A Virginia-based advisor with about $245 million in consumer belongings is becoming a member of Baird Non-public Wealth Administration, a dually registered wealth administration arm of Robert W. Baird & Co., from Edelman Monetary Engines.
Robert Sargent is becoming a member of Baird as a director and monetary advisor and might be accompanied by Consumer Assistant Kaitlyn Powell. Each are shifting to Baird’s wealth administration workplace in Fairfax, Va., which opened in January as a part of the agency’s growth within the state.
In response to SEC information, Sargent entered the business in 2008 at J.P. Morgan. He joined Merrill Lynch in 2010 and had subsequent stints at Constancy and Sanders Morris earlier than becoming a member of Edelman in 2014.
Because the begin of the yr, Baird has been bolstering its Virginia presence largely by luring advisors from Edelman. The Fairfax workplace opened earlier this yr, and Brandon Corso got here on board as a director. Like Sargent, Corso got here to Baird from Edelman, the place he managed roughly $585 million in consumer belongings.
Final month, Baird employed advisor Darrell Reynard from Edelman to affix its Fairfax workplace (he managed about $293 million at Edelman). Final week, Baird introduced Robert Bowman and Matthew Preddy would go away Edelman to open a brand new Baird workplace in Richmond (the duo collectively managed about $510 million in consumer belongings).
Along with Fairfax and Richmond, Baird has Virginia places in Lynchburg and McLean.
Baird’s non-public wealth enterprise consists of greater than 1,400 monetary advisors managing greater than $310 billion as of late June. The corporate was based in 1919 and is employee-owned. Along with wealth administration, the agency works in asset administration, funding banking and personal fairness, with workplaces in Europe and Asia.
In March, Baird picked up a Wisconsin-based group from UBS managing about $680 million in consumer belongings. Final yr, the agency agreed to pay $15 million to settle SEC fees that it hadn’t supervised reps’ use of off-channel communications.
Final week, Josh Hederick, who filed a lawsuit in a federal courtroom in North Carolina to interrupt his non-solicitation settlement with Edelman, left for Prime Capital Funding Advisors.
Within the swimsuit, he referred to as the Edelman covenant “overly broad” and argued the agency’s litigation historical past towards ex-employees meant he couldn’t belief they’d work with him on his departure “in good religion.” In an announcement to WealthManagement.com, an Edelman spokesperson stated the agency disputed the allegations “of their entirety.”