Hightower announces its fifth acquisition of the year with the planned acquisition of Financial Planning and Information Services (FPIS), a $1.1 billion registered investment advisor (RIA) based in De Pere, Wisconsin.
Founded in 1985 and serving the Green Bay area, FPIS specializes in fee-only financial planning and portfolio management. The firm has built its reputation on a high-touch, personalized service model, which remains the foundation of its client relationships nearly four decades later.
"Hightower and FPIS share a commitment to fostering long-term, generational wealth relationships within our communities," says Hightower Chairman and CEO Bob Oros. "This acquisition reflects our alignment in values and dedication to high-net-worth clients."
Currently under second-generation leadership, FPIS is led by President and CEO Ryan Wempe, alongside Vice Presidents Dan Budinger and Rachel Brown. While the firm has two charitable clients, it predominantly serves an affluent retail clientele, with nearly 75% of assets held by high-net-worth individuals.
FPIS’s 16-member team will maintain its established branding and local presence while integrating into the Hightower family.
For Wempe, joining Hightower opens up a wealth of resources, including enhanced marketing and business development support, back-office services like compliance, accounting, payroll, and HR. Hightower’s in-house accounting support and planned expansion of investment options through its partnership with NEPC—an outsourced chief investment officer providing a range of alternative investments—adds further value.
"Hightower’s platform brings valuable tools that will enable us to navigate our clients through life’s challenges and successes with greater support," Wempe says.
Hightower anticipates finalizing the acquisition by the end of the year.
More Articles
The Case for Bitcoin, Deregulated Banks, and a Reset U.S. Market Cycle: Insights from Wellington-Altus
Wellington-Altus’s Jim Thorne outlines why advisors should rethink digital assets, regional banks, and the current market cycle, arguing that a structural shift in credit, policy, and purchasing power is already well underway. He views Bitcoin as legitimate portfolio protection against 8% annual money supply growth, sees deregulated regional banks driving localized lending and economic growth, and believes April’s correction reset the typical four-year market cycle, potentially setting up significant gains ahead.
Private Markets with Purpose: How Fiduciary Trust International Approaches Alternatives with Clarity and Discipline
Amid the flood of alternative investment products, Fiduciary Trust International cuts through marketing noise with methodical discipline. Erick Rawlings and his team treat private equity, hedge funds, and real assets as essential portfolio building blocks—not side bets. With manager selection dispersion reaching 60% in venture capital, rigorous due diligence becomes critical. Rawlings emphasizes aligning client intentions with long-term commitments, viewing alternatives as strategic tools rather than magic bullets for targeted outcomes.