🎙️ The Breakaway Briefing: Episode Summary
Private Banking Models Versus Traditional Brokerage Models
In this episode of "Ask Roger," The Gershman Group CEO Roger Gershman analyzes the ongoing philosophical and economical "war" between the two dominant models in high-net-worth wealth management: the Private Banking Model and the Traditional Brokerage Model.
The discussion dissects the fundamental differences in client ownership, compensation structure, and long-term profitability that distinguish the wirehouses (Morgan Stanley, UBS) from the bank-owned wealth divisions (J.P. Morgan, U.S. Trust). Gershman argues that while both models provide nearly identical services, their underlying structure dictates who truly holds the power: the advisor or the firm.
In This Conversation, You Will Learn:
The Core Philosophical Divide:
Identical Services, Different Masters: Advisors in both Private Banking (e.g., JPM Private Bank) and Traditional Brokerage (e.g., Morgan Stanley) provide similar comprehensive wealth management solutions, including asset allocation, trust, estate, tax, and financial planning.
The "War" of Models: The two sides often look down on each other: Private Bankers view wirehouse advisors as mere "brokers," while wirehouse advisors criticize the lack of independence in bank models.
Traditional Brokerage Model (Wirehouses): Advisors "eat what they kill." Compensation is typically commission/fee-based, averaging around 50% payout. Critically, advisors in this model traditionally have a stronger (though often disputed) claim to client ownership and portability.
Private Banking Model (Bank-Owned): Advisors are paid a salary plus a subjective bonus. In this model, the advisor fundamentally works for the bank, and the bank owns the client relationship. Assets are considered highly "sticky" and extremely difficult for an advisor to move if they transition elsewhere.
Profitability for the Firm: The Private Banking model is significantly more profitable for the firm and its shareholders because it controls client access and cross-selling. As a result, firms like Merrill Lynch are observed to be gravitating toward adopting more bank-centric operating models.
Lack of Independence: While the Private Banking model offers a higher degree of concierge service and exclusive proprietary products for clients, it traps the advisor in a closed-architecture system where their income and client relationships are highly dependent on the profitability and politics of the entire parent bank.
Understand Client Ownership: Advisors must fundamentally understand whether their current model allows them to own their client relationships (the Traditional Model) or if the firm owns them (the Private Banking Model).
Align with Goals: For advisors seeking maximum personal control, profitability, and ownership—especially those who prefer an open-architecture platform—the Traditional Brokerage model (or, more ideally, full independence) often aligns better than the bank-owned salary/bonus structure.
Meet the Guests
Roger Gershman (CEO, The Gershman Group) A veteran of 25 years as a financial advisor, Roger now leads a consulting firm that provides expertise on advisor recruiting, transition, and industry trends, often focusing on high-stakes career decisions.