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Insights for Financial Advisors Considering Succession, Sale, or Growth through M&A.
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Summary: Insights for Financial Advisors Considering Succession, Sale, or Growth through M&A


1. Introduction: A Timely Topic for an Aging Industry

Tom Dickson opened the session by emphasizing the urgency of succession and M&A planning in the advisory profession.

  • The average age of a financial advisor is 57, and by 2034, roughly 38% of current advisors will have exited the industry, leading to an estimated shortfall of 100,000 advisors.
  • This imbalance is driving strong demand for M&A, succession solutions, and minority partnership options.

đź“– Fact Check:


2. Advisor Law: Overview and Market Role

Founded in 2016 and headquartered in Denver, Advisor Law employs over 50 professionals, including 20 attorneys. The firm:

  • Focuses on RIA compliance, M&A, and legal defense, particularly for firms under $2 billion AUM.
  • Represents advisors’ interests exclusively, avoiding conflicts associated with larger institutions or broker-dealer relationships.
  • Supports over 300 RIA clients managing $70+ billion in AUM, offering customized contracts and full legal representation during M&A transactions.

3. The M&A Process for Advisors

A. Valuation and Profitability

Advisory practice valuations are typically driven by profitability multiples rather than top-line revenue.

  • Profit margins between 35–45% are most commonly used in valuation modeling.
  • The practice’s client demographics, concentration risks, and age of clientele can adjust multiples upward or downward.
  • Average transaction multiple: 6–8Ă— EBITDA, depending on scale and growth potential.

đź“– Fact Check:
DeVoe & Company, “RIA M&A Deal Book 2024”
https://www.devoeandcompany.com/resources/


B. Transaction Timeline

From initial valuation to full transition can take 18–24 months:

  1. Letter of Intent (LOI): 2 weeks to negotiate terms.
  2. Contract Drafting: 1–2 months of revisions and attorney review.
  3. Due Diligence: 2–4 weeks for data verification.
  4. Client Conversion: 6–24 months of repapering, communication, and transition support.

đź“– Fact Check:
FINRA – “Selling a Practice: What to Know”
https://www.finra.org/investors/insights/selling-financial-advisory-practice


4. Common Deal Structures

TypeDescriptionTypical Terms
Full Sale100% ownership transfer60% cash upfront, 40% over 12–24 months with clawbacks
Minority SaleSell 10–25% equityOften includes “second bite” earnout after 2–3 years
Seller FinancingBuyer repays seller over timeAvoids third-party bank financing; may reduce tax burden
Hybrid StructureBlend of cash, equity, and earnoutsUsed for large or multi-partner firms

Seller-financed deals have become more common, providing flexibility and often tax deferral advantages for sellers.

đź“– Fact Check:
Internal Revenue Service – “Installment Sales (Seller Financing)”
https://www.irs.gov/taxtopics/tc705


5. Legal Considerations in M&A Transactions

Matt Tuerk detailed the legal framework underpinning advisor transactions:

A. Letter of Intent (LOI)

  • Sets nonbinding expectations for price, structure, and earnout conditions.
  • Reduces later contract friction by aligning expectations early.

B. Asset vs. Equity Purchase

  • Asset Purchase: Buyer selects specific assets (client goodwill, contracts) but not liabilities. Requires repapering clients under the new RIA.
  • Equity Purchase: Buyer acquires ownership of the legal entity and inherits liabilities but avoids repapering.
  • In both cases, the SEC may require client consent under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, particularly when a “change of control” occurs.

đź“– Fact Check:
SEC – “Investment Adviser M&A Guidance: Change of Control Requirements”
https://www.sec.gov/investment/investment-advisers-faq


C. Earnouts and Clawbacks

  • Protect buyers against client attrition post-sale.
  • Payments adjust based on AUM retention or revenue transfer (e.g., 90% of clients must transition for full payout).
  • Key drafting issue: Define the measurement period and formula clearly to avoid disputes.

đź“– Fact Check:
FINRA – “Best Practices for Advisory Business Transfers”
https://www.finra.org/rules-guidance/key-topics/business-transfers


6. Common Pitfalls and Best Practices

A. Waiting Too Long to Sell

Delaying transition can dramatically erode value.
Example shared:

  • $2.1M revenue firm with 40% EBITDA valued near $6–7M.
  • After a partner’s stroke and client attrition, value dropped to $4.2M — a $2–3M loss due to delayed action.
    Recommendation: Begin planning 3–5 years before retirement, or 10 years out via minority sale.

đź“– Fact Check:
FP Transitions – “The Cost of Waiting: Timing a Practice Sale”
https://www.fptransitions.com/resources


B. Overreliance on Equity in Sale Price

Equity portions of deals may be restricted stock—non-liquid, non-dividend-paying, and subject to dilution as firms aggregate more practices.

  • Always confirm whether equity offers include distributions or liquidity rights.
  • Beware of inflated “headline multiples” that rely heavily on hypothetical earnouts.

đź“– Fact Check:
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission – “Understanding Restricted Stock and Liquidity Events”
https://www.sec.gov/education/smallbusiness/exemptofferings/restricted-securities


C. Tax Complexities

  • Sales may involve a mix of capital gains (for goodwill) and ordinary income (for consulting or noncompete agreements).
  • Advisors should engage CPA and legal counsel early to structure tax-efficient outcomes.

đź“– Fact Check:
IRS Publication 544 – “Sales and Other Dispositions of Assets”
https://www.irs.gov/publications/p544


7. Risk Management and Client Transition

Client transition determines up to 40% of realized value.

  • Advisors should actively participate in client communication for 6–12 months post-closing.
  • Coordinated legal, operational, and custodial timelines are critical to avoid advising without proper contracts during repapering.

đź“– Fact Check:
Investment Adviser Association – “Best Practices in Client Transition Planning”
https://www.investmentadviser.org/resources


8. Key Q&A Takeaways

  • CPA firms: Advisor Law supports them, though they trade at lower multiples (~1Ă— revenue).
  • Tax structure: Sellers can achieve partial capital gains treatment, but should verify with tax counsel.
  • Representation: Advisor Law is compensated by buyers but represents sellers’ interests throughout negotiations.
  • Philosophical fit: It’s possible to source a buyer aligned with investment approach (e.g., DFA or fee-only philosophies).
  • Deal terms: 85% upfront cash deals are achievable, though rare; clawbacks remain standard for risk balance.

9. Advisor Takeaways

✅ Begin succession or M&A planning at least 3–5 years before retirement.
✅ Prioritize client transition plans — goodwill drives valuation.
âś… Avoid overvaluing restricted equity; focus on cash and defined liquidity events.
âś… Clarify earnout formulas and tax structure early.
âś… Use professional legal and compliance support to avoid post-sale disputes.


đź”— Fact Check URLs

  1. https://www.cerulli.com/publications/advisor-metrics-2023
  2. https://www.bls.gov/ooh/business-and-financial/personal-financial-advisors.htm
  3. https://www.devoeandcompany.com/resources/
  4. https://www.finra.org/investors/insights/selling-financial-advisory-practice
  5. https://www.sec.gov/investment/investment-advisers-faq
  6. https://www.irs.gov/taxtopics/tc705
  7. https://www.fptransitions.com/resources
  8. https://www.sec.gov/education/smallbusiness/exemptofferings/restricted-securities
  9. https://www.irs.gov/publications/p544
  10. https://www.investmentadviser.org/resources

Attendees Comments:

A few comments from listeners when they were asked what the learned from the webinar:

Need to start planning earlier. Great session!!
- Angela D.

The focus on asset purchases versus equity purchases by buyers. It was an excellent webinar.
- Mark Z.

The various things that impact valuations, different deal structures - very interesting, thanks!
- Frank M.

missy@financia…

Wed, 11/05/2025 - 09:42

Comments
A few comments from listeners when they were asked what the learned from the webinar:

Need to start planning earlier. Great session!!
- Angela D.

The focus on asset purchases versus equity purchases by buyers. It was an excellent webinar.
- Mark Z.

The various things that impact valuations, different deal structures - very interesting, thanks!
- Frank M.
Insights for Financial Advisors Considering Succession, Sale, or Growth through M&A. 10-04-2025

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