BofA In A Panic? Unilaterally Imposes Garden Leave Provisions

Selasa, 08 Maret 2011 0 komentar
It never ceases to amaze me that Bank of America has managed to stay in business. Personally, I always thought they were a terrible bank, with terrible rates, annoying terms and conditions, and really annoying marketing. As a brokerage firm, they have simply bumbled and stumbled their way through the acquisition of Merrill Lynch, turning a unique opportunity into a disaster.

There are too many misteps to detail, but the ones that directly affect brokers makes the point - plus there is a new disaster breaking.

Right after the merger Bank of America had a problem. Its US Trust brokers had some of the same clients as its Merrill brokers, and the two firms were, on a certain level, competitors. The same is true on the retail side, but the problem is what do you do about integrating the brokers and the customers?

There are any number of solutions, but Bank of America decided that brokers who Merrill recruited from US Trust could no longer solicit their US Trust clients to join Merrill. That obviously causes a significant problem for the new US Trust recruits - who are recruited by Merrill to bring their clients from US Trust. Imagine that series of conversations:
 
         "Bring your business to us, we want your US Trust clients, get them over here."

         "We will give you a huge bonus, as a loan, and you will be able to pay it off with the money that you make with us"
"Great you are here, glad to have you!"

"Oh wait, you can't solicit your old clients to come over here. Not a problem, you can start all over again here!"

A complete disaster for those US Trust recruits, and Bank of America offered no solutions, no enhanced compensation, no additional loan forgiveness. Nothing, it just told its new hires, many of whom were big producers with signficant clients who they had built relationships with over decades, "too bad", "start over."

There was also the 50% pay cut imposed on bank brokers. Yes, those stock brokers who sit in bank branches and provide investment services. Their compensation structure is different from that of a stock broker on the brokerage side of the business. Their payout is lower, but they have some advantages - a build-in client base, and referrals from the branch bankers. For reasons which still remain a mystery to the brokers involved, Bank of America decided one day to stop permitting bankers to give referrals to the bank brokers, and then in order to insure that they really screwed the brokers, they cut their payout in half. A 50% pay cut plus a loss of your largest source of referrals. Many brokers were simply forced to leave because of this flagrant breach of contract, and the reality that you cannot earn a living after a 50% paycut. You have to leave in order to support your family.

Then Bank of America refused to join the Broker Recruiting Protocol, creating the interesting situation where Merrill brokers were covered by the protocol, but Bank of America brokers were not. And just to make sure the process was an entire mess, they began to consolidate the bank brokers with the brokers at Merrill. That created significant problems with the Recruiting Protocol. While those were ultimately addressed, it created additional problems for individual brokers, many of whom were forced back to a branch that they left - brokers who got into a dispute with Bank of America managers and quit to go to Merrill are finding themselves back at their old Bank of America office, with the same manager.

To no one's surprise, Bank of America is having trouble recruiting brokers. Shocker. What would a reasonable firm do in such a situation? There are a ton of choices - increase pay packages, step up recruiting, and otherwise make your firm a place where brokers can bring their clients, with a good platform, favorable employment policies - things like that.

Did Bank of America do any of that? Of course not. Instead of making the firm a place to conduct a securities business, add value to the customers, all to entice brokers to join, Bank of America has done the exact opposite - they have announced unilateral employment terms on their existing brokers, and new hires,  in order to prevent them from leaving!

Some advisors at Bank of America Merrill Lynch's U.S. Trust unit recently received an ultimatum - a demand that they sign a new agreement that would effectively sideline them for up to eight months if and when they decide to leave the firm or else risk losing not only their 2010 bonuses but their jobs, too.

That's the ticket! We can't recruit brokers, so lets make sure the ones we have do not leave. Lets force them to give 60 days notice of termination, with a 6 month non-solicit of their customers! Not only does this move raise employment law questions, contract questions, and more,  it raises questions regarding the Broker Recruiting Protocol and a potential breach of the agreement with 450 other brokers firms.

The Protocol was put into place to stop all of the lawsuits between firms when a broker moved. Firms were spending tons of money suing each other over recruiting and solicitation of clients. Three firms created and signed the Protocol, which is in essence an agreement between the firms to allow brokers to solicit customers when they leave, provided the provisions of the Protocol are met. Bank of America acknowledges that its Merrill brokers are covered by the Protocol, but continues to insist that its US Trust brokers are not.

How Bank of America intends to compete in an industry where over 450 of the firms have signed onto the Protocol remains a mystery, but this latest move is the icing on the cake. Brokers are aware of the existence of the Protocol, and in considering a move, factor the Protocol into their decision making. It obviously makes a significant difference if the new firm is part of the Protocol, as it makes the transition easier, and gives the broker a measure of comfort knowing that he will not be sued if the new position does not work out, and he wants to leave in a year or two.

But now US Trust, which is not part of the Protocol, and already has problems recruiting, has make the situation significantly worse. Any broker who is considering a move to US Trust is going to have to consider that once he goes there, he can never leave, no matter what happens - because if he does leave, he will lose his clients.

A two month garden leave plus a 6 month non-solicit is draconian. Even Bank of America can convince clients not to leave the firm if they get an 8 month head start.

Related Stories:

Prickly BofA slaps "garden leave" restrictions on advisers
US Trust Asks Employees to Confirm Broker Protocol Does Not Apply
BofA to Advisors: Take it Or "Garden" Leave It
BofA Forces "Garden Leave" on Brokers After Defection




Recruiting Bonus to Be Banned?

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Last year Mary Shapiro started talking about bonuses on Wall Street and how bad they were. (That's almost funny given the source) and the SEC has finally gotten around to addressing the boss' concern.

On Wednesday, the SEC proposed new rules aimed at reigning in incentive comp. The rules, which stem from Section 956 of the Dodd-Frank Act, would prohibit incentive-based compensation arrangements that encourage “inappropriate” risk-taking or could lead to “material financial loss” at broker-dealers and investment advisers with $1 billion or more of assets.

The current proposal would not affect most investment advisors, and so far, recruiting bonuses are safe - so long as they do not provide additional bonuses for performance, and according to one source, so long as there are no claw-backs based on performance.

However, the traditional recruiting bonus does have a claw-back provision of sorts - if the broker leaves the firm before the term of the note and the additional compensation agreement, he has to pay back the note. In reality, the broker is paying back the bonus, and that is a claw back provision. Couple that with a termination for lack of production, and you have a true performance based bonus, which the SEC is going to ban.

The rule is not final yet, but if it is approved as is, we are going to have an interesting situation. Firms will be forced to restructure their bonus and notes, and are going to have to address the termination for lack of performance issue. There is certainly no way that firms are going to remove that clause, and they cannot realistically remove recruiting bonuses, which puts them in a bit of a bind.

My money is on the third choice - an exemption for repayment of loans on termination for lack of production. I'll update as events move forward.



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Why Is the Financial Services Industry Still Lukewarm About Social Media?

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It's the regulators of course. Update on the use of social media by financial firms from Financial-Planning.com

FINRA Slaps Lincoln Financial for Major Security Stumble

Sabtu, 19 Februari 2011 0 komentar
According to press reports, Lincoln Financial has been allowing its brokers to access confidential customer information over the Internet, using any browser, without security software. It doesn't take much effort to figure out that this is not a good idea, but the fine of $600,000 might drive the point home.

Arbitration Award Forces Closing of B-D

Senin, 07 Februari 2011 0 komentar
QA3 Financial Corp, a independent broker dealer, announced that it was closing its doors next week. According to InvestmentNews.com, the decision came as a result of an arbitration award against the firm. If true, the firm didn't have much choice - an arbitration award is a hit on net capital. If a firm's net capital falls too low, it must close, and that appears to be the case here.

The firm has been caught up in the Regulation D frenzy, where investors are suing their brokers over failed investments in private placements. According to InvestmentNews, QA3 has been in suits over two deals, Medical Capital and Provident Royalties. Both companies face fraud charges from the SEC, and investors have sued the brokerage firms for selling the security, despite the fact that fraud charges have not been brought against the broker dealers.

More...

Registration of Investment Advisers

Selasa, 01 Februari 2011 0 komentar
Suddenly there are more questions about the registration and regulation of investment advisers. My column, Registration and Regulation of investment advisers answers most of them. It is online at SECLaw.com here.


SEC Approves FINRA Rule Change for All Public Arbitration Panels

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The FINRA practice of requiring an "industry" arbitrator on all of its arbitration panels has finally come to an end. The requirement once upon a time had some merit, back in the day when arbitrations were simple, handled in a few afternoons, and were primarily simple disputes. Over the decades that I have been representing parties in securities arbitrations, the landscape has changed dramatically. While the concept was to have someone on a panel who understood the workings of the securities industry, FINRA altered the definition of industry arbitrator to the extent that so many individuals were included that the entire concept was lost in rule changes.

It was also an issue to have an "experienced" industry arbitrator on a panel. While the thought is that the industry arbitrator could help the other arbitrators, that is simply not the case, and the risk that the panel will make decisions based on information from the industry arbitrator that was not evidence in the case has become far too great.

The practice is finally over. Yesterday FINRA announced that the SEC has approved its proposed rule change to provide customers in all FINRA arbitrations the option of having an all public panel. The amended rules will apply to all customer cases in which a list of potential arbitrators has not yet been sent to the parties.

Given the fact that 40% of all participants in the "all public" pilot program still chose an industry arbitrator, I do not expect to see any significant changes in the composition of panels. As experienced practitioners know, the best arbitrator is a fair and reasonable one, and that is very often an "industry" arbitrator. What will change is the complaining about the selection process. While the complaint that the "industry" arbitrator will side with the industry is insulting to the professionalism of our arbitrators, the complaint did have some traction with the public and the press and it was time for the requirement to go.  More...