Best & Worst Firms for Advisor Satisfaction: J.D. Power, 2024

News July 10, 2024 at 02:37 PM
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Financial services firms are under pressure to retain advisors at a time when the U.S. advisor population is aging, industry consolidation is underway and organic growth rates are slowing, according to the J.D. Power 2024 U.S. Financial Advisor Satisfaction Study.

The study, released Wednesday, found that 34% of employee advisors and 41% of independent advisors who are more than two years away from retirement may not remain at their current firm in the next year or two. 

J.D. Power said this is noteworthy considering that 28% of employee advisors and 52% of independent advisors have worked for three or more firms during their career. 

"Several forces are currently at play that pose challenges to the loyalties of even the most entrenched advisors," Craig Martin, head of wealth and lending intelligence at J.D. Power, said in a statement. 

"Aggressive compensation offers, a promise of better technology or support and flexible business models can all tempt advisors to change firms. However, the cultural fit and advisor confidence in leadership are what determine how susceptible they are to attempts to lure them away." 

The advisor satisfaction study measures satisfaction among both advisors who are employed by a broker-dealer and those who are affiliated with a broker-dealer but operate independently, based on these dimensions: compensation; firm leadership and culture; operational support; products and marketing; professional development; and technology. 

The new study, which was fielded from January through May, is based on responses from 4,072 employee and independent financial advisors. 

What Makes Advisors Stay?

Significant improvement in compensation-related metrics, perceptions of technology and quality of support have driven major gains among employee advisors in the past year, the study found. 

Among independent advisors, however, satisfaction declined significantly year over year for leadership-related reasons. Those who said they strongly agree that their firm is headed in the right direction dropped to 46% this year from 54% in 2023.

J.D. Power used a multi-year analysis to measure attrition among advisor respondents. Researchers found that of those who said in 2021 that they definitely or probably would not be at the same firm in one to two years, about half were no longer at that firm in 2024. 

In that same time period, some 90% of advisors who said they definitely would still be at their firm were still there. 

When researchers compared ratings provided by advisors committed to staying with their firm with those open to leaving, they found that ratings for firm leadership and culture reflect the greatest differences. Among less-tenured advisors at their firm, professional development is the area of next greatest difference. 

The study found that satisfaction among employee advisors rose 49 points year over year to 637 (on a 1,000-point scale). In contrast, overall satisfaction among independent advisors is considerably lower at 611, reflecting a 15-point year-over-year decline. 

Historically, J.D. Power noted, independent advisors' satisfaction scores have been higher than those of employee advisors. 

The charts below break down the firms that scored above and below the industry average for financial advisor satisfaction.

Worst Firms for Financial Advisor Satisfaction

JD Power 2024 U.S. Financial Advisor Satisfaction Study Overall Satisfaction Index Ranking, Independent Advisors: Firms Below Segment Average of 611: Cetera (557), Osaic (527), Wells Fargo Advisors FiNet (447)

JD Power 2024 U.S. Financial Advisor Satisfaction Study Overall Satisfaction Index Ranking, Employee Advisors: Firms Below Segment Average of 637: Wells Fargo Advisors (563), Morgan Stanley (538)

Best Firms for Financial Advisor Satisfaction

JD Power 2024 U.S. Financial Advisor Satisfaction Study Overall Satisfaction Index Ranking, Independent Advisors: Firms Above Segment Average of 611: Commonwealth (819), Raymond James Financial Services (694), Cambridge (676), Ameriprise (641), LPL Financial (617)

JD Power 2024 U.S. Financial Advisor Satisfaction Study Overall Satisfaction Index Ranking, Employee Advisors: Firms Above Segment Average of 637: Stifel (767), Raymond James & Associates (750), Edward Jones (740), Merrill (657)

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