Raymond James Financial, Inc. (NYSE:RJF) Q3 2025 Earnings Call Transcript

Raymond James Financial, Inc. (NYSE:RJF) Q3 2025 Earnings Call Transcript July 23, 2025

Raymond James Financial, Inc. misses on earnings expectations. Reported EPS is $2.18 EPS, expectations were $2.37.

Kristina Waugh: Good evening, and welcome to Raymond James Financial’s Fiscal 2025 Third Quarter Earnings Call. This call is being recorded and will be available for replay on the company’s Investor Relations website. I’m Kristi Waugh, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations. Thank you for joining us. With me on the call today are Chief Executive Officer, Paul Shoukry; and Chief Financial Officer, Butch Oorlog. The presentation being reviewed today is available on Raymond James Investor Relations website. Following the prepared remarks, the operator will open the line for questions. Calling your attention to Slide 2. Please note that certain statements made during this call may constitute forward-looking statements. These statements include, but are not limited to, information concerning future strategic objectives, business prospects, financial results, industry or market conditions, anticipated timing and benefits of our acquisitions and our level of success in integrating acquired businesses; anticipated results of litigation and regulatory developments, and general economic conditions.

In addition, words such as believes, expects, anticipates, intends, plans, estimates, projects, forecasts and future or conditional verbs such as may, will, could, should and would as well as any other statements that necessarily depends on future events are intended to identify forward-looking statements. Please note that there can be no assurance that actual results will not differ materially from those expressed in these statements. We urge you to consider the risks described in our most recent Forms 10-K and subsequent Forms 10-Q and Forms 8-K, which are available on our website. Now I’m happy to turn the call over to CEO, Paul Shoukry. Paul?

Paul Marone Shoukry: Thank you, Kristie. Good evening. Thank you for joining us. We are holding this call from the firm’s Annual Summer Development Conference in Orlando, Florida, where financial advisers in our employee channel, along with their families, come for education, networking and activities, one of the great tradition of Raymond James and unique to our culture. I really enjoy being able to spend time and hear directly from such dedicated professionals. Our results this quarter marked the firm’s 150th consecutive quarter of profitability. Since our inception, the firm has endured thriving in good times but also persevering through challenges, including recessions, financial crisis and events such as the pandemic and other global threats.

This long-term record of resilient profitability reflects the strength of our diverse and complementary businesses and our ongoing commitment to always putting clients first. As current market and macroeconomic conditions remain uncertain, we continue to adhere to strategies that have supported consistent success over the past 150 quarters, guided by our vision to be the absolute best firm for financial professionals and their clients. I’m also excited to share that Raymond James has topped the J.D. Power rankings in its annual U.S. Investor Satisfaction Study as the #1 wealth management firm for advised investor satisfaction. The firm also ranked as the most trusted and highest in the Study’s individual metrics on people and products and services as well as strong rankings in the J.D. Power Financial Advisor satisfaction rankings in each of the employee and independent adviser surveys.

This recognition is purely a reflection of all advisers, branch staff and corporate associates do every day to serve clients so well. So thank you. These are well deserved owners. Turning to our financial results for the quarter. The firm’s values-based client-focused approach continues to generate steady performance. Quarterly net revenues of $3.4 billion grew 5% over the prior year quarter. Pretax income of $563 million declined 13% compared to the year ago quarter. Results this quarter included a $58 million reserve increase associated with the settlement of a legal matter related to bond underwriting for specific issuer sold to institutional investors between 2013 to 2015. Although the firm maintains and has strong defenses and denied any liability, given the complexity of the case and the unpredictability of litigation outcomes, we determined to resolve the long-running dispute without admission of wrongdoing.

For the first 9 months of fiscal 2025, we generated record net revenues of $10.3 billion and record pretax income of $1.98 billion, up 10% and 5% over the first 9 months of fiscal 2024. These solid results were attributable to our diverse and complementary businesses anchored by the Private Client Group and augmented with the capital markets asset management and bank segments. Across our businesses, we have achieved consistent success retaining and recruiting financial professionals who provide high- quality advice to their clients. In the Private Client Group, we ended the quarter with a record $1.57 trillion of client assets under administration, representing year-over-year growth of 11%. Over the past 12 months, we recruited into our domestic independent contractor and employee channels, financial advisers with $336 million of tailing 12 production and $52 billion of client assets at their previous firms.

Including assets recruited into our RIA and Custody Services division, we recruited total client assets over the past 12 months of over $60 billion across all of our platforms. Quarterly domestic net new assets equaled $11.7 billion, representing a 3.4% annualized growth rate. We saw net new assets improved throughout the quarter, with June activity producing annualized growth in the high single-digit level. Based on our robust recruiting pipeline and strong level of commitments, we are even more optimistic about our momentum and growth over the coming quarters. Our best of both world’s value proposition where we offer a unique combination of an adviser and client-focused culture, coupled with leading technology and solutions continues to resonate with advisers across all of our affiliation options.

Additionally, our strong balance sheet and commitment to independence is increasingly becoming a differentiator as well. To continue retaining and attracting the best advisers, we are continuing to make investments in our platforms and offerings. For example, in the private wealth space, we remain focused on providing education, training, accreditation and enhanced capabilities and product solutions to allow advisers to meet the needs of their most sophisticated clients. About 370 advisers have completed or enrolled in our private wealth adviser program, which continues to attract strong interest from advisers due to its client benefits and contribution to business growth. We also continue to invest in technology, including AI, to drive continued operational efficiencies and improve advisers’ productive capacity.

We are making investments to automate and streamline processes, which in turn frees up associates and advisers to do what they do best, which is to engage human-to-human and deepen relationships, add more value and importantly, have more capacity to grow their businesses by attracting new clients. In the Capital Markets segment, the investment banking pipeline is strong. And we are becoming more optimistic about macroeconomic conditions relative to the near term, although the environment remains uncertain. However, we are confident that we are well positioned with motivated buyers and sellers along with deep expertise across the industries we cover whenever the market does become more conducive. We remain committed to enhancing the platform by broadening and deepening its capabilities, whether through strategic hiring or acquisitions.

In the Asset Management segment, net inflows into managed fee-based programs in the Private Client Group were strong during the quarter, annualizing at nearly 5% and reflecting the complementary impact of our successful recruiting efforts. In the bank segment, loans ended the quarter at a record $49.8 billion, primarily reflecting strong growth in securities-based lending balances, yet another synergistic impact from our growing Private Client Group business as we are able to deploy our strong balance sheet in support of our clients. Importantly, the credit quality of the loan portfolio remains strong. Turning to capital deployment. Our long-standing priorities have remained unchanged, and that starts with investing in growth. First, organically and complemented with strategic acquisitions.

We continue to pursue acquisition opportunities that meet our criteria of being a strong cultural fit, a good strategic fit and valuations that would generate attractive returns for our shareholders. During the quarter, we repurchased $451 million of common stock at an average share price of $137. Year-to-date, we have returned capital of over $1 billion through common dividends and share repurchases. As previously discussed in recent quarters, the capital deployment plan is to repurchase shares on a consistent basis throughout the quarter, with total amounts expected to be similar to the fiscal third quarter. This approach is expected to maintain capital liquidity levels, which provide ample capacity to fund organic growth initiatives and execute future acquisitions.

Now I’ll turn the call over to our CFO, Butch Oorlog to review our financial results in detail. Butch?

Jonathan W. Oorlog: Thank you, Paul. I’ll begin on Slide 6. The firm reported net revenues of $3.4 billion for the fiscal third quarter. Net income available to common shareholders was $435 million with earnings per diluted share of $2.12. Excluding expenses related to acquisitions, adjusted net income available to common shareholders equaled $449 million resulting in adjusted earnings per diluted share of $2.19, and our adjusted pretax margin was 17.1%. We generated annualized return on common equity of 14.3% and annualized adjusted return on tangible common equity of 17.2%. Solid results for the quarter, particularly given our conservative capital base. Turning to Slide 7. Private Client Group generated pretax income of $411 million on quarterly net revenues of $2.49 billion.

An investor sitting at a desk looking through financial documents, representing the private client group.

Results were driven by higher PCG assets under administration compared to the previous year, the result of market appreciation and the consistent addition of net new assets. Pretax income declined year-over-year, primarily due to the impact of lower interest rates. Fiscal year-to-date, PCG generated record revenues. Our Capital Markets segment generated quarterly net revenues of $381 million and a pretax loss of $54 million. Net revenues grew 15% year-over-year, driven primarily by higher investment banking, fixed income and equity brokerage revenues. However, sequential results declined 4%, largely due to lower M&A and fixed income brokerage revenues, which were partially offset by higher underwriting and affordable housing investments revenues.

Pretax income was negatively impacted by the $58 million legal reserve increase previously described. The Asset Management segment generated record pretax income of $125 million on net revenues of $291 million. Results were largely attributable to higher financial assets under management compared to the prior year quarter due to market appreciation over the 12-month period and strong net inflows into PCG fee-based accounts. We had strong net inflows of approximately $2.1 billion into managed programs on our platform. The Asset Management segment generated record revenues and pretax income fiscal year-to-date. The Bank segment generated net revenues of $458 million and pretax income of $123 million. On a sequential basis, Bank segment net interest income grew 5%, driven by continued loan growth and a 7 basis point expansion of net interest margin to 2.74%, resulting from a favorable shift in asset mix along with a higher portion of lower cost deposits.

Turning to consolidated revenues on Slide 8. Third quarter net revenues grew 5% over the prior year and were flat sequentially. Asset management and related administrative fees of $1.73 billion grew 8% over the prior year and were slightly higher than the preceding quarter. Record PCG fee-based assets equaled $944 billion at quarter end, up 15% year-over-year and 8% over the preceding quarter. As we look ahead, we expect fourth quarter asset management and related administrative fees to be higher by approximately 9% over the third quarter, primarily due to higher PCG assets and fee-based accounts at quarter end and one more business day during the quarter. Brokerage revenues of $559 million grew 5% year-over-year due to higher revenues in Capital Markets and PCG.

Investment Banking revenues of $212 million increased 16% year-over-year and declined 2% sequentially. The sequential decline reflected lower M&A and advisory revenues, while underwriting and affordable housing investments results were higher in the quarter. Moving to Slide 9. Client domestic cash suite and enhanced savings program balances ended the quarter at $55.2 billion, down 4% compared to the preceding quarter and representing 3.8% of domestic PCG client assets. Program balances increased by nearly $1 billion in the month of June after seasonal declines for client tax payments and fee billings resulted in decreases early in the quarter. In July, domestic cash sweep and enhanced savings program balances have declined to date, in line with July’s record quarterly fee billings of approximately $1.7 billion.

Turning to Slide 10. Combined net interest income and RJBDP fees from third-party banks increased 1% to $656 million as the decline in RJBDP third-party fees was more than offset by higher net interest income. Net interest margin in the bank segment grew 7 basis points to 2.74% for the quarter, the result of the factors I described earlier. The average yield on RJBDP balances with third-party banks decreased 4 basis points to 2.96% primarily due to deployment of incremental cash suite program balances from third-party banks on to the bank segment balance sheet. Based on current interest rates and quarter end balances, net of fourth quarter fee billings, we would expect the aggregate of NII in RJBDP third-party fees to decline approximately 2% in the fourth quarter, largely the result of the lower beginning of the quarter, sweep balances held by third-party banks.

Keep in mind, there are many variables which will influence actual results, including any interest rate actions during the upcoming quarter and factors affecting our balance sheet, including changes in our loan and deposit balances. Turning to consolidated expenses on Slide 11. Compensation expense was $2.2 billion, and the total compensation ratio for the quarter was 64.8%. Excluding acquisition-related compensation expenses, the adjusted compensation ratio was 64.5%, better than our 65% target recently shared at our Investor Day, a good result, especially in a challenging capital markets environment. Noncompensation expenses of $633 million increased 20% sequentially. Adjusting for the previously mentioned legal matter reserve in the quarter, noncompensation expenses of $633 million increased 20% sequentially.

Adjusting for the previously mentioned legal matter reserve in the quarter, noncompensation expenses were $575 million, up 9% sequentially. While the third quarter typically experiences higher seasonal costs related to conferences and events, a large portion of this quarterly increase also supports firm- wide growth initiatives, including adviser recruiting, professional fees associated with increased underwriting activity and higher investment sub-advisory fee expense. Through the first 9 months of the fiscal year, we are on track with our guidance for full year noncompensation expenses of approximately $2.1 billion, excluding the bank loan provision for credit losses, unexpected legal and regulatory items and non-GAAP adjustments presented in our non-GAAP financial measures.

On Slide 12, we provide key credit metrics for our bank segment. We grew loans during the quarter by 3%, primarily in support of our clients with this loan growth continuing to be led by a securities-based lending and residential mortgage loan growth. These 2 loan categories represent well over half of our total loan book, reflecting 36% and 20% of the total. The credit quality of the loan portfolio remains strong. Criticized loans as a percentage of total loans held for investment were stable at 1.14% at quarter end, and nonperforming assets remained low at 34 basis points of bank segment assets. The bank loan allowance for credit losses as a percentage of total loans held for investment ended the quarter at 93 basis points, consistent with the prior quarter level.

The bank loan allowance for credit losses on corporate loans as a percent of corporate loans held for investment was 1.96%. We believe the total allowance represents an appropriate reserve but we continue to closely monitor economic factors that may affect our loan portfolios. Slide 13 shows the pretax margin trend over the past 5 quarters, which demonstrates the resilience of our diverse business mix and its ability to consistently deliver strong margins. Adjusting for the legal matter reserve impacting the quarter, as well as acquisition- related expenses, our pretax margin would be approximately 19%, slightly below our target of 20% adjusted pretax margin, largely due to the challenging capital markets environment. We remain committed to investing to support growth across the business, while maintaining discipline over controllable expenses.

On Slide 14, at quarter end, our total assets were $84.8 billion, a 2% sequential increase resulting primarily from loan growth. Liquidity and capital each remain very strong. RJF corporate cash at the parent ended the quarter at approximately $2.3 billion well above our $1.2 billion target with a Tier 1 leverage ratio of 13.1% and a total capital ratio of 24.3%, we remain well above regulatory requirements. Our capital levels provide significant flexibility to continue being opportunistic in our pursuit of strategic acquisitions and to invest in organic growth. The effective tax rate for the quarter was 22.6%, reflecting the favorable impact of nontaxable corporate-owned life insurance gains that arose during the quarter. For the fiscal year 2025, we estimate our effective tax rate for the year to be approximately 24%.

Slide 15 provides a summary of our capital actions over the past 5 quarters. We returned over $550 million of capital to shareholders during the quarter and nearly $1.8 billion over the past 5 quarters through either common dividends paid or share repurchases. We remain committed over the long term to operate our businesses at capital levels in line with our stated targets. I’ll now turn the call back to Paul for some final remarks.

Paul Marone Shoukry: As we enter the fourth quarter, we are encouraged by the strong tailwinds arising from fee-based assets up 8%, net loans higher by 3% and strong pipelines for growth across our businesses. Our adviser recruiting pipeline is growing significantly across all of our affiliation options, a testament to our unique culture and robust platform that is resonating with advisers. We are laser focused on providing a seamless transition as advisers affiliate with our platform, while importantly, maintaining excellent service levels to existing advisers and their clients. While the investment banking environment is uncertain based on the current pipeline and activity levels, we believe the next 2 quarters should be better than the prior 2.

Lastly, we have plenty of capital to support organic growth and acquisitions as well as continued share repurchases at a level similar to this quarter. As illustrated by our recent J.D. Power #1 rankings, putting clients first has been the cornerstone of Raymond James’ value since our inception and that commitment remains at the center of everything we do. This prestigious honor demonstrates the strength of our client-centric culture and our steadfast dedication to supporting advisers and empowering them with sophisticated resources support and technology. Our results reflect the many contributions of our associates and advisers and financial professionals across the firm. Thank you for contributing to 150 quarters of consecutive profitability by providing outstanding advice and service to your clients.

That concludes our prepared remarks. Operator, will you please open the line for questions.

Q&A Session

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Operator: [Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from Michael Cho with JPMorgan.

Michael Cho: I just wanted to start on recruiting, Paul, you touched on the solid pipeline out there. You called out the June exit rate at a high single-digit percent level. I was hoping you could unpack a little bit more about that pipeline you see and maybe across different channels where you might be seeing better engagement. I mean I recall you called out during Investor Day about changing some of the recruiting functions, maybe centralizing some things. And so maybe is this result of some of the actions you’ve been taking in previous months and quarters. And this high single digits kind of the right pace for now given what you see in the pipeline?

Paul Marone Shoukry: Thanks, Michael. Yes, what I would say on the recruiting pipeline is in terms of the acceleration of activity, the number of events that we’re hosting, the number of advisers that we’re meeting with the entire team really across all of our affiliation options. When we speak to the teams who have been with Raymond James for a long time, we really haven’t seen this type of acceleration in activity since the financial crisis. And of course, the advisers that we’re talking to now are much larger than the advisers that were talking to us during the — after the financial crisis as a safe haven given all the disruption that was going on in the industry. So we’re really excited about this opportunity. It’s all hands on deck, both recruiters and also want to give a lot of credit to our transition teams because we — and we’ve invested in the transition teams as well, giving them more capabilities and capacities to really help with the uptick to ensure that we have seamless transitions of the new advisers that are affiliating with the platform but also ensure that we provide, and this is really important, exceptional service to our existing advisers and their clients as well.

So we don’t want that service level to fall off. Their satisfaction is very high right now as evidenced by the #1 ranking in the J.D. Power award for service and trust. And so we want to make sure we don’t dilute that as we bring on the new advisers who are affiliating with us.

Michael Cho: Great. If I could just switch to the balance sheet real quick. You saw some nice growth this quarter. You called out security-based lending and also some growth across CRE and C&I. Just wondering if you could just — how you’re planning the trajectory of balance sheet growth across some of the key segments for the remainder of the year. And then just on the other side, if we think about the third-party bank mix, how should we think about the normalized level over time as you continue to experience maybe better balance sheet engagement?

Paul Marone Shoukry: Yes. I think it was around this time last year that we were saying that clients are getting used to sort of the new level of interest rates and that we were expecting higher utilization of securities-based loans after really kind of 2 years of a lot of paydowns and payoffs. And that’s exactly what we experienced year-over-year securities-based loans to Private Client Group clients are up 20% across the firm. So really exceptional growth. And even mortgages are up 8% year-over-year across the firm. So really using the balance sheet to support clients and client demands and particularly clients of the Private Client Group business. And so — we don’t know what the trajectory is going to look like going forward. The momentum and the pipeline for securities-based lending continues to be strong. And so we, unfortunately, have a strong deposit base and a diversified deposit base to continue supporting that growth going forward.

Operator: The next question comes from Dan Fannon with Jefferies.

Daniel Thomas Fannon: One more on just organic growth. So Paul, your comments this quarter seemed a little bit more bullish, but generally consistent with what we’ve heard for the last few quarters. But yet, the NNA, both on a dollar basis and on a percentage growth basis is still below where you were last year and other periods. So what is the disconnect or could you talk to what maybe the negatives are that are maybe drawing down the overall growth levels.

Paul Marone Shoukry: Well, I mean, hopefully, you’re hearing sound more confident about our recruiting pipeline because that’s the intent. I mean, we — the activity levels are accelerating and picking up. And so we are increasingly, while we have been very consistently and successfully recruiting advisers across affiliation options, we have been consistent in our success there. We are growing even more optimistic just looking at the pipeline. Now again, these are pipelines. We don’t count our eggs until they hatch. And so we’ll — we have to convert the pipeline, and so they’ll look at that. And as a reminder, once you — once the new adviser affiliates with the firm, there is a lag in terms of when that shows up into NNA because then they have to bring over their clients and they have to bring over their assets.

So it’s not a just-in-time impact to NNA from the time we feel good about our pipeline to the time we see it in NNA. It could be 3, 6, 9 months, just depending on how quickly that pipeline is converting. We are still seeing pressure on the existing adviser base, private equity, we always say with the roll-ups in the absence of a value proposition, they compete with big checks. And so — while we’re seeing that moderate a bit as I think some of the valuations have just gotten so lofty that I think across the industry, a lot of the participants are questioning the valuations and the prices that these private equity backed roll-ups are paying for certain advisers, I think some firms are taking breathers, but there’s still a handful of aggressive firms out there.

And from time to time, that is disruptive, particularly in the independent channel. But aside from that, retention, morale, service levels, satisfaction levels, have been very good and our pipeline continues to accelerate.

Daniel Thomas Fannon: Great. That’s helpful. And then as my follow-up, just within brokerage, can you talk about the fixed income outlook? And what type of environment is best for that business to really accelerate?

Paul Marone Shoukry: Yes. I mean our biggest business in fixed income brokerage, and this is an important distinction from the bigger bulge bracket banks and wire houses who’ve had really strong quarters on the much higher volatility that you get with commodities and currencies and interest rates, especially in the environment we saw last quarter. We’re really not heavily engaged in those higher volatility segments within fixed income. I mean we’re really serving our biggest client base in the fixed income business, our depositories, banks and credit unions, helping them manage their securities portfolio. So in an environment where they’re deposit-rich, and there’s a lack of loan demand and opportunity to earn more by investing in securities out on the curve is an environment that’s most conducive for us in fixed income.

When there’s spread volatility, that helps our SumRidge business that technology-enabled business is really driven more on spread volatility. And spreads have been actually fairly tight and resilient. And so we haven’t seen the volatility that you may expect given sort of the macro uncertainty surrounding it. So that business hasn’t really seen the type of tailwinds that you would have otherwise expect with higher spread volatility.

Operator: The next question comes from Devin Ryan with Citizens JMP.

Devin Patrick Ryan: First question, just here on for cash balances, the decline was maybe a bit more than we had expected, and I know there’s a lot that goes into that with taxes and advisory fees and investors leaning to the market, but it’s a bit difficult from the outside to parse through kind of what’s cash sorting versus other trends. So just be good to get an update on what you’re seeing around your client behavior there, what you’ve seen through July, if you can share that? And then also what you’re expecting in the back half of the year just given what you talked about with kind of accelerating organic growth. So how much that could help for kind of rebuilding some of that transactional cash.

Paul Marone Shoukry: Yes. I’ll let Butch speak to the cash movements, particularly in the quarter. What I would say is you’re right, the pipeline as it converts as new advisers bring on new clients with new assets that should be, all else being equal, a tailwind to our cash balances. And before turning it over to Butch to talk about the quarterly change in cash balances, what I would do is kind of step back first and look at the year-over-year change in sweep balances, which have been pretty resilient. It’s been almost flat year-over-year at right around $42 billion for the sweep balances. So as we said maybe a year, 1.5 years ago, we feel like cash balances are relatively stable. We’re not ready to declare victory on that until we actually start seeing growth in those balances. And to your point, as Butch will talk about, that wasn’t the case this quarter.

Jonathan W. Oorlog: Yes. Thanks, Devin. As we talked about on last quarter’s call that there’s a seasonal element to cash balances in this quarter, client tax payments in — especially in the month of April, typically having the adverse effect on client balances in the short run. And so we certainly experienced that as well as the industry at large. And what we’ve seen in the month of June, and we’re encouraged by the month of June is what we’ve seen is we’ve seen $1 billion of growth in the balances that occurred in the month of June kind of as those seasonal factors kind of reverse. And so we’re hopeful that, that portends a positive trend for the balance is upcoming in the fourth quarter. But as Paul mentioned, when you look at those balance levels on a year-over-year basis, I mean there’s — continues to be relative stability in those balances year-over-year.

Devin Patrick Ryan: All right. Great color there. And then as my follow-up, I caught the press release on — in the Canadian business, you recently announced what you framed as a significant investment in [indiscernible] to accelerate the digital transformation of the wealth management infrastructure and elevate the adviser client experience nationwide. So I appreciate Canada is a smaller piece of Raymond James today, maybe were significant relative to the Canadian platform, but my attention. So what you can kind of the size and strategy of that investment more broadly in this world where outright acquisitions in the space have been really competitive and maybe pricey. Could we see more of these strategic investments as maybe an outlet for excess capital?

Paul Marone Shoukry: Yes. We’ve been in the Canadian market for a very long time, and it’s certainly an important market for us, particularly in wealth management, but also in capital markets. And we have a profitable business in wealth management. It generates good profitability, and we have a best of both world’s value proposition in Canada that’s very similar to the value proposition that we have in the U.S., where we’re competing against the big 6 banks up there, and we offer a more adviser-centric culture and all the capabilities that the advisers that are mostly — most of them come from those banks have become accustomed to having. And so that value proposition resonates up in Canada. It’s a very attractive market for us.

It’s one that we’re committed to. And we’re going to continue just like we do in the U.S. and in the U.K. to continue to invest in their resources. The press release mentioned a new technology system for them that we’re really excited about and the advisers they are excited about as well. So it’ll just continue to be, we look for acquisitions in the Canadian market as well. There’s not as many as not as fragmented as the U.S., although U.S. is becoming a lot less fragmented too. But we would be — if we find a firm up in Canada, on the wealth side, that’s a good cultural fit, strategic fit and at a price that makes sense, we would welcome inviting them to the Raymond James family.

Operator: The next question comes from Kyle Voigt of KBW.

Kyle Kenneth Voigt: So it sounds like some positive momentum on the recruiting side. Paul, you mentioned some easing dynamics very recently, maybe some firms in the industry taking breathers on transition assistance rates or recruiting packages. But just curious how you would describe the current environment — competitive environment even after that easing versus where we’ve been over the past year or 2? And then also wondering if you could comment on whether Raymond James has changed anything in terms of how it’s approaching recruiting packages in recent periods.

Paul Marone Shoukry: Yes. I mean I would just say the environment remains competitive. It’s been — I’ve been with the firm for 15 years, and it’s been competitive since I joined the firm, and those who have been here much longer have described an environment that was competitive before that. So the dynamic that’s relatively novel in the last 5 years is these PE backed roll-ups cropping up everywhere. And over the last 3 years, in particular, they’ve been extremely aggressive and trading and paying at higher and higher multiples. And I think they’re getting to the point now somewhat of a inflection point, I think, in that business where they’re trying to figure out what’s next. How much higher can those multiples go, especially when you compare them to public company multiples, I mean it’s significantly higher in many cases than public company multiples.

So they’re — I think they’re looking at what’s next. Is there a public market for that type of multiple or are there strategic buyers for that type of multiple. Is there another private equity buyer or a continuation fund. And so that’s just, I think, surfacing those type of questions. But I don’t want to overstate the impact that’s having on the competitive environment because, again, it only takes 2 or 3 firms that are earlier in their stage of deploying their capital that they’ve already raised to keep that competitive environment sort of frothy. And so that is still a competitive environment out there. But I do think that the tone that I’m hearing is a little bit different from some of those roll-up firms than maybe it was a year or 2 ago.

Kyle Kenneth Voigt: That’s very helpful. And maybe just staying on the recruiting topic. And just regarding your earlier comments about the largest acceleration in activity since the financial crisis. Like do you think this is an industry-wide dynamic or you’d expect to see overall industry-wide churn levels increase over the next 12 months? Or do you think it’s more idiosyncratic or something about Raymond James is positioning in the market currently that’s made the platform more attractive and has caused you to see this acceleration recently?

Paul Marone Shoukry: No. I think — I mean, there’s certainly been M&A-driven catalyst, particularly on the independent side of the business that you all are well aware of. And so I think that, again, the success that we’re having, though is not concentrated only from that particular catalyst. We’re seeing success from a lot of different firms across our affiliation options. But that catalyst certainly has led to — or contributed to the acceleration in our recruiting pipeline and our recruiting activity.

Operator: The next question comes from Bill Katz of TD Cowen.

William Raymond Katz: Maybe sticking on just sort of dynamic of accelerating financial adviser and the new asset growth. I was wondering, could you talk a little bit about does that have any structural impact on your comp ratio? And also, I was wondering with the assets that are coming in, given that the teams are larger, does that have any kind of adverse impact on the client cash as a percentage of those assets that are coming in the door?

Paul Marone Shoukry: I would say, again, we have over $1.6 trillion of client assets. So for anything to really make a meaningful change to any of these firm- wide ratios, it would have to be really substantial. So I would say it would be more of a glide path than a sudden change in any of the ratios across the board with what we’re talking about. Just given the size of the base and the magnitude of what you’d have to bring on to change to move the needle given the size of the base.

William Raymond Katz: Okay. And this is my follow-up. Just from a big picture down at your Investor Day, you were pretty rigid in terms of looking at the market and seem a little heavy from an M&A perspective on pricing. You’ve seemingly passed on a few things. Wondering if you could update us on your thoughts about how the strategic backdrop is looking from an M&A perspective, and where you might be most focused?

Paul Marone Shoukry: We continue to stay very, very busy in our corporate development function. And so we’re developing relationships across the spectrum in terms of early inning relationships to more advanced discussions around potential opportunities. And so we would just continue to look for opportunities. Our biggest business is private clients, and we envision that 5, 10, 15 years from now that will still be our biggest business. So that is in terms of targets, where we would look for acquisitions first, but also capital markets and asset management. I think the bank, we already have 2 charters. And so — and we have one branch and 2 ATMs across those 2 charters. So we have really a utility bank to serve clients and not a brick-and-mortar type business structure there.

And so we continue to remain active across all of our businesses and develop relationships again across the spectrum from early discussions, preliminary discussions to more advanced discussions. But most importantly, we’re not going to do a deal to just do a deal. It has to meet our 3 criteria: First being a good cultural fit. No matter how good the revenues and profits are. If it’s not a good cultural fit, it’s not going to work in our business. And if it’s a good cultural fit and it has to be a good strategic fit, where 1 plus 1 gives us a chance of being more than 2, where we make them better and they make us better. In our history of acquisitions, we’ve always tried to retain the management team, and we have a great track record of doing that.

Our Public Finance and Fixed Income business is still run by the leaders that came over from Morgan Keegan back in 2012, for example, and so we want to be better after the acquisition, not just add assets or revenues. And then finally, if those first 2 boxes are checked, then the valuation has to make sense for us and has to make sense to the selling party. And so those — we’re going to remain disciplined in that regard.

Operator: The next question comes from Alex Blostein with Goldman Sachs.

Alexander Blostein: I wanted to ask you guys a question around just the margins in the quarter, but also the targets and sort of relay that back to your capital markets commentary from earlier in the call. So 19% for the quarter, as you mentioned, it’s running a little bit below the 20% target that you guys are shooting for. Is the pipeline in banking what are you seeing right now and stuff that’s sort of tangible enough to get you guys into that 20-plus percent pretax margin goal that you outlined at the Investor Day?

Jonathan W. Oorlog: Yes. With respect to the current quarter, we were pleased with the 19% pretax margin for the quarter given the softness in the Capital Markets segment for the quarter that we experienced and although we continue to see the capital markets business long term as a mid-teens margin type of business, we do continue to expect to be able to achieve that. And just with the improvement in the capital markets environment, it wouldn’t foretell well for us to be able to deliver on that pretax margin target of 20% that we that we shared at Investor Day. And as we previously mentioned, we feel — we also feel good about the tremendous tailwinds that we have in the private client business with the upcoming quarter with the 8% increase in fee billable assets. And so we continue to feel good about the opportunities to improve on the margin from this quarter.

Alexander Blostein: Got it. Second question for you guys, just around opportunities to better leverage the wealth platform as you think about incremental revenues related to the alternative platforms, alternative business that are out there. Some of your peers, especially on the larger cap side, did quite a good job monetizing that opportunity where effectively shelf space payments. How are you thinking about that for AJ? It feels like the opportunity to increased penetration of alternative products, private market strategies continues to expand. So maybe some guidepost in terms of what percentage of the asset base is in private strategy today. where you guys think that could go? And again, the revenue opportunity attached to that over time?

Paul Marone Shoukry: Yes. Our penetration in the private markets is lower than some of the bigger firms that we compete against. So I think there’s a lot of headroom there. But we, unlike some of our firms that we compete against, we’re not going to push the products to create more monetization opportunities or create more “stickiness” That’s really not our culture. So it will be driven by demand of clients and their advisers. And so — and there is more demand for those type of products that is just naturally organically happening. We’re providing a lot of education and resources and a broader and deeper set of products alternatives in that space. And so we’ll continue to invest in it. We have a new leadership team in that space that we put in place 4 months ago or so and they’re really investing in the education and increasing the awareness of the solutions to the advisers and the increasingly high net worth clients that these products make more sense for.

So we have a lot of — in summary, I would say, we have a lot of headroom. We’ve got a lot of investments in these areas. We have a great set of products across the spectrum. But we are not going to have quotas or push products or create sort of variable incentives to try to drive growth in those products. It’s just not the type of culture that we have at Raymond James.

Operator: The next question is from Jim Mitchell with Seaport Global Securities.

James Francis Mitchell: Maybe you mentioned a couple of times strong inflows into fee-based assets in PCG. I know you don’t disclose that data, but can you kind of give us a sense of at least a ballpark of the level of growth you’re seeing in fee-based flows. And is that materially better than NNA? And maybe just talk about the dynamic between the 2.

Paul Christopher Reilly:

Executive Chair: Yes. I mean the fee-based flows have been stronger than the overall flows. And you see that with just the level of client asset. I mean overall, if you look year-over-year, client assets under administration overall for the firm have grown at 11% where fee-based assets have grown 15%. And so that’s the best way, I think, to just to mention the relative growth of fee-based assets versus overall assets at Raymond James. And we’re now at 65% or so of our asset — overall assets in the Private Client Group are fee-based. And so we’ve always really led the industry in fee-based penetration. And so — but we also — when it makes sense for clients, we also want to continue offering a competitive and robust brokerage solution as well.

James Francis Mitchell: So you don’t think it’s like a difference in client mix that sort of gap between the 2 is really organic growth and fee-based being a couple of hundred basis points higher than NNA growth.

Paul Marone Shoukry: Well, I mean, advisers over a long period of time have been shifting their business to more fee-based business and advisory-based relationships. But a lot of clients have both a fee-based account and a commission-based account because they have assets that have different objectives and priorities around them and some of those assets may be better invested in a brokerage account or — and some of those assets may be better invested in an advisory relationship and a fee-based account. So it’s not that any adviser, any client just does one or the other. It’s a mix, and it’s really driven by what is best for clients.

James Francis Mitchell: Yes, all fair. So just maybe a follow-up on the recruiting pipeline. Is it pretty broad-based across all affiliation options? Or is it more concentrated in 1 specific segment?

Paul Marone Shoukry: No, I would say, we’re seeing good success across all of our affiliation options. There’s certainly the acceleration rate within the independent channel is probably higher, but we’re still seeing very good success in the employee affiliation option and the independent RIA option as well.

Operator: Your final question comes from Michael Cyprys of Morgan Stanley.

Michael J. Cyprys: Just on the investment banking side, you mentioned that you expect the next 2 quarters to be better than the prior 2 quarters. Just curious if you could elaborate a bit on what you’re seeing, how the magnitude of the pipelines has evolved and what you’re seeing from an environmental standpoint, supporting your confidence versus, say, 1.5 months ago at your Investor Day.

Paul Marone Shoukry: Yes. I think there was just an immediate — and this is an industry-wide statement, not just specific to Raymond James. But I think across the industry, in early April, there was a lot of shock with just the tariff discussions and the magnitude and the breadth of the tariffs and people not really understanding exactly how that will pan out. And so as time has passed, as deals have been struck by the administration as the administration has pivoted on deadlines and shown a willingness to negotiate with the countries and come to a good overall hopefully positive solution. I think the shock that we had in early April has not fully worn off. And again, we could be shocked again tomorrow, who knows. But certainly, the market sentiment now is more positive than it was in early April.

And so — and there’s a lot of pent-up demand and there has been for several months now because of 2 years of really lackluster investment banking business across the industry. We have a lot of motivated buyers and sellers, particularly private equity sponsors, which represent 60% of our M&A activity in any given quarter a year, roughly 60%. And so they have companies that are sort of beyond their original time lines in terms of being sold out of the portfolio, so they could distribute capital back to their LPs. And then they also have — on the buyer side, they have capital that needs to be deployed. So there’s a lot of pent-up demand. And I think as there’s more certainty and less shock in the system and more certainty around tax reform, which was successfully implemented in the tariff reform and now maybe around interest rates to some extent as long as there’s certainty around those things, no matter what the outcome is, I think there’ll be a better environment for that pipeline to convert to realizations.

Michael J. Cyprys: Great. And then just as a follow-up question, more bigger picture. Just curious if you could just give us a little bit of an update, thoughts around digital assets, stablecoin strategy. How you’re seeing the opportunities for Raymond James, what steps might we see you guys take over the next 12 months as it continues to garner more attention across the marketplace.

Paul Marone Shoukry: I think we’re encouraged. I mean what we’ve been asking for through the last couple of years really is for the regulation and the regulatory framework to catch up to the demand into sort of the actually penetration and utilization of these type of products. And so we’re encouraged. I think there’s a lot more even as recently as last week, our trade associations, I know, which we have senior leadership representation on, we’re really engaged on the hill on trying to help regulations catch up to the demand and interest for these type of products. And so — in the meantime, we’ve been, as you can imagine, very deliberate. We want to protect clients first and foremost. And until the regulations catch up, the clients are at some level of risk that’s disproportionate to the other securities where the regulations have been in place for a very long period of time.

And so we’re not bleeding edge on these type of products, but we are monitoring them very closely. We have teams that are focused on understanding what other competitors are doing and what’s available and what’s not yet available, what may be available. So we’re studying it very closely, trying to be as responsive as we possibly can to our advisers and their clients. Great. Well, I think that was the last question. I just want to thank all of you for your time and interest in Raymond James. We certainly do not take it for granted. And I also want to thank all of our financial advisers, bankers, associates and clients for trusting Raymond James and for doing such great work across the country. So we really appreciate it, and we wish all of you well.

Operator: This concludes today’s conference call. Thank you for joining. You may now disconnect.

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