Morgan in April.

Nagle is changing into a managing director at Residents Non-public Wealth, operating a group that makes a speciality of managing fairness and balanced portfolios for ultra-high-net-worth purchasers, trusts, endowments and foundations. Nagle joined First Republic in 2013. Earlier than that, he was a vice chairman and senior portfolio supervisor with BNY Mellon Wealth Administration, in accordance with J.P. Morgan’s profile of Nagle.

Silicon Valley Financial institution’s collapse despatched shockwaves via the banking trade final March, with First Republic succumbing as one of many victims in its aftermath. It turned the second-largest financial institution failure in U.S. historical past (and the fourth regional financial institution to fall after SVB). 

Regulators briefly seized First Republic earlier than JPMorgan Chase stepped in, buying about $173 billion of First Republic’s loans, $30 billion in securities and $92 billion in deposits. First Republic Wealth Administration managed roughly $290 billion in consumer belongings on the time of the disaster.

Many First Republic advisors opted to maneuver to JPMorgan after the collapse, together with Nagle, who turned a managing director and wealth supervisor with J.P. Morgan Wealth Administration whereas primarily based in Boston.

“Residents Non-public Wealth affords a platform that elevates how we serve purchasers with essentially the most complicated wants,” Nagle stated in regards to the transition.

Moreover, Residents introduced that Mark Thompson, the previous CEO of Boston Non-public Financial institution and president of Cambridge Belief, would turn out to be the market govt for Residents Non-public Financial institution’s Boston workplace, which opened this yr. In line with Residents, Thompson’s appointment and Nagle’s transfer have been a part of a broader agency effort to give attention to Boston.

In April, Residents introduced a former San Francisco-based First Republic group would be a part of from JPMorgan. The group included senior managing administrators Rick Gordon and Hugh Beecher and managing director Andrew Curto. Beecher beforehand labored at Goldman Sachs and Credit score Suisse, whereas Gordon lower his enamel at Barclays and Lehman Brothers; each joined First Republic in 2016, in accordance with FINRA data.

The Residents groups weren’t the one former First Republic advisors to depart JPMorgan in latest months. 

The identical week because the transfer by Gordon, Beecher and Curto, a Florida-based 12-person group with $3.5 billion AUM that made the transfer from First Republic to JPMorgan opted to depart for Merrill Lynch. The group included 4 wealth managers and 6 consumer associates.

In April, Cresset added two San Francisco-based groups totaling $5 billion in managed belongings from J.P. Morgan Wealth Administration. The groups, which originated at First Republic, included three lead advisors and 12 supporting advisors who managed belongings for 160 consumer households. In March, Rockefeller Capital Administration recruited one other former First Republic, Califorinia-based group managing about $922 million in belongings from JPMorgan.

The transfer from First Republic to JPMorgan was a “full circle” transfer for lots of the former financial institution’s advisors. A lot of them began their careers in huge brokerages earlier than becoming a member of First Republic, solely to seek out themselves again at a large agency after the acquisition. A 2023 WealthManagement.com evaluation discovered that 69% of First Republic advisors joined from a wirehouse or massive agency, together with Ameriprise, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, Raymond James and Credit score Suisse, amongst others).

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