When LPL Financial secured a landmark agreement in August 2023 to provide a tailored wealth management platform for Prudential Financial’s 2,800 financial advisors, it marked a pivotal win for LPL.
The deal also set in motion a complex development effort. LPL’s team built new technology, established a dedicated broker-dealer, and launched a registered investment advisor (RIA) specifically designed to serve Prudential’s unique needs. After investing $300 million into what is now called LPL Enterprise and completing the integration of Prudential’s advisors, the company aims to scale this offering to attract more institutional clients.
“This opens up a $1.5 trillion addressable market tied to insurance companies operating wealth management businesses,” says Ken Hullings, executive vice president of Institutional Client Success at LPL Financial.
By November 18, Prudential’s wealth management division had transitioned approximately $25 billion in assets to LPL’s platform. Another $35 billion is expected to follow over the next several months, solidifying the partnership’s significance.
Already a dominant player with $1.6 trillion in client assets, LPL continues to grow by recruiting advisors, acquiring businesses, and securing large-scale institutional partnerships like Prudential’s. This growth aligns with broader industry consolidation, where rising technology and compliance costs have driven smaller firms to merge with larger platforms and encouraged insurers to either divest their wealth management units or seek operational partners.
Prudential is the first firm to leverage LPL Enterprise’s purpose-built broker-dealer and RIA, which cater to the distinct needs of insurance companies. Unlike banks and credit unions, insurers bring an added layer of complexity due to their proprietary insurance and annuity offerings. “They have their own products, so there’s more complexity,” Hullings explains.
Hullings highlights how the Prudential partnership will benefit LPL’s existing advisors and clients. The technology, services, and operational flexibility developed for Prudential will become part of LPL’s broader platform, enhancing capabilities across the board.
“We’ve enabled institutional clients to curate a unique mix of platform features, products, advisory solutions, and technology to deliver differentiated services to their customers,” Hullings says.
He also notes that the Prudential collaboration served as a catalyst for LPL to modernize its platform and enhance its offerings. “It was a great trigger for us to take our capabilities to the next level,” he says.
November 20, 2024
More Articles
Fed chair nominee Kevin Warsh Will Meet With The Senator Blocking His Confirmation
Republican Senator Thom Tillis will meet this week with Kevin Warsh, President Trump’s nominee to be the next chair of the Federal Reserve.
When the Market Cracks, Music Plays On: The Case for MUSQ, The Music ETF
While equity markets contend with geopolitical turbulence and AI-driven whiplash, the MUSQ Global Music Industry ETF is holding steady—by design. David Schulhof, CEO at MUSQ, LLC, The Music ETF, argues that music is not a luxury good or a tech proxy. It is a daily habit with global scale, recurring revenue, and structural growth drivers that traditional sector allocation simply cannot replicate. Here is why advisors are paying attention.