Cresset folds in $1.7B athlete RIA after minority investment

Doug Raetz and Heather Goodman
From left to right, financial planners Doug Raetz and Heather Goodman are the founders of San Francisco-based True Capital Management.
Cresset

Multifamily office Cresset is approaching $33 billion in assets under management after purchasing the majority of a firm it had invested in on a minority basis three years ago.

San Francisco-based True Capital Management, which has $1.7 billion in client assets for more than 350 customers who are primarily professional athletes and entertainers, merged into Chicago-based Cresset in a transaction of undisclosed size, the firms said on May 9. In February 2020, an affiliate of Cresset invested in True, which counts active and retired athletes Albert Pujols, Marshawn Lynch, Diana Taurasi, Richard Sherman, Nneka Ogwumike, Deandre Ayton, Robert Griffin III, Logan Ryan, Kelsey Plum and Breanna Stewart as clients.

The overall number of M&A deals has fallen off last year's pace by 20%, but the volume of firms with at least $1 billion in client assets changing hands has surged ahead of the first three months of 2022, according to investment bank and consulting firm Echelon Partners. 

True's principal owners, Heather Goodman and Doug Raetz, have been working with athletes for two decades dating back to their days with Smith Barney before launching their registered investment advisory firm. True acquired a practice catering to country musicians last year, and the firm is seeking to expand its reach under Cresset further into entertainment with Hollywood directors and actors in addition to athletes in football, basketball, baseball, golf and hockey. 

"It's offering those high-quality services to people who need them," Goodman said in an interview. "There are so many verticals that can be tapped into."

Deal volume fell by 19 transactions year over year to 75 in the first quarter, according to Echelon, which estimated in its latest tracking study that the number will amount to 315 by the end of the year. In 2022, the volume set a record for the 10th straight year with 341 deals. 

The flow has tapered off so far in 2023 amid higher interest rates leading to more expensive capital and larger concerns in the economy about a potential recession. The number of deals involving firms with at least $1 billion in client assets, though, has soared by 94% after "a quarter with numerous mega-deals," according to Echelon's report. So far this year, deals have put in motion firms with about $1.2 trillion in assets, which is 61% of the total for all of 2022.

Companies managing at least $1 billion in client assets "are especially attractive to acquirers as they tend to have experienced management and established processes and platforms," the report stated. "Our research indicates that, in the face of rising borrowing costs and economic uncertainty, buyers are being selective in the acquisitions they consider, a fact that may favor owners of $1B+ wealth managers."

With hundreds of deals closing across the industry each year, many RIAs have spoken with technology vendors about software integrations under new ownership structures or the process of talking through the transactions with their client bases, according to Julie Littlechild, the CEO of client and prospect relationship firm Absolute Engagement.

"As firms are merging or being acquired, one of the most important things they come to us about is understanding how the clients feel about it," Littlechild said. "This is the time they need to talk to clients to see how they feel about that and ensure that they answer all those questions."

Cresset has been growing rapidly on the strength of its M&A deals and recruiting moves after former veteran private equity investors Eric Becker and Avy Stein launched the firm in 2017. Earlier this month, the firm hired industry dealmaker Liz Nesvold to be the firm's first president.

"We see an enormous opportunity, an opportunity that's far greater than when Avy and I started Cresset five years ago," Becker said. "We want to go where we can deliver value and excellence to clients."

At the time of Cresset's initial investment in True three years ago, the firm listed $1.2 billion in client assets from 200 households. In 2007, the firm managed $40 million on behalf of 40 athlete clients, Goodman said.

"Athletes were just starting to make the money that they're making today," she said. "We really had an opportunity to learn about the marketplace and realize that there just weren't many advisors focused on the athlete space."

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