Shares of LPL Financial drop 2.38% in after-hours trading Thursday following the firm’s second quarter earnings report. While adjusted earnings per share (excluding some one-time expenses) surpass analyst expectations, official earnings per share results fall short.
LPL Financial reports adjusted earnings per share of $3.88, marking a 2% decrease from the same period last year, yet surpassing analysts' estimates of $3.71. On a GAAP basis, the company reports earnings per share of $3.23 and total revenue of $2.93 billion. Analysts surveyed by FactSet had anticipated GAAP earnings of $3.43 and revenue of $2.89 billion.
As the largest independent broker-dealer in the nation, LPL Financial continues to grow its advisor force through recruitment and acquisitions. The firm announces a record advisor head count of 23,462 at the end of the quarter, an increase of 1,520 from the previous year.
Total advisory and brokerage assets rise 21% year-over-year to a record $1.5 trillion, partly driven by strong equity markets. Advisors are also bringing in more funds, with organic net new assets reported at $29 billion for the quarter, up from $21.7 billion during the same period last year.
“Over the past quarter, we remained focused on our mission of taking care of our advisors, so they can take care of their clients,” says CEO Dan Arnold. “This focus led to another quarter of solid business and financial results, reinforcing our momentum.”
Like other brokerage and wealth management firms, LPL Financial sees a decline in client cash balances, which fall $6 billion year-over-year to $44 billion and $2 billion sequentially. Over the past 18 months, clients have been shifting cash from lower-paying sweep accounts to higher-paying options such as money-market funds. This process, known as cash sorting, has impacted other companies like Charles Schwab.
Investors and analysts are also concerned about potential pricing pressures on interest rates paid on customers’ uninvested cash. Wells Fargo and Morgan Stanley recently announce they are raising interest rates paid on investors’ cash, which may impact net interest income, a key profit center. These changes have triggered a sell-off in wealth management stocks, including LPL Financial.
More Articles
Unusual Prospect of a Full-Employment Recession Per BlackRock and Charles Schwab
BlackRock and Charles Schwab are signaling that the U.S. economy may be entering a period of unpredictable, “rolling” inflation.
HIVE’s Infrastructure Play: Why Bitcoin Mining Led to an AI Goldmine
From Bitcoin mining roadblock to AI infrastructure goldmine—Frank Holmes never planned to build an artificial intelligence company. Yet HIVE Digital Technologies has evolved from a 2017 cryptocurrency workaround into a renewable-energy-powered data center operation generating $800,000 daily revenue with just 25 employees. Now positioned at the intersection of crypto and AI growth, HIVE owns the essential hardware both booming industries desperately need, creating a scalable infrastructure play that analysts value at $10–$12 per share.