After 26 years helping his clients try to get rich, Indiana securities broker James Madden thought it was his turn to make a lot of money when a recruiter from Raymond James offered him $150,000 — nearly twice his annual income — to shift his business to the Florida-based firm.
Madden said there was just one catch: Each time he failed to reach his sales quota in a three-month period, he would have to repay $7,500.
Six months after cashing in his windfall, Madden was in trouble. Business was down, and he had to give back $15,000. Madden started making secret trades in client accounts to reach his sales targets. Regulators later found unauthorized trades for at least 15 people and suspended his license. Raymond James fired Madden and paid $36,000 to reimburse one of his clients, records show.
"I got seven kids and they are all in private schools and college — I was not prepared to give back $7,500 every quarter," Madden said. "If I was Raymond James, I wouldn't want anybody to know about that [bonus] program. It is ridiculous. If my clients knew about that, they would have fired me, I am sure."
For most brokers, getting a six-figure check to bring their clients to a new firm is a moment to celebrate. But records obtained by the Star Tribune show that the strings attached to these rich packages have destroyed the careers of hundreds of brokers since 2012 and caused financial woes for some of their customers.
In the past five years, Minneapolis-based Ameriprise Financial, Wells Fargo and three more of the nation's biggest investment firms spent at least $40 million to settle complaints filed by investors against brokers who accepted a bonus to change firms, records show. Most of those complaints were settled in arbitration with no public disclosure.
"These bonuses are like the crack cocaine of the securities industry," said Chicago attorney Andrew Stoltmann, past president of the Public Investors Arbitration Bar Association, a trade group that promotes stronger consumer protections. "They lead to a whole lot of chicanery in the industry, because there is extraordinary pressure to pay those things off."
Paying bonuses to recruit top performing brokers and their clients is not a new practice among investment firms, but a booming stock market and aging workforce have made the competition more intense and expensive than ever. Recruiting packages in the six figures are now typical. Ameriprise, the nation's fifth largest investment firm, spent $152 million on recruiting in 2017, nearly triple what it spent in 2010, according to records filed with Minnesota regulators.