Creative Planning Buys Wipfli's $5B RIA

Peter Mallouk

“Going forward, we will be able to provide additional services to our clients to meet their needs for many years to come while investing in our team through a strong commitment to training and development,” he added.

The transaction “creates a strategic relationship that will allow our clients to access a broad set of services through innovative financial platforms,” according to Kurt Gresens, Wipfli managing partner and chairman of the board.

M&A Activities

The deal is Creative Planning’s third transaction this summer, following its June purchase of Rosen Capital Management, which works with about $114 million in assets, and Ferris Capital, which manages $755 million assets.

Other recent acquisitions by Creative Planning included Keystone Wealth Partners  ($644 million of assets, Heritage Way Advisors ($450 million), Hatton Consulting ($440 million) and Resource Management ($1.9 billion), all of which were announced in April; it also bought Emery Howard ($1.8 billion) in March and Reilly Financial Advisors ($2 billion) in January.

Overall, Creative Planning managed or advised on more than $225 billion in client assets as of Dec. 31, with “continued plans for growth throughout 2022,” it said Wednesday.

Top Trends, Challenges

The RIA space is “fragmented with largely fragmented approaches; some firms integrate, others don’t; some share an investment approach, others don’t; some have long time horizons and others shorter,” Mallouk told ThinkAdvisor. “There is a lot of diversity in approaches in our space. It makes it great for sellers, who can really choose a firm that matches their needs.”

However, he said: “The secret of the RIA space is that most firms are not growing at all. But that has been masked by a strong market over the last five years. The No. 1 challenge for RIAs to compete in the future is to have an approach that can result in growth.”

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Current client concerns, meanwhile, are “not centered around one thing, which is unusual,” Mallouk pointed out. “Usually a prevailing narrative takes hold. Today, it’s all over the place, from inflation to rising rates, Ukraine to Taiwan, politics to social issues.”

On an optimistic note, he said: “The Fed will get inflation mostly under control, and the consequence will be a mild recession. Also, any predictions, including my best take, are generally worthless as the economy is too dynamic to be predictable.”

(Pictured: Peter Mallouk, CEO of Creative Planning)