LPL sees NPH retention glass as 70% full

LPL Financial could pay a lower price than the company expected for the assets of National Planning Holdings if the firm’s current retention rate holds up.

CEO Dan Arnold had set a goal of moving about three-quarters of business from NPH’s four independent broker-dealers to LPL’s platform by early next year following the massive acquisition. The firm on Wednesday estimated that roughly 70% of production will move over in the first half of the transition.

The rate “implies NPH-related costs at the low end of the range,” and the “resulting purchase multiple could be lower than we assumed,” according to a presentation released by the company at an investor’s day event in New York for the nation’s largest IBD. The exact figure remained elusive, though.

National Planning Holdings advisor headcount

The specific number matters because terms of the $325 million purchase from Jackson National Life Insurance require LPL to pay more if it keeps more than 72% of NPH’s production. The firm could spend up to $123 million more in a contingency payment to Jackson, if it retains 93.5% or more of NPH’s business.

LPL has planned the migration in two waves, with National Planning and Investment Centers of America’s assets slated for Dec. 2 and those of SII Investments and Invest Financial in February.

Ahead of the possible influx of 3,200 advisors with $120 billion in client assets, the firm has faced recruiting headwinds. LPL’s headcount has fallen by 124 advisors this year to 14,253.

LPL’s rivals have already announced grabs of 199 advisors with $8.9 billion in client assets from the incoming NPH group. Advisor Group’s Woodbury Financial Services alone has added 81 former NPH advisors, while Commonwealth Financial Network said its fourth-quarter recruiting will set a record.

THE RIGHT FIT
LPL knew going into the transaction that it would be working in “a competitive environment,” Arnold told investors Wednesday. The estimated 70% retention rate, which might vary “slightly or marginally,” translates to about 80% of EBITDA production, he noted.

Arnold gave three reasons why executives think LPL lost out on some advisors from National Planning and Investment Centers of America to other IBDs, maintaining that none of the explanations was surprising.

Some NPH advisors’ track records did not meet LPL’s criteria, he said. Other advisors opted for “economic incentives that they received out in the marketplace that didn’t meet our standards,” Arnold said. And some advisors did not view LPL’s scale as the right fit, he added.

“They may have seen a different solution that may have been smaller in nature that may have had lesser capabilities as an alternative to them,” Arnold said, casting the overall rate in context. “I think this shapes up very similar to what we’ve seen with other historical transactions.”

The CEO’s presentation hinted that LPL will pursue more acquisitions like the NPH deal. The firm’s size, along with its status as a self-clearing firm with strong advisory platforms, add up to an economic advantage for it, Arnold said, though such options will wait until next year.

“We’re focused on making sure that we integrate this business really well,” Arnold said. “First and foremost, our priority is to get that done and to get that done right.”

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Recruiting M&A Independent BDs Independent advisors Business development Dan Arnold LPL Financial Commonwealth Financial Network
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