People Moves
Summary Of Executive Moves In Global Wealth Management - April 2013

April proved to be a busy month across most regions for the wealth management sector.
UK
  Barclays appointed Kenneth Warnock as
  portfolio manager in its wealth and investment management
  division in Edinburgh. Warnock joined
  Barclays from Alliance Trust in Edinburgh.
  He previously worked for Premier Fund Managers, Jupiter Fund
  Management and Johnson
  Fry.
  Rowan Dartington appointed Steve
  Bridges to the newly-created role of business development manager
  at its Bristol office. Bridges
  joined from The Premier Group, where he was head of regional
  development.
  Previously, he worked for Butterfield Private Bank and Mayfair
  Capital
  Partners.
  Walpole
  British Luxury appointed Michael Morley, chief executive of
  Coutts & Co, to
  its board of directors. Morley joined Coutts, the wealth division
  of the Royal
  Bank of Scotland Group, as CEO in June 2009. In September 2010 he
  also became
  chairman of Royal Bank of Scotland International, the offshore
  banking business
  of the group in Jersey, Guernsey, the Isle of Man and
  Gibraltar. 
  IntelliFlo
  appointed Peter Jordan to the newly-created role of marketing
  director, based
  in its Kingston-upon-Thames, Surrey
  office. Jordan joined after
  teaching economics at Portsmouth
  Grammar School, but prior
  to this he held a number of senior marketing roles at Skandia and
  Scottish
  Windows. He reports to Dave Chessell.
  JP
  Morgan Asset Management appointed Simon Crinage as its new head
  of investment
  trust business. Crinage reports to Jasper Berens, head of UK
  funds
  management and replaces David Barron, who left the firm earlier
  this year.
  RBC
  Wealth Management added Angelina Yap as a London-based director
  within its UK private
  client team. Ms Yap will develop relationships with UK-resident,
  non-domiciled
  high and ultra high net worth clients from countries such as
  Singapore, Taiwan,
  Malaysia
  and Greater China.
  Ms
  Yap joined RBC from EFG Private Bank. Before that, she headed up
  a global
  Chinese initiative at Standard Chartered Private Bank, and also
  led the Asian
  business development unit at HSBC Global Asset Management.
  Ashcourt
  Rowan Asset Management appointed former
  Brewin Dolphin senior manager Harry
  Burnham to its board.
  At
  Brewin Dolphin, he was responsible for a wide range of
  individual, trust and
  charitable portfolios, as well as the management of the Brewin
  Dolphin pension
  fund. He was also instrumental in developing and managing the
  group’s fund
  research platform.
  Sarasin & Partners appointed Sarah
  McCarthy to the newly-created role of head of marketing. She will
  be based in London, but will work across the firm’s UK and
  international client base.
  McCarthy joined from Goldman Sachs,
  where she was executive director for the firm’s asset management
  team. Before
  this, she worked as senior marketing manager at Fidelity
  Worldwide Investment,
  and held other managerial positions at Skandia Investment Group
  and AXA Investment
  Managers.
  The Financial
  Conduct Authority appointed Sue Lewis as chair of the independent
  Financial
  Services Consumer Panel, effective from 1 July 2013. Until then
  she remains a
  consumer advocate member on the Chartered Insurance Institute’s
  Professional
  Standards Board.
  Architas, a
  subsidiary of AXA Wealth, hired Philippe Broadhead and Daniel
  Haylett as head
  of institutional and wholesale distribution, and intermediary
  business
  development manager, respectively. Broadhead joined from Union
  Bancaire Privee
  while Haylett joined from Dominion Funds.
  Barclays
  Corporate & Employer Solutions appointed four new corporate
  wealth advisors
  – Virgil Higglesden, Tony Dungworth, Daniel Richards and Mark
  Burns. Higglesden
  joined from The Fry Group, Richards from HSBC and Dungworth and
  Burns from RBS.
  The four recruits advise entrepreneurs, small and medium sized
  enterprises and
  smaller corporate clients on a range of corporate solutions, each
  in a specific
  UK region.
  Cofunds
  announced the departure of Stephen Mohan, managing director of
  operational
  services, who leaves after more than seven years at the firm.
  Mohan will stay
  in his role until a suitable replacement is found.
  Close Brothers
  Asset Management confirmed Chris Bailey stepped down as manager
  of the CDF
  Conservative and Growth Funds. Bailey left to pursue
  opportunities outside
  wealth management, and will be replaced by Riitta Hujanen who has
  been with the
  firm since 2012.
  Prudential
  appointed Jackie Hunt as chief executive to head its UK and
  European business.
  Hunt joined from Standard Life where she was chief financial
  officer, and will
  succeed Rob Devey in October 2013.
  Schroders made
  two newly-created senior appointments, hiring Daniel Morris as
  LDI solutions
  manager and Lef Sigolos as an investment risk manager within the
  Schroders
  independent group risk team, based in London. Morris previously
  worked at
  Towers Watson and AON Hewitt, while Sigolos joined from F&C
  Asset
  Management.
  Appleby, the
  offshore law firm, promoted its private client lawyer Marc
  Guillaume to the position
  of counsel. Guillaume joined the firm in 2009, advises on all
  aspects of trust
  law, and specialises in foundations, pensions, employee benefits
  and
  charities. 
  Jupiter Asset
  Management promoted two of its equity income managers, Alastair
  Gunn and Chris
  Watt. Gunn will manage the Jupiter High Income Fund, effective
  from 1 July
  while Watt currently manages the Jupiter Growth & Income Fund and
  the
  Jupiter UK Alpha Fund.
  The firm also
  appointed Damian Cocking as head of private clients and charities
  business
  development. Cocking joined from Stenham Advisors where he was
  head of offshore
  sales.
  As from July
  2013, Jupiter will also welcome James Clunie, who left Scottish
  Windows
  Investment Partnership where she was investment director of its
  global equities
  team. Clunie worked at the firm since 2007.
  Braemar
  Estates, the property management arm of investment firm Brooks
  Macdonald Group,
  appointed Chris March to the newly-created role of chief
  executive. March
  joined from Allsop Residential Investment Management and oversees
  the growth
  strategies of the company.
  Coutts
  appointed Layla Fear as wealth manager in its Birmingham office.
  She joined
  from JM Finn & Co where she was an investment manager, and will
  report to
  director Miles Plumb.
  Barclays
  Wealth and Investment Management promoted its director Paul
  Freeman to assume
  overall responsibility of its Bristol office. Freeman had been at
  the firm for
  more than 10 years. In addition, Matt Windows and Michael Smith
  were also
  promoted to the roles of director and vice president,
  respectively. Windows
  joined Barclays in 2007 while Smith joined in 2001. Barclays also
  appointed
  Eileen Cronin to the newly-created role of director in its
  Cardiff office.
  Meanwhile,
  Barclays confirmed the chief executive of its wealth and
  investment management
  division, Tom Kalaris, along with Rich Ricci,
  currently chief executive
  officer of its corporate and investment banking arm,
  will retire from
  the bank, effective from 30 June. Kalaris joined the firm in 1996
  and before
  that spanned an 18-year career at JP Morgan. Peter Horrell was
  named interim
  CEO of wealth and investment management, with effect from 1
  May.   
  In addition,
  Skip McGee was hired as CEO Barclays Americas with effect from 1
  May. He joined
  the firm in 2008. Eric Bommensath and Tom King were also
  appointed co-chief
  executives of corporate and investment banking effective from 1
  May. Bommensath
  joined Barclays in 1997 while King joined in 2009.
  Yorkshire Bank
  appointed a new leadership team for its Hull and Humber business
  and private
  banking centre. Brian Lake joined the firm in 2009 and currently
  leads the new
  business and private banking team. Other key figures include
  Anthony Hutt,
  relationship manager, commercial businesses; Matt Smith,
  relationship manager,
  commercial businesses; Danny Ruston, David Burgess and Richard
  Boor, business
  development managers; and Graham Wickenden, private banking
  manager.
  Yorkshire Bank
  also appointed a new leadership team for its west Yorkshire
  business and
  private banking centre earlier in April.
  Henderson
  Global Investors appointed Rob Page as global head of marketing,
  due to start
  this summer. He will report to Greg Jones and oversee the UK and
  European
  marketing, investment marketing, public relations and e-commerce
  teams. Until
  then, Page remains head of marketing and communications at
  Hermes. 
  BlackRock’s UK
  Income co-manager Nick McLeod-Clarke took long-term sick leave.
  On his return
  he will oversee a number of institutional mandates, but will not
  go back to
  co-managing the UK Income fund with Adam Avigdori which he has
  been doing since
  2009.
  Franklin
  Templeton Investments promoted David Zahn to the newly-created
  role of head of
  European fixed income, based in London. Zahn retains his
  responsibilities as
  senior vice president and portfolio manager of various funds, but
  also leads
  the firm’s effort to enhance its European fixed income
  capabilities. He has
  been working at the firm since 2006.
  St James’s
  Place confirmed that its non-executive director, Steve Colsell,
  will step down
  from the firm’s board, effective from 1 June. He joined in 2009
  and is believed
  to be retiring. The firm appointed Sue Harris and Alison Hewitt
  as
  non-executive directors to replace Colsell, subject to regulatory
  approval.
  Both will meanwhile continue their board duties for Lloyds
  Banking Group.
  Scoban
  appointed Jeremy Vaughan to the newly-created role of executive
  director of its
  London office. Vaughan joined from Adam & Co where he spent 16
  years.
  Butterfield
  Private Bank appointed Paul O’Neill as head of UK asset
  management, based in
  London. O’Neill oversees the management of the London investment
  business and
  aims to integrate the group research and London portfolio
  management teams. He
  joined from Talisman Global Asset Management.
  Banque
  Havilland, the Luxembourg-headquartered, family-owned private
  bank, appointed
  Tina Brunetti as group head of compliance. Brunetti joined from
  Lloyds Private
  Bank. In her new role she oversees Banque Havilland’s compliance
  activities
  across its three offices in Luxembourg, London and Monaco.
  Hargreave
  Hale, the UK-based stockbroker and investment manager, appointed
  Richard
  Sneideris as an investment manager at the firm’s Bangor office.
  Sneideris
  joined from Quilter where he was an investment manager for
  private clients.
  Towry, the
  UK-based wealth manager, appointed Jeremy Turrell to the
  newly-created
  role of wealth advisor in its Bournemouth office, as the
  firm continued
  its expansion plans. Turrell joined from Lloyds Mayfair Private
  Banking, where
  he was a senior private banker.
  In addition,
  Towry appointed four of its existing regional wealth advice
  managers to
  newly-created national roles: Jon Bowes, head of client
  advice, Neil
  Homer, head of client delivery, Andy Springall, head of client
  development, and
  Rob Chandler, head of client acquisition.
  UBS appointed
  Kirsten Burt as head of marketing for the UK, Jersey and UK
  international. Burt
  joined from Standard Chartered Private Bank, where she was head
  of marketing
  for Europe, the Middle East and Africa and the Americas.
  Duncan Lawrie
  Private Bank appointed Gillian Ralston Jordan to the
  newly-created role of head
  of fiduciary services, based on the Isle of Man. Jordan manages a
  team of
  accountants and administrators who deal with the bank’s
  international client
  base. She was previously director of two trust and company
  service providers,
  also located on the Isle of Man.
Switzerland
  New Access, the Swiss front-office technology firm,
  appointed Aniello Conte as chief technology officer. Previously,
  Conte spent 12
  years at Hewlett-Packard, and before that he was at Bull-France
  for four years,
  where he led the firm's development centres.
  Credit Suisse appointed Michael Strobaek as its chief
  investment officer for the private banking and wealth management
  division.
  Additionally, he heads the newly established investment strategy
  and research
  group within the division. Strobaek reports to Robert Shafir,
  head of private
  banking and wealth management products. Strobaek joined from a
  Swiss family
  office, where he was chief executive and CIO. Prior to that,
  Strobaek spent 13
  years at UBS in a number of senior positions, most recently head
  of investment
  management for wealth management, and prior to that global head
  of investment
  solutions. The appointment involves partly the creation of a new
  role,
  following reorganisation of the investment team, and due to the
  departure of
  Stefan Keitel from Credit Suisse, where he had been global CIO.
  Geneva-headquartered Lombard Odier Investment Managers
  appointed Grant Peterkin to the newly-created role of senior
  portfolio manager
  on its global and emerging fixed income team. Based in Geneva,
  Peterkin oversees the firm’s range of
  sovereign strategies with a particular focus on the total return
  bond fund, and
  reports to Gregor MacIntosh, head of the global and emerging
  fixed income team.
  Peterkin joined from Ignis Asset Management, where he co-managed
  the firm’s
  absolute return government bond strategy.
  Schroder & Co Bank, the Switzerland based part of
  UK-listed wealth management firm Schroders, said Luc Denis was to
  retire from
  the post of chief executive at the end of June, and be replaced
  by Adrian
  Nösberger on 1 July. Nösberger previously held senior private
  banking
  management roles, including member of the executive board and
  head of private
  banking for Switzerland
  at Clariden Leu (formerly Bank Leu) from 2003 to 2011.
  EFG International nominated two new directors: Nico Burki
  and Bernd-A von Maltzan. Burki practises as a legal attorney and
  is a certified
  Swiss tax expert, trust and estate practitioner. Previously, he
  was a partner
  in the law firm Bär & Karrer, and formerly a tax lawyer for
  Arthur Andersen
  in Zurich. Von
  Maltzan has held a variety of senior positions in Deutsche Bank,
  including
  divisional board member and global head of private banking
  followed by
  divisional board member and vice chairman, private wealth
  management in Frankfurt.
  Middle
  East
  Australia
  and New Zealand Banking Group said Alex Thursby, its chief
  executive for
  international and institutional banking had left the firm to take
  up the CEO
  role at the National Bank of Abu Dhabi.
  ANZ is looking at candidates within the firm for Thursby’s post,
  as well as
  from among external candidates. During this interim period,
  Gilles Planté, CEO
  Asia-Pacific and Steve Bellotti, managing director for global
  markets and
  loans, assumes Thursby’s roles.
Europe
  Lloyds TSB Private Banking appointed Jon Farley as head of
  its business in Gibraltar.
  He reports to Richard Musty, director of private banking and
  Lloyds TSB International. Farley has over 15 years of banking
  experience in a
  variety of roles, including wealth, corporate, international and
  retail
  banking. He joined Lloyds in 2008 from Barclays Bank, and after
  his initial
  role in intermediary sales, he joined the wealth and
  international division in
  2009. Most recently, he was appointed to oversee strategic
  projects in Geneva and the US.
  UBS has appointed Tristan Gervais to its global family
  office team as a senior relationship manager. Gervais has 12
  years' experience
  of providing corporate finance advice to entrepreneurs and family
  offices and
  cross-selling corporate finance and private bank key client
  relationships
  across Europe, Middle East and Africa, first
  at JP Morgan and later at Deutsche Bank. He is based in
  London
  and initially reports to Michael Bishop, head for ultra high net
  worth and
  global family office UK, and
  to Susan Ward when she joined as head GFO UK
  in May onwards with a line into Jeremy Eakin for GFO global
  emerging markets in
  London.
  London-based asset manager Threadneedle Investments promoted
  Michael Poole to lead manager of the £790 million ($1.2 billion)
  European High
  Yield Bond Fund. Poole has been co-managing
  the fund alongside Barrie Whitman, head of high yield, for the
  past two years,
  but the latter stepped down to become deputy manager. Whitman
  will continue to
  oversee other funds, including the Credit Opportunities Fund, the
  High Yield
  Bond Fund and the Strategic Bond Fund.
  UBS hired Blackrock's German head Dirk Klee as chief
  operating officer of its private banking arm, taking the post in
  September,
  2013. Klee replaced Stephan Zimmermann, who is moving to an
  as-yet undefined
  position at the Swiss bank at year-end.
  Deutsche Bank proposed the election of three new members to
  its supervisory board: John Cryan, president for Europe
  at Temasek International, Dina Dublon, former chief financial
  officer of JP Morgan
  Chase, and Georg Thoma, a partner at law firm Shearman Sterling.
  Dr
  Karl-Gerhard Eick and Werner Wenning did not stand for
  re-election at the 23
  May 2013 annual general meeting, and Tilman Todenhöfer stood to
  be elected
  until 31 October 2013.
  Brooks Macdonald International, an offshore subsidiary of
  UK-listed wealth manager Brooks Macdonald, appointed Mark
  O’Connor as an
  investment manager at its Guernsey office.
  O’Connor joined from Rothschild Wealth Management in Guernsey, a
  division of
  Rothschild Bank, where he was an assistant director responsible
  for a client
  base covering the UK,
  Europe, the Channel Islands and Israel.
  Prior to Rothschild Bank, he worked at Royal Bank of Canada.
  Carne Group, the Luxembourg-based provider of governance and
  oversight services to the global funds industry, appointed Jean
  de Courrèges as
  a director to its international team. He sits on the boards of
  both Luxembourg and Cayman
  Islands funds as an independent director. Courrèges has more
  than
  30 years experience in banking and portfolio management in North
  America,
  Europe and Asia, including four years as a
  manager of fund investment operations and strategies with Credit
  Suisse Asset
  Management.
  KBL European Private Bankers, the parent company of UK-based
  private bank Brown Shipley, appointed Hanif Mohamed to the
  newly-created role
  of group chief legal officer. Based in Luxembourg, Mohamed
  supervised and
  coordinated the activities of all legal departments across KBL’s
  nine-country
  European network.
International
  Nerine Group of Fiduciaries appointed a new managing
  director for its British Virgin Islands
  business, and promoted its finance director. Jonathan Bailey is
  the new
  managing director of Nerine Trust Company (BVI). The previous
  managing director
  was Simon Filmer. Bailey has more than 10 years’ experience
  working at a senior
  level within the private client sector in the UK and BVI.
  Executive search firm The Rose Partnership, which is pulling
  out from recruiting in private banking and fund management
  sectors, announced
  the retirement of Philippa Rose and her husband James D’Arcy.
  After 32 years at
  the firm, Rose decided to spend more time with her family and
  pursue other
  interests. She and D’Arcy previously led The Rose Partnership’s
  fund management
  practice. Rose remained as a partner in the firm and also
  continued to offer
  advice and guidance as required by her team.
North America
RBC Wealth Management added to its team in Texas and promoted staff at branches in Florida and Washington.
  In Austin, TX, Glen Hatch joined as branch director. He took up
  the
  role on April 22, having formerly been Austin branch manager for
  Morgan
  Stanley, where he spent eight years.
  In Tampa, FL, the firm appointed Michael Neff as branch
  director.
  Neff, who joined RBC in 2007, takes on a leadership role with
  oversight
  of 10 financial advisors. He replaces Jeff Farrell, who relocated
  to the
  St Petersburg branch.
  In Edmonds, WA, RBC Wealth Management promoted Shane Flock to
  branch
  director. Flock joined RBC in 2009 from Merrill Lynch. He is a
  member of
  the Flock Group, along with his father, Larry Flock, his brother,
  Tony
  Flock, and client associate Mary Malencore. He will be
  responsible for
  the oversight of five advisors and three other branch employees.
  Waterbury, CT-headquartered Webster Bank appointed Madorie O’Hara
  as a
  vice president and senior investment manager in Stamford, CT.
  O’Hara was latterly a member of Citi Private Bank’s tailored
  portfolio group, managing equity and balanced portfolios for
  private
  clients, trusts and charitable organizations.
  Wilmington Trust, part of M&T Bank, hired Sharon Klein as
  managing director of family office services and wealth strategies
  in the
  New York metro region.
  Klein was latterly managing director and head of wealth
  advisory
  services at Lazard Wealth Management. She has 20 years of
  experience in
  the areas of trusts and estates, and philanthropic planning.
  Before her stint at Lazard, Klein headed up the estate advice
  department at Fiduciary Trust Company International, and served
  as
  special counsel within the trusts and estates department at
  Rosenman
  & Colin (now Katten Muchin Rosenman).
  Morgan Stanley Wealth Management expanded its advisor force
  in
  California and Florida with hires from Deutsche Bank and Merrill
  Lynch.
  In Boca Raton, FL, Eric Behr joined from Deutsche Bank, where
  he
  served as a director and advisor. He had annual revenue
  production of
  roughly $1.2 million and now reports to Morgan Stanley complex
  manager
  Michael Higgins.
  Thomas McCann joined Morgan Stanley in La Jolla, CA, from
  Merrill
  Lynch. There, he managed over $200 million in client assets and
  last
  year generated about $1.1 million in revenue. At Morgan Stanley,
  McCann
  reports to complex manager Mark Kremers.
  Additionally, David Rascoe - latterly of Wells Fargo Advisors
  -
  joined in San Diego, CA. At Wells he managed $80 million in
  client
  assets and last year generated $905,000 in revenue.
  Rockville Financial appointed Valerie Duncan - latterly of
  Wells
  Fargo Private Bank - as a senior vice president and head of
  private
  banking, based at the firm's administrative offices in
  Glastonbury, CT.
  Duncan has over 16 years of experience in the financial
  services
  industry and at Wells served as a vice president and private
  banker for
  the Northeast region.  
  Reporting to Mark Kucia, executive vice president and head
  commercial
  banking officer, Duncan will lead the firm's private banking
  team,
  which is comprised of: Anna Sinatro, vice president and private
  banking
  executive, and Heather Loranger, vice president and private
  banking
  executive.
  Wells Fargo Advisors extended its footprint across four states
  with
  seven hires from Morgan Stanley Wealth Management and Edward
  Jones.
  The new hires managed $776 million in combined client assets at
  their
  former firms and have joined Wells Fargo Advisors' private client
  group
  in Florida, Maryland, New Jersey and Virginia.
  In Winter Haven, FL, Richard Meadows, Paul Seifert and Michael
  Fettig
  - the Meadows, Seifert, Fettig Group - joined from Morgan
  Stanley
  Wealth Management, where they managed $266 million in client
  assets.
  They are now based in Lakeland and will report to branch
  manager
  Christian Rafool.
  Further north in Maryland, Howard Mirvis and Larry Holmes -
  also
  latterly of Morgan Stanley - stepped into Wells Fargo’s
  Lutherville
  office, where they report to Matthew Glenn. The Mirvis-Holmes
  Group
  previously managed $220 million in client assets and had T-12
  production
  of $1.6 million.
  Gary Pollick also joined from Morgan Stanley, where he managed
  $178
  million in client assets. He now works in Paramus, NJ, and
  reports to
  complex manager Chris Leavy.
  Lastly Betty Schutte-Box - latterly of Edward Jones - joined
  Wells
  Fargo in Richmond, VA. Schutte-Box, who formerly managed $112
  million in
  client assets, now reports to market manager Rob Withers.
  In a separate announcement, Wells Fargo Advisors Financial
  Network -
  Wells Fargo’s independent brokerage arm - added two practices
  in
  Seattle, WA, with a combined $549 million in assets under
  management.
  In Mercer Island, Butler Wealth Management is comprised of
  financial
  advisors Jim Butler and his two sons, Jim Butler and Neil Butler.
  The
  team joined from Merrill Lynch. Butler Wealth Management has
  $1.3
  million in production and over $356 million in AuM.
  In Lynnwood, the O’Neal & Brokaw Private Retirement Group -
  comprised of Teresa Brokaw, Don O’Neal and Trent O’Neal - joined
  from
  Merrill Lynch. The team has $1.4 million in production and $193
  million
  in AuM.
  Laven Partners, a global consulting firm focused on the
  alternative
  investment industry, appointed Tom Morgan as managing director of
  the
  firm’s New York office, charged with expanding the firm’s
  presence in
  the US.  
  Laven Partners launched its New York office in October 2011
  following
  increased interest from US-based managers expanding their
  operations to
  Europe, and European clients concerned with US regulations.
William Demchak took over from Jams Rohr as president and chief executive of PNC Financial Services Group.
  Rohr, who announced in February that he will retire in 2014,
  has
  taken on the new position of executive chairman. He will serve in
  this
  role for a year to help with the transition.
  Demchak, a director at BlackRock, joined PNC in 2002 as chief
  financial officer and became head of corporate and institutional
  banking
  in 2005. He was promoted to senior vice chairman in 2009, named
  as head
  of all PNC businesses in 2010, and then elected as PNC president
  in
  April 2012.
  The moves were announced at the firm’s latest annual meeting,
  during
  which shareholders also re-elected all 16 directors to the board.
  They
  are: Richard Berndt, Charles Bunch, Paul Chellgren, Demchak, Kay
  James,
  Richard Kelson, Bruce Lindsay, Anthony Massaro, Jane Pepper,
  James Rohr,
  Donald Shepard, Lorene Steffes, Dennis Strigl, Thomas Usher,
  George
  Walls and Helge Wehmeier.
  Atlantic Trust, the private wealth management division of New
  York-listed Invesco, ramped up its team in Houston, TX,
  appointing
  Catherine Schnaubelt as a senior vice president and senior
  wealth
  strategist.
  Schnaubelt joined Atlantic Trust from Wells Fargo’s ultra high
  net
  worth family wealth division, Abbot Downing, where she was a
  director.
  Previously, she was a partner with Strasburger & Price, and a
  principal for the management consulting business within
  Avatar
  Associates.
  Campden Wealth promoted Mindy Rosenthal to president of its
  Institute
  for Private Investors US subsidiary and appointed David Berger as
  chief
  executive for the Americas.
  Rosenthal has served as executive director of IPI, a
  membership
  organization for wealthy individuals, since Campden Wealth
  acquired it
  in 2011. Rosenthal, who joined the firm back in 2007, will
  now
  concentrate on overseeing services and content for IPI member
  families.
  Meanwhile, Berger will be responsible for strategic planning,
  business development, operations and new technology initiatives
  in North
  and South America.
  Berger joined Campden Wealth from Asia Executive Solutions, a
  Hong
  Kong-based consultancy he founded which advised professional
  and
  financial services clients entering Asian markets.
Both executives are based in New York and report to Dominic Samuelson, CEO of Campden Wealth.
  The brokerage firm Stifel, Nicolaus & Co, a subsidiary of St
  Louis, MO-based Stifel Financial, recruited an 11-member team
  from Wells
  Fargo’s independent brokerage network.
  At Wells Fargo Advisors Financial Network, the team operated as
  RMG
  Asset Management and oversaw over $1 billion in client assets.
  At
  Stifel, they are known as the RMG Group.
Nine of the advisors are based at Stifel's new office in Bellevue, WA, and the other two are based in Portland, OR.
  The new Bellevue office is run by former Wells Fargo advisor
  Mark
  McClure. The rest of the team are: Andrew Campbell and Lance
  McIntosh -
  both senior vice presidents - and advisors Jennifer Rush, T
  Kevin
  Tucker, Michael Harkins, Glen Ness, Richard O'Donnell and
  Michael
  Tucker.
  The Private Client Reserve of US Bank promoted Matt Ellison
  to
  regional wealth planner for Kentucky, Tennessee and Cleveland
  and
  Columbus, OH.
  Reporting to Steve Cook, market leader of the PCR, Ellison will
  work
  with high net worth individuals and families, with a focus on
  entertainment and professional sports clients.
  Ellison has over 20 years of trust, financial planning and
  investment
  management experience. He joined US Bank in 2011 as a wealth
  management
  advisor. Previously, he was head of trust and wealth planning at
  Royal
  Bank of Canada and has held similar positions at AmSouth Bank.
  Wells Fargo appointed Michael Lee as a relationship manager
  and
  wealth planning strategist at Abbot Downing in Chicago, IL, as
  the firm
  expands its ultra high net worth business operations in the
  region.
  Lee joined from William Blair & Company, where he was a
  partner
  and head of corporate and executive services. He also has
  experience in
  the areas of wealth, tax and estate planning, having previously
  been a
  tax attorney.
  In his new role, Lee will focus on issues faced by owners and
  executives of private and public companies. He joined a
  Chicago-based
  team providing planning and family dynamics services, asset
  management,
  private banking, trust, fiduciary and administrative services.
  San Antonio Capital & Trust Company, a Texas-based wealth
  manager, hired a new chief executive and president from Bessemer
  Trust.
  Audie Apple, the new CEO, was formerly managing director for
  Bessemer
  Trust for the Southwest, based at the US wealth manager’s
  Dallas
  office. He is a native Texan. Before Bessemer, he worked at
  AllianceBernstein in the private wealth division, between 1996
  and 2011.
California-based Willow Creek Financial Services added David Homan as a financial advisor.
  Homan joined the firm this year from Private Ocean, a San
  Rafael-based wealth manager where he was a senior wealth advisor.
  There,
  he specialized in portfolio management and financial planning for
  high
  net worth individuals.
  Homan also owns Intersect Marketing Group, an online
  marketing
  services firm for small business and real estate professionals.
  Overall,
  he has been in the industry 10 years and advises individuals on
  tax
  planning, estate planning, risk management, and charitable
  strategies.
  Howard-Sloan, an executive search firm specializing in the legal
  and
  financial sectors, hired Alan Goldstein as global practice
  director of
  wealth management.
  Goldstein has 20 years of industry experience, during which time
  he
  has worked with clients in the US, Latin America, Europe, the
  Middle
  East and Asia.
  In his new role, he will concentrate on private bankers and
  relationship managers, financial advisors and private client
  investment
  managers, working with family offices, wealth managers, hedge
  funds and
  asset managers.
  BNY Mellon Wealth Management hired Robert Buzzelli as a
  senior
  director, based in the firm’s Pittsburgh, PA, office. He will
  report to
  regional sales manager Garrett Alton.
  Buzzelli was latterly chief banking and wealth management officer
  at
  Allegheny Valley Bank. There, he was responsible for sales and
  service
  across all lines of business including wealth management and
  commercial,
  consumer, and residential lending.
  Between 2004 and 2012, he was a managing director at Fifth
  Third
  Bank, where he led a team of 28 professionals in the wealth
  management
  division.
  American Independence Financial Services, a New York-based
  independent investment manager, appointed Keith Fletcher as
  vice
  chairman and a member of the executive committee.
  Fletcher has spent the last 30 years building sales, marketing
  and
  product teams for traditional and alternative investment
  products. 
  He recently served as chief marketing officer and head of
  product
  management for Security Global and Rydex Investments (later
  Guggenheim
  Investments), where he was responsible for the company’s
  exchange-traded
  products, mutual funds and other related products.
  RMB Capital, the independent advisory firm, appointed John Bohan
  as a
  senior wealth manager at RMB Wealth Management in Denver, CO.
  Bohan’s industry background includes several years as a
  senior
  private wealth advisor. He was formerly a managing director at
  CoBiz
  Wealth Management, focused on new business development,
  relationship
  management and wealth advisory for high net worth clients.
  Southfield, MI-based wealth management and consulting firm CIG
  Corp
  appointed Howard Margolis as its new managing director of
  wealth
  management.
  Margolis was previously the managing director and director of
  wealth
  management for The Private Bank in Michigan. In that role, he
  was
  responsible for daily operations, business development and
  marketing at
  the bank’s wealth management, fiduciary and risk management
  services
  businesses. He also headed up its national financial advisory
  services
  team.
  The wealth and investment management division of UK-listed
  Barclays
  said its chief executive, Tom Kalaris, will retire from the
  bank,
  effective June 30.
  In addition to his role as CEO WIM at Barclays, Kalaris is also
  an
  executive chairman of Barclays in the Americas and will step down
  from
  this position at the end of June. He stepped down from the
  Barclays
  executive committee at the end of April.
  Rich Ricci, currently the chief executive of the corporate
  and
  investment banking arm, decided to retire on June 30, by which
  time he
  will have helped to support the establishment of the new
  leadership
  team. He has now stepped down from the bank’s executive
  committee.
  Kalaris will work with Peter Horrell, head of Barclays’
  intermediaries, international and direct businesses, to implement
  the
  transition of responsibilities. Horrell was named interim CEO of
  wealth
  and investment management, with effect from May 1, 2013. Horrell
  will
  report to group CEO Anthony Jenkins.
  Meanwhile, Skip McGee was hired as CEO Barclays Americas, with
  effect
  from May 1. He will be the senior executive in the Americas,
  with
  geographic responsibility for all of Barclays’ businesses in the
  region.
  McGee will also join the Barclays executive committee and report
  to
  Jenkins.
  In addition, Eric Bommensath and Tom King were appointed co-CEOs
  of
  corporate and investment banking, effective from May 1.
  Bommensath and
  King take on these roles in addition to maintaining their
  current
  responsibilities as head of markets and head of the investment
  banking
  division, respectively.
Bommensath and King will join the Barclays executive committee, and both men will report to Jenkins.
  Evercore Trust Company, a subsidiary of Evercore Partners,
  appointed a
  new chief executive as part of a reshuffle of its executive team.
  As of July 1, Charles Wert and Norman Goldberg will become
  vice
  chairmen, while Ciara Burnham, currently a senior managing
  director with
  Evercore Partners, will succeed Wert as president and CEO. 
  Additionally, William Ryan - latterly executive director for
  legal
  and compliance and head of ERISA law at Morgan Stanley - will
  succeed
  Goldberg as chief fiduciary officer.
  BMO Private Bank named Peter O'Connor as a managing director
  in
  Hinsdale, IL, and Nate Wasson as a managing director in
  Naperville, IL,
  describing these areas as “growing suburban markets.”
  Katie Vander Zanden, who previously led both markets, is now
  chief
  administrative officer of BMO Private Bank. This is a
  newly-created role
  in which Zanden assumes overall responsibility for BMO Private
  Bank's
  compliance, audit, initiatives management and administrative
  functions.
  She will also lead initiatives designed to improve the overall
  client
  experience.
  Zanden has over 33 years of financial services experience and
  has
  been with BMO since 1996. O'Connor has been a financial
  services
  professional for over 26 years and joined BMO in 2000.
Wasson joined BMO in 2011 and was most recently vice president and regional manager for BMO Harris Financial Advisors.
New York-based Provident Bank promoted its chief wealth management officer, James Nesci, to executive vice president.
  Nesci, who is also president of Beacon Trust Company, a
  Morristown,
  NJ-based subsidiary of Provident Bank, has over 20 years of
  financial
  industry experience and is working to enhance and expand
  Provident's
  wealth management offering.
  Nesci is a member of Beacon Trust’s board of directors and
  Provident
  Bank’s executive leadership team. He also serves on several of
  the
  bank’s management committees, including the asset and
  liability,
  officers trust, and disclosure committees. Additionally, he is a
  board
  member of Provident Investment Services.
  Rothstein Kass brought in Todd Kesterson as director of family
  office
  services in Dallas, TX - a role in which he will provide
  accounting,
  tax and business consulting services to high net worth
  individuals and
  family offices.
  Kesterson has about 25 years of experience in public
  accounting,
  wealth advisory and business operations. He has also worked in
  family
  business consulting, investment analysis, estate and business
  planning,
  internal controls and risk aversion, and budgeting and cash
  management.
  Kesterson spent the past 15 years or so as president and
  chief
  financial officer for the private wealth management office of a
  high net
  worth family in Dallas. In that role, he oversaw all business
  and
  day-to-day operations including accounting, planning and
  forecasting,
  asset custody and security, human resources functions, and
  private
  foundation operations and compliance.
  Before that, he served as CFO of a privately-held auto
  finance
  company, having started his career as a tax consultant at Ernst
  &
  Young.
  Denver, CO-headquartered Janus Capital took on Michael Stern as
  sales
  director, charged with expanding the firm’s intermediary
  distribution
  and sales in New York City.
  Stern has over 20 years in financial services sales and sales
  management and was most recently a market director within the
  wealth
  management group at JP Morgan Chase. He started his career as
  a
  financial advisor and, later, a branch sales manager at Smith
  Barney in
  Melville, NY. 
  White Oaks Wealth Advisors, an independent and private wealth
  management firm in Minneapolis, MN, promoted Michaela Larson to
  director
  of operations.
  Larson joined White Oaks Wealth Advisors five years ago and has
  since
  been managing the firm’s internal and external communications.
  Los Angeles, CA-headquartered Aristotle Capital Management
  hired
  Catalina Llinás as a managing director within its client service
  and
  marketing team.
  Llinás was latterly a senior vice president at Metropolitan
  West
  Capital Management, having previously held an investment role
  at
  Citibank in Spain.
The World Gold Council appointed Robert Alderman as managing director of private investment in the US, based in New York.
  Alderman joined the World Gold Council from Credit Suisse
  Asset
  Management, where he was managing director and head of retail
  distribution for the Americas.
  He has 25 years of experience in the private investment and
  asset
  management sectors, having spent time working at Advisors
  Asset
  Management, Prudential Investments and Bank of America Merrill
  Lynch.
  The Private Client Reserve of US Bank appointed Kenan Aksoz as
  a
  wealth management consultant and Doug Heding as an assistant
  vice
  president and private banking officer.
  Aksoz has over 23 years of experience in the financial
  services
  industry and in his new role will work with high net worth
  individuals
  and families in Minneapolis, MN.
  Based in Milwaukee, WI, Heding will also work with HNW
  individuals
  and families. He has significant experience in treasury
  management,
  credit risk management, HNW client relationship management and
  small
  business relationship management, the firm said.
Before joining the PCR, Heding was a private banking officer for The PrivateBank and Trust in Milwaukee.
  RBC Wealth Management appointed Robert Magel as branch director
  of
  its Denver, CO, tech office - a role in which he is responsible
  for the
  oversight of 21 financial advisors.
  Magel has 30 years of industry experience and most recently
  worked at
  UBS as a branch and complex manager. Previously, he was a
  financial
  advisor at Dean Witter, and then served as branch manager and
  regional
  manager when the company became Morgan Stanley.
  Nerine Group of Fiduciaries appointed a new managing director for
  its
  British Virgin Islands business, and promoted its finance
  director.
Jonathan Bailey is the new managing director of Nerine Trust Company (BVI). The previous managing director was Simon Filmer.
  Bailey has more than 10 years’ experience working at a senior
  level
  within the private client sector in the UK and BVI. He will
  oversee all
  Nerine BVI operations and staff and takes on a prominent role
  within the
  group for marketing and business development, with particular
  emphasis
  on wealth structuring solutions available from the BVI for both
  private
  and institutional clients.
Former US Attorney Mary Jo White was sworn in as chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission.
  White was nominated to serve as the US authority’s chairman
  by
  President Barack Obama in February and the move was
  subsequently
  confirmed by the US Senate.
  She served as the US Attorney for the Southern District of New
  York
  from 1993 to 2002 - a role in which she prosecuted complex
  securities
  and financial institution frauds, while also focusing on
  international
  terrorism cases.
  Before that, White served as the first assistant US Attorney,
  and
  later acting US Attorney, for the Eastern District of New York
  between
  1990 and 1993.
  Baird Private Wealth Management brought in a large Texas
  advisory
  team and opened a second office in Houston, as it targets oil and
  gas
  wealth in the Lone Star state.
  The firm hired John Hantak as senior vice president, branch
  manager,
  responsible for overseeing both of its Houston offices. He is one
  of ten
  new hires the wealth manager has made.
  Hantak joined Baird from UBS Financial Services, where he was
  most
  recently an executive director/complex director, overseeing
  around 50
  financial advisors in Stamford and Greenwich, CT, and managing
  $48
  million in revenues.
  He was joined by seven legacy AG Edwards advisors, who were all
  most
  recently with Wells Fargo Advisors. The team focuses on the
  retirement
  planning needs of executives in the oil and gas industry and
  oversees
  more than $770 million in client assets.
  The team of advisors is comprised of: J Gillette Burns,
  director;
  Orlando Montesino, senior vice president; Andrew Atkinson;
  Richard
  Pfeil, vice president; Matthew Leatherwood; Thomas Davis,
  vice
  president; and C Nelson Shields, vice president.
  Burns, Montesino and Atkinson, known as The Burns Financial
  Group,
  were joined by client relationship assistant Cynthia Silva.
  Meanwhile,
  Pfeil and Leatherwood were joined by client relationship
  assistant
  Ogochukwu Obianagu. They are all based in the new Houston office.
  Chicago, IL-based William Blair & Company hired John
  Zielinski
  and the team of John Baker Welch and Anthony Faut as private
  client
  advisors. 
  Zielinski was latterly a senior vice president at Capital
  Group
  Private Client Services and has also previously worked at
  Lehman
  Brothers Asset Management and The Northern Trust.
Welch spent the last 25 years at Rothschild Investment Corporation, most recently as a partner and portfolio manager.
  Faut also joins from Rothschild Investment Corporation, where
  his
  most recent role involved focusing on investment advice and
  employee
  education as a member of the firm's retirement plan team.
OppenheimerFunds appointed Mark Hamilton as chief investment officer of asset allocation, a newly-created role at the firm.
  Reporting to Art Steinmetz, CIO, Hamilton will lead the expansion
  of
  the firm’s investment strategies, with a focus on designing
  and
  implementing multi-asset products and solutions.
  Hamilton joined from AllianceBernstein, where he most recently
  served
  as an investment director on the dynamic asset allocation
  portfolio
  management team.
  His responsibilities there included managing investments in
  the
  global equity, bond, credit, currency and real asset sectors, as
  well as
  directing the design, development and implementation of dynamic
  asset
  allocation strategies for institutional, sub-advisory, retail
  and
  private client channels.
Westwood Holdings Group appointed Randall Root as president of its Texas trust subsidiary, Westwood Trust - Dallas.
  Root has been a member of the Westwood Trust team for 20 years,
  most
  recently as senior vice president, trust investment officer. He
  works
  with affluent individuals and families, as well as charitable
  endowments, foundations and corporate retirement plans.
  Focus Financial Partners brought in Mark Hovanic and Matt Sonnen
  to
  support Focus Connections, the firm’s offering that supports
  advisors
  undergoing the transition to RIA status.
  Hovanic, a managing director, will be responsible for recruiting
  and
  advising wirehouse breakaway teams, while Sonnen joins as vice
  president
  of strategic operations.
  Hovanic previously served as a senior vice president, complex
  and
  branch manager at several wirehouses including what was then
  Morgan
  Stanley Smith Barney, as well as UBS and earlier Paine
  Webber.  
  Prior to joining Focus, Sonnen was the chief operating officer
  of
  Luminous Capital, which was bought by First Republic Bank in
  November
  2012. Before that, he worked at Merrill Lynch and Los Angeles,
  CA-based
  Pacific West Capital Group. 
  Focus Financial also appointed Frank Balducci as senior vice
  president of accounting and reporting, Jason Carver as a
  business
  development associate, and Antonia Savaria as a vice president
  of
  compliance and risk management.
Atlanta, GA-headquartered Bank Solutions Group appointed JP Nicols as a partner within its wealth management practice.
  Nicols has over 25 years of industry experience and is also
  the
  founder and chief executive of Clientific, which will now
  provide
  research and insights for BSG clients.
  Prior to founding Clientific, he held a number of roles at
  various
  financial institutions, including as the first chief private
  banking
  officer for US Bank. 
  UBS Wealth Management Americas hired three financial advisors
  -
  latterly of Morgan Stanley - in Phoenix, AZ, and Indianapolis,
  IN, with
  $467 million in combined assets under management.
  In Phoenix, Scott Merrill has a T-12 production of $1.2 million
  and
  $113 million in AuM, while Steven Schultz has a T-12 production
  of $2.6
  million and $320 million in AuM.
  Meanwhile, Stockton Schultz - Steven Schultz’s son - joined UBS
  in
  Indianapolis. He has a T-12 production of $340,000 and $34
  million in
  AuM.
  New York-headquartered Tiedemann Wealth Management hired
  Thaddeus
  Shelly as a managing director and senior advisor in Palm Beach,
  FL - a
  role in which he will develop and maintain client relationships.
  Shelly joined Tiedemann from Lazard, where he served as a
  managing
  director and chief executive of Lazard Wealth Management,
  overseeing the
  firm’s private wealth management effort in the US.
  Prior to joining Lazard in 2009, he was a senior managing
  director at
  Bessemer Trust, where he oversaw client acquisition and
  account
  management for their Mid-Atlantic, south and southeast regions,
  as well
  as the firm’s Delaware Trust Company.
  City National Bank brought in Richard Stasand as a senior
  vice
  president and senior private client advisor in Irvine, CA.
  Stasand is
  part of an expanded private banking focus in Orange County.
  Reporting to Carla Furuno, senior vice president and manager
  for
  private client services in Orange County and San Diego, CA,
  Stasand will
  serve high net worth families, related professional service firms
  and
  non-profits in the region.
  Prior to joining City National, he advised HNW individuals and
  their
  families as a managing director at Citi Private Bank. Stasand
  jumped
  ship to Citi after 20 years with Bank of America's US Trust unit,
  where
  he was a managing director working with individuals, families,
  private
  foundations and charitable organizations. There, he advised
  on
  investments, estate planning and taxes.
  Tampa, FL-headquartered JHS Capital Advisors, a
  dual-registered
  broker/dealer and RIA, appointed Mark Palsson as a vice president
  of
  investments and financial advisor at the firm’s office in
  Bellevue, WA.
  Prior to joining JHS, Palsson spent five years as a financial
  advisor
  at Smith Barney, which is now part of Morgan Stanley Wealth
  Management.
  Before that, he worked for 25 years at Weyerhaeuser Co in a range
  of
  accounting, finance and managerial positions.
  Altius Associates, the private equity advisory and
  fund-of-funds
  firm, added two senior associates to its global investment team.
Jeffrey Kopocis will be based in Richmond, VA, while Arnaud Garel-Galais will be based in the London office.
  Kopocis joined Altius from a multi-family office in Alexandria,
  VA,
  where he was an investment professional and member of the
  investment
  committee. Prior to that, he worked at Cambridge Associates as a
  senior
  hedge fund analyst.
  Meanwhile, Garel-Galais joined from Dahlia Partners, a
  Natixis
  subsidiary. There, he managed private equity funds-of-funds,
  having
  previously worked at CALYON in Hong Kong.
  Method, an Atlanta, GA-based firm that develops and invests
  in
  CPA-owned wealth management practices, appointed Kosta Velis as
  director
  of registered investment advisor services.
  Velis will lead Method’s efforts to cultivate advisor
  relationships
  for clients and partners of the firm’s wealth management
  practice. Velis
  has worked as a financial advisor with Bank of America Merrill
  Lynch,
  as well as at Smith Barney and other firms.
  Philadelphia, PA-headquartered Janney Montgomery Scott hired
  Jonathan
  Fairbanks - who oversees over $100 million in client assets - as
  first
  vice president of wealth management in West Hartford, CT.
Fairbanks spent the past eight years at Morgan Stanley and prior to that was at AG Edwards & Sons for 12 years.
  Jerry Lombard, president of Janney’s private client group, said
  the
  firm is looking to expand within areas that present opportunities
  for
  growth, with the additional aim of recruiting more
  advisors.  
  US Bancorp Investments, an affiliate of US Bank, appointed
  Brett
  Pearce as a financial advisor. He will provide wealth management
  and
  financial planning services to affluent clients.
  Glenmede, the privately-held investment and wealth management
  firm,
  hired John Carson as a business development manager in
  Philadelphia, PA.
  Carson will focus on initiating and broadening relationships
  with
  high net worth individuals and families, as well as family
  offices,
  endowments, foundations and institutional entities nationally. He
  will
  report to Chip Wilson, executive director of relationship
  management.
  Carson has over 20 years of experience in the financial
  services
  industry and joins Glenmede from Oppenheimer & Co, where he was
  a
  managing director of the middle market institutional sales group.
  Ruston, LA-based Argent Financial Group appointed four directors
  and a
  president for its trust business, which it has renamed Argent
  Trust
  Company.
  Gary Moore, who joined Argent in 1998, was named as president
  and
  senior trust officer and joins the board of Argent Trust. He has
  over 30
  years of experience in the wealth management industry.
  The new board of directors are: Armand Roos, counsel to Weiner
  Weiss
  & Madison of Shreveport; J Mark Garrett, a retired partner of
  KPMG
  and chairman of Argent’s audit committee; Thomas Murphy, a
  private
  investor and former president of Murco Drilling; and John Werner,
  a
  partner at Fishman Haygood Phelps Walmsley Willis & Swanson.
Meanwhile, John Williams was elected as director emeritus in “recognition of his service for over 20 years.”
  Prospera Financial Services, the independent broker-dealer based
  in
  Dallas, TX, nabbed two former Morgan Stanley Wealth Management
  advisors.
  Stephen Shipley and John Rubottom previously managed $121 million
  in
  client assets and had annual revenue production of $925,000. They
  were
  based out of Morgan Stanley's Arlington, TX, office.
The director of the SEC’s San Francisco regional office is leaving to become a partner at a law firm.
  Marc Fagel, who had been at the SEC in San Francisco for 15
  years,
  joined Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher’s securities enforcement practice.
He will remain based in San Francisco and will deepen the firm’s securities enforcement practice on the West Coast.
  In his most recent role at the SEC, which he took up in 2008,
  Fagel
  oversaw a staff of more than 100 attorneys, accountants and
  other
  professionals, and an area spanning Northern California,
  Washington,
  Oregon, Montana, Idaho, and Alaska.
  Vulcan Capital, which manages Paul Allen’s multi-billion
  dollar
  portfolio, has brought in a managing director to head up a new
  Palo Alto
  office.
  Abhishek Agrawal will head up Vulcan’s Silicon Valley presence
  and
  expand its investments in the internet and technology sectors.
  He joined the firm from General Atlantic, a global growth equity
  firm
  with $17 billion in capital under management, which he joined in
  2005.
St Louis, MO-based Archford Capital Strategies joined the Dynasty Financial Partners platform.
  Archford Capital Strategies was founded by James Maher this year.
  It
  was formerly known as The Maher Group and has a second office in
  Creve
  Coeur, MO.
  According to FINRA records, Maher has been registered with
  Merrill
  Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith since 2001 and with Archford
  since
  March 2013.
Maher was joined by the following team members:
· John Russo, chief operating officer and wealth management advisor;
· Jerry West, chief investment officer and wealth management advisor;
· Robert Schlueter, director of operations and wealth management advisor;
· Tracy Winters, assistant branch manager and senior registered client associate;
· Julie Hanger, senior administrative assistant;
· Joshua Anderson, associate analyst;
· Bernard Thebeau, retirement specialist.
  Morgan Stanley Wealth Management made a number of hires in Akron,
  OH,
  and Riverwoods, IL, from Bank of America Merrill Lynch and Wells
  Fargo
  respectively.
  In Akron, financial advisor Mark Pentella was joined by team
  members
  Jessica Palmer, a financial advisor, and Rebecca Tiranno, a
  senior
  registered client service assistant.
Pentella previously managed $1.13 million in client assets and generated annual revenue production of about $1.1 million.
At Morgan Stanley he reports to Jason Haines, branch manager.
  Meanwhile, the Gordon Financial Group - comprised of David
  and
  Kirsten Gordon - stepped into the Riverwoods office from Wells
  Fargo and
  reports to branch manager Mark Boersma.
The pair previously managed over $300 million in client assets and generated roughly $2.6 million in annual revenue production.
RBC Wealth Management added five financial advisors - latterly of Morgan Stanley - to its Pittsburgh, PA, office.
  Russell Sherred, Pamela Pasterick, Ken Kuska, Kathleen Corrales
  and
  Matthew Lawrence together have  $380 million in assets under
  management
  and generate production of $2.8 million.
  Cleveland, OH-based Cedar Brook Financial Partners hired Kelly
  Smith
  as an associate director within its wealth strategies department.
  Smith joined from Beacon Financial Partners, where she was
  responsible for the wealth management department until 2011. She
  then
  became a senior advisor, providing planning and operations
  support for
  high net worth individuals, with a focus on physician
  clients. 
  Smith has about 20 years of industry experience overall,
  having
  worked with HNW clients at other local financial planning firms
  prior to
  joining Beacon Financial Partners.
Asia-Pacific
  Canberra-based financial planner Australian Unity Personal
  Financial Services named Jeff Mitchell as its new investment
  research head.
  Mitchell was previously the director of fund services as Standard
  & Poor's
  and, before that, served as co-head of wealth management for
  Australia.
  Martin Currie Investment Management announced that Andrew
  Graham is taking over as head of Asia
  following the resignation of Jason McCay. McCay has been with the
  firm for 15
  years and is leaving in the summer of 2013. Graham has worked for
  the company
  for nearly three years and, prior to the appointment, was
  co-manager of the
  Martin Currie Asia-Pacific and Martin Currie Asia Long Term
  Unconstrained
  Funds.
  Managing Partners Limited, the Cayman Islands-based fund
  manager that specialises in alternative assets, named Benjamin
  Lim as business
  development director for Asia. Lim brings 15
  years of industry experience to the role and had served as chief
  marketing
  officer for Allianz Global Investors in Asia
  prior to this move. He now reports to Jeremy Leach, managing
  director for MPL.
  LGT Capital Partners, the Swiss investment firm, opened a
  new office in Beijing which will serves as the
  hub for its private equity investment activities in Mainland
  China. The new
  branch is led by Frankie Fang, the firm's Chinese representative
  since 2007.
  UK-based equity manager Martin Currie appointed Paul Danes
  as chief executive of its newly-established Singapore office.
  Danes was
  previously an investment director. He is joined by Kimon
  Kouryialas as regional
  head, Mike Gibb as director, Liping Tan as equity dealer and
  Steven McCole as
  head of Asia-Pacific dealing. In a statement Martin Currie said
  that the new
  office is just timely as 50 per cent of the assets it manages are
  invested
  across Asia.
  Deutsche Asset & Wealth Management named Anurag Mahesh
  as head of wealth management coverage in Asia-Pacific. Mahesh was
  previously
  head of client assets in the discretionary and advisory units at
  the firm and
  sits on the Asia-Pacific executive and global investment
  committees. He reports
  to Ravi Raju, head of DeAWM Asia-Pacific.
  Alex Thursby, chief executive for international and
  institutional banking at Australia
  and New Zealand Banking Group, left the firm to take up a new CEO
  role at
  National Bank of Abu Dhabi.
  ANZ is looking at candidates internally and externally to fill
  the post. In the
  interim, Gilles Plane, CEO for Asia-Pacific, and Steve Bellotti,
  managing
  director for global markets and loans, assume Thursby's post,
  reporting to
  chief executive Mike Smith.
  BNP Paribas Wealth Management appointed an additional team
  leader for non-resident Indians, Singapore
  and South East Asia. Dhananjai Cadambi joined
  the company in March and is now based in Singapore, reporting to
  Stephane
  Honig, head of Indian markets. Cadambi is responsible for
  relatonship managers
  dedicated to NRI clients in the city-state and South East
  Asia. Prior to this, he led the NRI team at Barclays Wealth
  before
  moving to Morgan Stanley, where he held a similar position for
  three years.
  Asiya Investments of Kuwait opened a new office in Hong Kong and
  named executive directors Sulaiman Alireza
  and Dan Xystus as its heads. The company currently has 20 staff
  working out of
  the new branch.
  Credit Agricole revealed that its Asian private banking
  chief executive Georges Zecchin is leaving the company in June
  this year to
  "pursue personal interests." The bank is currently looking for
  a
  replacement In the meantime, Youssef Dib, head of private banking
  in Geneva will supervise the Asian activities, while Serge
  Janoswki and Sen Sui remain respectively as chief executives of
  the Hong Kong
  and Singapore
  branches.
  ANZ named former ABN AMRO senior private banking executive
  Arjan de Boer as its new head of private banking for North East
  Asia. De Boer is now based in Hong Kong and oversees the
  private banking operations in both Hong Kong and Taiwan. He will
  not assume his new
  role until 3 June 2013. His old post at ABN AMRO was assumed by
  Ian Pollock.
  Westpac Banking subsidiary Ascalon Capital Managers
  announced Robert Lance as the new country head for Australia,
  taking over from
  Jason Collins who has joined BlackRock to become the head of the
  institutional
  client business. Lance was previously the co-founder and chief
  executive of
  Hong Kong asset manager Dragonback Capital. He now reports to
  Chuak Chan, chief
  executive.
  Global investment manager BlackRock named Sabrina Gan as
  director and head of retail distribution in Singapore,
  responsible for mutual
  funds and iShares ETFs in the city-state. Gan was previously part
  of the
  intermediary retail team at Schroders Investment Management in
  Singapore.
  Mirae Asset Securities, the brokerage arm of South Korea's
  Mirae Asset Financial, announced that it is reducing its Hong
  Kong staff
  numbers by around 20 by end of April 2013, in response to
  declining global
  market activity. The company made clear that it is not shutting
  its Hong Kong
  office down and that its wealth management operations are
  unaffected.
  Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, the New York investment firm,
  promoted Japan managing director and chief executive Shusaku
  Minoda to chairman
  of Japan. Minoda's former responsibilities were given to Hirofumi
  Hirano, who
  joined the company from AlixPartners Asia, where he served as MD
  and head of
  the Asia practice.
  Australian investment manager Equity Trustees created a new
  senior role within its private wealth services business. Julie
  Foster took the
  position of national manager of advice and personal services,
  having previously
  worked for the likes of Tower Australia, Commonwealth Bank,
  Suncorp and
  Colonial. The new post is in line with preparations for the new
  Future of
  Financial Advice reforms, which will be mandatory by 1 July 2013.
  BNY Mellon created a six-person equities team in Tokyo,
  Japan, led by Miyuki Kashima. Kashima and her group, composed of
  investment
  managers, analysts and a trader, joined from ING. She now reports
  locally to
  Shizu Kishimoto, representative director and president of BNY
  Mellon AM Japan,
  and functionally to Alan Harden, CEO for the Asia-Pacific
  investment management
  business.
  After Bank of Queensland took over the retail financial
  services business of billionaire Richard Branson's Virgin Group
  (Virgin Money
  Australia), it placed industry veteran Brian Bissaker as chief
  executive of the
  newly-acquired entity. Bissaker was previously a wealth
  consultant at
  Commonwealth Bank Group. The then-VMA managing director David
  Curneen left the
  business, but remains a consultant throughout the transition.
  Bank of China Hong Kong appointed Zhu Yanlai as deputy chief
  executive, strategic planning and management, taking charge of
  the chief
  executive's office and the renminbi business. Zhu joined the
  group in October
  2001 and was named assistant chief executive in May 2010. She has
  been part of
  Bank of China since 1997 and served the Canadian and Macau
  offices.
  Global credit card provider American Express named Yat-Chung
  (YC) Koh to the position of president for Asia, card services and
  Susanna Lee
  to vice president and general manager for proprietary card
  services in Hong
  Kong. Koh added to his responsibility as head of the
  international consumer and
  small business services in the region. Lee was previously the
  vice president
  and general manager for global merchant services in East Asia.
  The Monetary Authority of Singapore has called a Credit
  Suisse advisor for violating certain sections of the Financial
  Advisors Act.
  The regulator reprimanded the Swiss bank's Singapore branch for
  allowing Toh
  Swee Beng to provide financial advisory services on its behalf
  even though he
  was not an appointed representative. Credit Suisse confirmed the
  incident and
  assured MAS that it has taken action.
  Equity
  Trustees, the Australian wealth management and estate planning
  firm, appointed
  an interim chief investment officer while waiting for results of
  its takeover
  bid for The Trust Company. George Bourbouras joins the company
  from UBS Wealth
  Management, where he served as head of investment strategy and
  consulting.
  Australia’s Russell
  Investments appointed Siva Sivakumaran as managing director,
  private
  client services. Prior to this role, Sivakumaran was the director
  for
  infrastructure. The investment division will take care of
  manufacturing and
  managing multi-asset solutions for clients. The Australian
  investments team
  will be led by Symon Parish, chief investment officer, and
  supported by a team
  of investment professionals both offshore and in Australia,
  including Andrew Sneddon, MD and portfolio manager for
  multi-asset solutions in
  Australia,
  and Graham Harman, senior investment strategist for Asia-Pacific.
  The firm is
  currently conducting a global search for a new managing director
  for the
  institutional business as Michael Clarke, the previous MD, left
  the company to
  join Challenger Financial.
  Suncorp Group,
  the Australia and New Zealand focused
  banking and wealth management firm, named a new chief investment
  officer. Nick
  Basile gave up his chief executive post at Presima, the real
  estate fund
  management arm of National Australia Bank, to assume this key
  position.
  Crescent
  Wealth, the Australian wealth management firm, strengthened its
  board with the
  addition of several known names in the asset management, banking
  and Islamic
  wealth management industries. The new Global Advisory board will
  consist of six
  members, namely Dr Jamil Jaroudi, chief executive of Nizwa Bank
  (Oman), Spiro
  Pappas, CEO of National Australia Bank Asia, Wadah Khantar,
  former Al Jazeera
  director general, Toby O'Connor, CEO of Islamic Bank of Asia, Ian
  Buchanan, a
  corporate advisory veteran, and John A Sandwick, a Swiss private
  banker
  specialising in Islamic structures.
  Standard Life
  plans to set up a hub in Hong Kong to oversee and support its
  Asia
  and Emerging Markets unit. The company intends to hire about
  20-30 people in
  Hong Kong and approximately 10 people in Singapore
  and Dubai.
   It will be creating new roles in business development,
  product services
  and development, sales and marketing and operations. The new
  hub, to be
  rolled out over the next 12 months, will be headed by Alan
  Armitage, chief
  executive of Asia and Emerging Markets, who is already based in
  Hong Kong.
  UBS announced a raft of senior management
  promotions. Betty Tsui will be appointed vice
  chairman wealth management China,
  reporting to Kathryn Shih. Ruth Chung will be appointed as
  regional market
  manager for wealth management China
  1 (the China
  role is split). Francis Liu will be appointed as regional
  market manager
  for wealth management China
  2. Meanwhile, Jean
  Claude Humair will assume sole responsibility as regional
  market manager
  for the wealth management Hong Kong market.
  In addition, he will be appointed as deputy chief executive for
  wealth
  management Hong Kong.  Chung, Liu and
  Humair will all report to Allen Lo, chief executive, Hong
  Kong, UBS Wealth Management.
  BlackRock continues its Asia-Pacific
  buildout with the appointment of a new global capital markets
  head. Scott
  Greenberg moves to Hong Kong from New
  York to assume this new position, which will have him
  responsible for developing equity and debt investment
  opportunities for
  BlackRock clients in the region. At present, the company operates
  comparable
  GCM teams from the London and New York offices. He reports to
  Steve
  Sterling, head of GCM, and Mark Desmidt, Asia-Pacific head of
  alpha strategies.
  Jupiter Fund
  Management, the London-based fund house, is building its Asian
  team after
  receiving a type 1 license to operate in Hong Kong.
  Peter Swarbeck, previously the managing director and head of Hong
  Kong at
  BlackRock Asset Management, is now head of Asia-Pacific, while
  Tony Yu, who
  joined the firm in January from Franklin Templeton, is to become
  sales director
  for Hong Kong.
  Coutts, the
  private bank, appointed David Lam as managing director and head
  of North Asia,
  effective from 29 May, having previously worked at GAM, the
  investment house,
  in Hong Kong. Ignatius (Iggy) Chong, who was
  overseeing the North Asia function on an interim basis, will now
  focus on his
  roles as market head, Hong Kong and chairman
  of the Coutts Institute Asia.
  Citi is
  stepping up efforts to grow its trust business in Hong
  Kong with the appointment of a new chief executive for
  CitiTrust.
  Stewart Aldcroft assumes the role of chief executive to lead the
  CitiTrust team
  in developing new initiatives and growing its client base in
  Asia-Pacific. He
  reports to David Russell, regional head for securities and fund
  services
  Asia-Pacific.
  Standard
  Chartered strengthened its Hong Kong/China research capability
  with a new head.
  Dorris Chen joins as head of China
  financials research after holding a similar position at BNP
  Paribas. She also
  previously worked at China International Capital Corporation,
  where she covered
  the China
  insurance market.
  Income
  Partners, the Hong Kong-based asset management firm, lost one of
  its senior
  executives following a realignment effort that will have the
  company focus on
  liquid credit strategies. Jiffriy Chandra stepped down as
  partner, having been
  with the company since 1998. He used to lead the firm's private
  capital
  initiative, which has been scrapped in favour of increased focus
  on its core
  liquid business. Chandra has moved on to create a new private
  capital business,
  TransAsia Private Capital, with Eddie Wong, the former CEO of
  Hong Kong's
  Winnington Capital.
  OCBC saw its
  head of financial institutions credit risk management switch over
  to its
  private banking arm, Bank of Singapore, at the same time bagging
  a top-level
  promotion. William Shak joined Bank of Singapore earlier this
  year as its
  global chief risk officer, replacing Leander Jansen, who left for
  personal
  reasons.
  Scott Duncan at Sarasin was promoted to vice chair client
  advisory,
  from his previous role of managing director at the bank.
  Manulife
  Financial bolstered its growth strategy in Asia with four
  senior
  appointments
  at its Singapore
  business. John Curtis is now senior vice president and chief
  distribution
  officer for Singapore,
  responsible for overseeing agency distribution, partnership
  distribution
  in
  bank and financial advisory channels, training and quality
  assurance. KK
  Loo assumes the role of chief agency officer, after
  serving
  as chief of the accident and health business for Manulife
  Singapore. He
  reports to Curtis.