Family Office
AST buys advisor-centric trust-service provider

Phoenix-based trust administrator extends reach into the
private-client realm. AST Trust Company, a directed trustee,
trust-administration and back-office trust-service provider to
registered investment advisors (RIAs), family offices and other
financial advisors, has acquired the Capital Trust Company of
Delaware, another trust-service provider. The companies say the
merger will “deliver significant value to both companies'
clients” through “increased scale and a broader national
presence.”
Greg Tschider, president of Phoenix, Ariz.-based AST says he’s
“extremely excited” about a transaction that brings together “two
of the larger players in the trust-service space” that also share
a cultural affinity. “At both companies we pride ourselves in
being extremely advisors-friendly.”
Bigger and broader
That shows up in AST’s outreach to advisors, according to
Tschider. “We can function as consultants and be very hands on,”
he says. “So if they like us to take part in a client meeting, we
can do that, or we can stay behind the scenes.”
AST executive v.p. Nicholas Peters says the merger with Capital
Trust “significantly adds to our private client trust assets
under administration and allows us to accumulate critical mass in
the broker-dealer and independent advisor communities.” In
addition, he says, the deal brings Capital Trust’s clients “the
extensive resources and solutions” of AST's private-client and
retirement-plan groups. “Our model allows our advisor-clients to
work with one trustee for comprehensive retirement and
personal trust solutions,” he adds.
AST had about $18 billion in assets under management going into
the deal, about 85% of that in corporate retirement trusts;
Capital Trust had about $1 billion in assets under management,
almost all in advisor-directed personal trusts.
Tschider says it’s vital that a third-party trust-service
provider be “non-competitive” with its advisory clients. “We’re
not an RIA, we’re not a broker-dealer,’ he says. “That means
there’s never the threat that somebody across the hall could
cannibalize [an advisor’s] client base.”
With AST and Capital Trust paired off, Tschider mentions the Bank
of New York and Santa Fe Trust, as two of AST’s bigger
competitors.
The agreement between AST and Capital Trust took effect last
week. Wilmington, Del.-based Capital Trust will continue to
operate under its own name, at least initially. The merged
company will adopt Capital Trust’s status as a Delaware-chartered
trust company, “thereby allowing its clients to continue to take
full advantage of doing trust business in Delaware,” AST says in
a press release.
The companies didn’t disclose financial details of the
transaction.
AST is a division of American Stock Transfer & Trust Company, a
New York-based independent stock transfer and trust company that
administers more than six million shareholder accounts on behalf
of more than 2,500 public-company equity issuers. –FWR
.