Investing Billions - E225: Inside the $324B Playbook: How Hightower Is Reshaping Wealth Management
Episode Date: October 13, 2025Can a $324.3 billion wealth manager reinvent how high-net-worth investors access private markets? In this episode, I speak with Robert Picard, Head of Alternative Investments at Hightower Advisors, w...ho is leading one of the industry’s most ambitious expansions into private markets. We discuss how Hightower is bringing institutional-grade research, access, and due diligence to individual investors, what the NEPC acquisition means for its alternatives platform, and how technology and AI are reshaping the way portfolios are built. Robert also shares lessons from more than 35 years of building multi-billion-dollar alternative platforms atThe Carlyle Group/Rock Creek, Optima Fund Management, RBC Capital Markets and State Street/InfraHedge, and explains why the future of wealth management will look more like an endowment model than ever before.
Transcript
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When you look at all the companies in the United States today that generate more than $100 million in revenues,
91% of those companies are still private.
I mean, that's crazy numbers.
So only 9% are public.
Historically, just to give you an idea, they're very famous private equity firms, growth managers.
The minimum investment size used to be $25 million.
Today, the same investment access can be acquired for investments as small as $10,000.
So there have been huge evolution or change in technology, which has made it more accessible,
that now enable what I refer to as the democratization and miniaturization of private markets.
Now we're entering into this artificial intelligence cycle, which is a 10-year cycle.
Lovable basically created five websites for me in about a period of 20 minutes.
And I went to bed. I couldn't sleep that night.
I was so upset.
And I was upset because my brain couldn't process the transformational change that's occurring,
not only in our economy, but in everything we do as investors.
The reality of AI and the reality of the information that's coming
and the volume of information is that I will be disrupted.
Robert, I've been so excited to chat.
Welcome to the High Invest podcast.
Thank you, David, for having me.
I've been waiting a long time.
Really excited to be here today.
So give me a sense for where High Tower is today as a business.
So High Tower Advisors is currently owning north of over 100 separate wealth management firms
across over 34 states and currently managing 300 plus.
over $320 billion in wealth management assets.
And you recently merged with NEPC.
So tell me about the strategic rationale for that acquisition,
and how are you integrating that into your business?
So great question.
So, you know, Hightower is this wealth management platform
where we've been convincing and acquiring wealth managers
all around the country with the purpose of sort of presenting them this concept of you get the best
of both worlds where you maintain that white glove service of a local wealth manager who knows
their clients who know who are very close to their clients and then you get the benefit of this
this national behemoths such as high tower where we have and this is where I get back to the
NEPC question value added services or we refer to as VAS and you know we have to demonstrate to all
those wealth managers that we add value to their business. And that was really a lot of the purpose
behind the acquisition of NEPC, also known as New England Pension Consultants. And I'd like to say
that we're probably one of the first wealth managers or RAAs to deepen our bench on the research side,
where we can not only bring evaluated services in the form of research, but also in the form of
model portfolios across both public markets, private markets, and bring basically
all of that expertise that NEPC has built over their long history, managing money for
institutional clients, insurance companies, endowments, foundations, and pension funds,
bringing that knowledge and adapting it for the growth of high net worth and wealth
management in general. So that's really become a significant benefit to our teams to have
that evaluated service of research from NEPC. On one side of the coin, you have NEPC, which
has advised the very leading endowments, pension funds, foundations, very large family offices.
And on the other end, you have High Tower that's been advising high net worth, ultra-high-net-worth.
If you're building a portfolio for these two different customers, how does that differ and should it differ?
Should you have a different portfolio as a high-net-worth individual versus, say, endowment?
So I would say they're slightly different animals.
the high net worth individual versus the institutional investor. Part of that has to do with their
liquidity structure, meaning that a large pension funder endowment very often have many years ahead
or a long runway for an investment. And they have the freedom to invest with 5, 10, if not 20 year
investment horizons, where the high net worth investor, not only do they often have more requirement
for liquidity, but they also need to really understand and be able to touch, feel their portfolio.
And, you know, just to give an example, today the average endowment, the average university
endowment has more than 50% allocated to private markets. The average billionaire have more
than 50%. The average pension, approximately 25%, but that said, there's a huge gap because
the average individual investor or a high net worth investor has less than 5%. So we've really been
working to close that gap through education, through research. But I still think that the way we
approach wealth management is still quite different than the way institutional pension fund
would look at it, where our clients need to understand and need to have that feeling, you know,
they feel the portfolio. You know, we look at private markets. And obviously, I oversee private
markets on the investment solutions team, which is led by Stephanie Link at Hightower. And she's on,
she's a paid contributor on CNBC on a weekly basis.
But, you know, our effort is, you know, we have public markets,
and then we look at private markets as simply complementing those public markets.
So the average investor, when they're, you know, invested in, let's say,
NVIDIA or the main, you know, certain technology companies, Palo Alto networks and others,
they can understand what those companies do.
They have, to a certain degree, all that research that's available publicly on their iPhones,
but also from our team here at Hightower.
But then add to that the private markets, which should complement and provide them
with access to investments that are typically not available in the public markets.
I mean, just as a framework and I'm going off on a tangent, but I just want to frame it,
you know, public markets, when you look at all the companies in the United States today
that generate more than $100 million in revenues, 91% of those companies are still private.
I mean, that's crazy number.
So only 9% are public.
So those 9% that are public, we have research.
We have information available about them.
But the 91% that are private really are this opportunity to generate real revenue and investment returns or risk-adjusted returns by investing in private markets.
So, you know, pension funds are much more used to now.
The institutional investors have been well-educated over the past 20 or 30 years on private markets investing.
That's why they have a higher allocation.
But the individual investors are less exposed.
They have less than 5%, mainly because a few years ago, a lot of products that are available today for them to gain access were not available.
So there have been huge evolution or change in technology, which has made it more accessible.
But most importantly, new products that have been developed by some of the leading private equity firms and other asset management firms that now enable what I refer to as the democratization and miniature.
of private markets where historically, just to give me an idea, they're very famous private equity
firms, growth managers, the minimum investment size used to be $25 million. That's way above the
threshold for the average investor. And today, thanks to more flexibility on regulation and new
products that have developed, those investments can be, the same investment access can be acquired for
high net worth investors for investments as small as $10,000. So that's really exciting. And I, I
think that's a big benefit that we're going to be leveraging both with the acquisition of
any PC, but most importantly, with also this increased focus within Hightower and our wealth
management firms on including and adding private markets to the model portfolios that we have.
I said another way at the very maximum. You wouldn't want to put more than two and a half
percent of your net worth into any one manager. That be at the very high end. So at 25 million,
you need a billion dollars in net worth to write that kind of check without going over your
skis. And now with 10,000, now, you know, you need half a million or a couple of million dollars.
So, David, I'm already evaluating you as a potential client and you clearly have the right
approach for investments. I will argue. And unfortunately, not all of our clients are as well-versed
as you are and your listeners in the sense that we still have a lot of investors who are much more
concentrated, much more focused on, you know, putting a lot of their money in individual stocks or
or higher allocations where I actually applaud you, we take the similar approach that you just
suggested, which is proper diversification, not only on the public portfolio, but most importantly
in the private market side, we also like to be well diversified across both managers and
positions. On one side, you have an endowment that might be 50% in alternatives, mostly private
assets, and you have an individual that mostly is under 5%. An individual high net worth investor,
let's define them as having $5.20 million net worth. What percentage of their money should be in
private assets? Oh, wait, I need to pull out my calculator now because now you're giving me actual
numbers that I'll have to evaluate and calculate off the cuff. No, kidding aside. So we approach
this, and again, this is one of the benefits of Hightower's ecosystem where, you know, we own
these 100 plus private wealth management firms. Each client is different. Each client is different,
because it depends where they are in their multi-generational wealth,
where they are with their liquidity,
where they are with their age demographic.
A 26-year-old who just had an exit from a Silicon Valley-based software company
might have a very different view on how they want to invest
and allocate more to private markets than, to a certain degree,
a 70- or 80-year-old gentleman who really has a history of investing with GE
and or more traditional stocks.
So there's a lot of education involved
and there's a lot of handholding
and most importantly,
making sure that our wealth managers
know their client and do what's best for the client.
So with that caveat that there's this wide spectrum
of client type,
we really look at it as conservative, balanced, and growth.
So just as similar as you look at a traditional public portfolio
in the same way,
where is the client,
depending on where they are in their age and what they want to do with their earnings and how much
if they want to be more income generating versus growth and have the patience and the risk
appetite for significant growth, meaning traditionally people have talked about, you know, a 60-40
portfolio. So 60% allocated to equities, 40% into fixed income. That would be a growth portfolio,
at least at high tower, or in some cases defined as aggressive. And we'd apply to
same doctrine to the private markets piece. So let's say conservative approach would be having
a 10% allocation to private markets, balanced would be a 20% allocation to private markets,
and then 30% allocation to private markets would be considered to be growthy. And then within
each one of those allocations, conservative would be basically almost a 2080 portfolio. So 20%,
if you're looking for a conservative approach to private markets, 20% as an example, would be in
private equity, venture capital, and secondary private equity. And then the remaining 80% would
be allocated across both real estate and private credit to generate income. You know, whether it be
owning multifamily homes, certain public storage or single family rental facilities, and then
private credit owning, you know, income and lending or acting as a bank almost within this private
fund. So 2080, let's say, on the conservative side. Balanced, it's 50-50. So you'd have to a certain degree,
50% allocated to a combination of private equity venture and secondary private equity.
And then the remaining 50%, let's say 25, 25 would be real estate and credit.
And then on a growth side, it would be 6040.
So 60% now allocated to those different private equity or equity-like investments on the private side.
And then the remaining 40% 2020.
So 20 in real estate and 20 in private credit.
So that's really how we approach it.
And once you take that notion, it's funny, we were talking to a large private equity firm recently that everyone's
trying to figure out how to approach high net worth in a rational, thoughtful way. And we were
really excited because we've been struggling with this. I'd say we've passed several years on how
best to handle asset allocation within the private markets bucket. And to quote this private
equity manager, my colleague Frank Cordio and I, he literally, they literally said, you guys have
cracked the code. And High Towers figured out how to present and allocate. And then we went through
all the historical research on a 16-year basis on how those returns would translate with
those type of allocations. And pretty much in all cases, in all cases, it generates better
risk-adjusted returns with all of those allocations compared to a traditional 60-40 or
40-60 public portfolio. Boy, that's a lot to download, David. I hope that wasn't too much,
but that'll give you an idea of kind of how we approach. Really just conservative, balanced growth.
I have a very paradoxical belief in the virtue of illiquidity in that illiquidity can be very useful in just the right times during market downturns, can keep people from committing unforced errors, like liquidating at the bottom of markets.
What do you think about this?
And could illiquidity be a feature?
Interesting take. And I love the fact that you take that you take that approach.
So I've lived through, I've been doing this for 35 years.
And historically, before really there was significant investments in private equity, everyone was investing in hedge funds.
And I come from a very liquid background.
I come from a trading and global equity, derivative background where my mantra was always liquidity, liquidity, liquidity.
And my frustration at times in the 1990s and most importantly during the global financial crisis was I was always acutely aware and our clients were always acutely aware of the illiquity of private markets.
yet many clients would get very frustrated and angered when they would have, let's say, a suspension of redemptions,
meaning that when they'd look to actually exit, the manager would be like, hey, you know, this would have a negative impact on not only your investment, but all the remaining investors in the fund, and it's probably not prudent to sell.
And what's interesting is that's actually a very fair argument because the same argument is true for your own personal house.
most Americans, at least on the high net worth side, own their home. And clearly, just because
there's a bit of a, you know, either noise or some sort of an economic downturn, everyone should
not rush to liquidate their home because your home price would drop almost instantly, especially
if it's a forced sale. And you can see it today with, you know, divorce and, and other effects
that occur in a marriage, that will often have a negative result on your pricing. So the same is true for
private markets. And what we've now discovered to close out in my agreement with your position on
liquidity is that investors have become much more aware of illiquidity, much more understanding,
and much better educated. And I really applaud our wealth management teams within Hightower
have done a great job at just educating clients to understand the importance, how illiquity
can be your friend in market downturns. But at the same time, only if your clients are well-informed,
and understand what they own and the fact that just because there's a short-term blip by simply
holding on to the investment, you know, keeping your wits about you, ultimately will rebound.
This has happened both in the global financial crisis. This was true most recently during the
pandemic in 2022, where there were moments or actually in 2020 at the beginning of the pandemic
where there are moments where private credit funds had a significant mark-to-market change in March of 2020
and subsequently rebounded almost immediately.
So anyone who would have sold at that time had a significant impact or loss where those that held on actually benefited in that thing.
And I'll just give one last anecdote, which is my late father who passed away, Kurt Picard, who had a bit of a German accent.
He was a great example of what not to do with market.
And he was an example where whenever he would call me and say, Rob, at this time, I think I need to sell the market.
I could literally call my brothers and I literally reach out to my colleagues and say, guys, time to buy the market.
Because he was always either the top tick or the bottom tick on the market and was always on the wrong side.
And unfortunately, now he's passed away, so I've lost my best indicator for when to buy and when to sell.
But that's exactly very true.
I think liquidity is something to be understood.
And the best thing we can do is to simply educate clients to understand what they own and the fact that, you know, being patient, often you're rewarded for that patience.
I had the CIO of Calsters, Scott Chan on the podcast, and they had a best idea contest within Calsters.
And the idea that one best idea is how to prepare for the next downturn, essentially this war games of the market's down 20%.
What do we do?
What's our step-by-step playbook?
And they created this playbook in Calsters.
This was ahead of the 2020, and they executed the playbook and they had great returns.
So they not only realized the value of that playbook, but they were able to have this prepared
mind to do this market sell off.
A well-known institutional investor that will go nameless, he said, the number one thing
you could do in a market downturn is to cancel your IC.
That is the one degree of freedom you could do to preserve your, to keep from exasperating
your losses because you go to that IC, you have that one person on your eight-person
And I see that yells fire, nobody stands up to them, and then you end up making the wrong
decision.
So that's probably the most extreme action, but potentially a very good action to take if faced
with that and if your organization is not well prepared for the downturn.
It's really interesting because you bring up a whole point of, you know, we're not perfect,
meaning investment managers and anyone, you know, traders, whether we day traders, long-term
investors and others, you know, we only know our most recent history and or our own
real life experience. And I think what's what I've found fascinating is we spend a lot of time
focusing on not only what can go wrong, but what will go right and how do we how do we get
there, like from a long-term perspective. And I have, I'm half Swiss. I was in the Swiss military,
very process driven in the way we operate. And, you know, the Swiss would be building
tunnels through the mountains that go on for 20 or 30 years. And I kind of look at, you know,
doing the same thing on the investment side, which is how do we position the portfolio in a way
that it's robust, that it'll be able to survive, like look at all the risks that could happen
currently, whether it be war, you know, recent war in the Middle East, whether it be, you know,
U.S. currency devaluation and or loss of U.S. dollar supremacy. You know, we're trying to always
focus on, you know, what are the different elements that can impact our portfolio and how do we
position that portfolio, not only for those impacts, but most importantly, regardless of what
may happen, that we're basically on riding a wave within that portfolio that will generate
revenue for years to come. And for instance, we've been investors in cybersecurity now for a
number of years, both on the public side with Stephanie Link, where she owns Palo Alto
networks. We've been invested in a cybersecurity fund that recently had one of our portfolio
companies taken out by Palo Alto. So it was very beneficial to our investors. But we really look at
areas where we know for the next 10 years there's going to be significant investment in that
space required by at the board level. It's a fiduciary for every U.S. corporation to have
someone reviewing and managing the cybersecurity risk.
And that's one area where we've rode that wave, probably a year before certain well-known private equity firms decided that was their top theme in 2024.
We were already investing in 2023, and that's in that concept.
Same with AI, though we are getting at times concerned with the growth and the expansion of AI, but it's extraordinary.
And I think it's extremely disruptive in the sense that, you know, and we'll probably talk briefly about the transformational moment, both on the wealth management side, financial technology.
but also the transformational moment in the way we operate as businesses due to artificial intelligence
and to a certain degree of health care.
So those transformational moments are really what we worry about and we spend a lot of time
thinking about to make sure that we basically planted seeds that reward us for those moments.
And I think Stefan Meister from Partners Group, I don't know if you had him on your show,
but he has a brilliant discussion about sort of the history of finance.
And he talks about the period of time when we went through industrialization, service
economy.
And then he talks about sort of the Internet 1.0 from 1990, which is a 25-year cycle and went on to mobile.
And now we're entering into this artificial intelligence cycle, which is a 10-year cycle.
And we're probably in the second or third inning of that 10-year cycle.
And right now is the time we have to.
to be planting seeds to basically leverage and reap the rewards just a few years from now.
And it's exciting, though at times concerning because I was playing with an app called Loveable
earlier this year in March.
And I created five websites watching it code.
It was a bit like war games in the States movie, the movie War Games with Matthew Broderick.
Lovable basically created five websites for me in about a period of 20 minutes.
And I went to bed.
I couldn't sleep that night. I was so upset. And I was upset because my brain couldn't
process the transformational change that's occurring not only in our economy, but in everything
we do as investors, because we're investing in companies that are going to be impacted by
this change. We're investing in people that are going to be impacted by this change. And it's
hard for myself even to comprehend the enormity of this change that's coming. So just one of the
one of the choices. But on that happy note, I'll turn back to you. But just
just wanted to share kind of that position.
On that note, we're in 2025, in 2030, 2035, what do you think your role will be as an asset
manager?
What's going to be streamlined?
What's going to stay the same?
What's going to evolve?
And what does the future of asset management look like?
Great question.
And break out the violence.
I'll probably be disrupted, meaning that my role today, my value add, and I've built my career,
always trying to add value, whether it being globalized derivatives, volatility, and
convertible bond trading, structured products, and investment management, how do we add value?
I want to always be in a situation where a computer can't do what I'm doing.
And one of the benefits of those 91% of companies that are still privately owned is there's
really very limited research on them.
And you need seasoned professionals such as myself and several others in the industry to
evaluate what the best investments are for our clients.
The reality of AI and the reality of the information that's coming and the volume of information
is that I will be disrupted in my role as a research analyst and as someone who diligence
as funds because the information will be much more readily available in the future.
It'll be readily available most likely in a website or in a app format.
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I talked about lovable a second ago.
One of the, one of the specs I gave was I big.
basically created that night in five minutes. I said the, the, the specifications I said is I
basically just defined my role as a private markets investor. I said, please create a website
that will provide research on individual fund investments all around the world in private credit,
private real estate, and private equity, provide investment memos using publicly available
information from the SEC and other platforms, and make this website,
compatible with U.S. securities law for a credit investor, qualified client, and qualified purchaser
thresholds. That was the specs I gave, right? And there's a lot of information there.
This thing in five minutes starts coding, and in five minutes it delivered a dummy platform
that provided all of what I just described. Obviously, it didn't have all five or 10,000
fund investment opportunities that are out there, and it didn't necessarily have
in-person evaluation of those, but it actually provided really good investment memos
with basic characteristics, basic descriptions, and basic, you know, different than Claude
and a number of other systems. And it was quite upsetting, and another reason why I didn't
sleep that night is because I will be disrupted. So that's one answer, which is, I think
I'll be disrupted, at least my role. That's one. The second one is, I believe the market
capitalization of private markets due to the fact that it's only now we're in the early
innings of it being embraced by the average investor we're at 12 to 13 trillion dollars let's say
based on the most recent evaluation of market capitalization for private markets that's going to grow
over the next six to eight years to 30 to 35 trillion dollars bane capital says north of 50
trillion some of our fund managers think it's going to be 80 trillion so
So I think there's a significant bifurcation and transformation occurring on the investment side where many wealth management firms, one of the reasons you join Hightower is to get access to the private markets information.
But wealth management firms, banks, insurance companies, pensions, and others are going to be building much more significant efforts and platforms.
Some of the well-known platforms that are out there today that are well-capitalized will also be.
solving for that solution of providing the miniaturization, democracy, making these solutions for
private markets available to investors with that growth. Whether that disrupts me or not, I hope not,
but I give myself another five or ten years. So to summarize your position, you're going to be
an unemployed person on your own private island with a 10-X portfolio. Based on what's been
in the news lately, I'm not sure I even want a private island and or be associated with a private
Island. But that said, no, kidding aside, I will be very proud of what was what's been built
and continues to be built not only at High Tower, but what we've been involved with on behalf
of our clients because it's so much fun. I mean, David, it's, and you know because while
you're meeting with me today, but this show is so well regarded and you have some of the highest
caliber investors in the world on your show. And you see firsthand the excitement that we have and
how much fun it is for us to evaluate and learn about new new technologies. I'll give you one
example. Life Sciences, I met with the Life Sciences manager the other day. This manager told me point
blank, you know, Picard, if you live for another five years, if you're healthy for the next five years,
you're going to live, 91% chance you live to 100 years old. And this person actually is not a,
he's not a con man. He's not a snake oil salesman. He's a legitimate business builder. He's a
founder. He's founded four or five different biotechnology firms. And it's really exciting. Now,
That will have an impact on, for instance, life settlements business where they have to evaluate what the average age or what are, well, without going into the morbid elements of life settlements.
But, you know, it has impacts.
But it's exciting because we're learning all these new, you know, I've got a front row seat to some of the best minds and the best investment opportunities out there.
I think investing, especially in a seat like yours, is one of the most interesting.
It's an infinite game.
So the thought experiment I like to say is right now we're on a podcast.
the cameras, the computers behind you are closed.
They're all different asset classes.
Different people produce these things.
And there's millions of different asset classes, different geographies, different supply chains.
If you were theoretically today to go and learn all these millions of different kind of industries and businesses,
that would probably take millions of years without AI.
But even if you were to do that, tomorrow morning, that would completely change.
New tariffs, some tariffs go through the Supreme Court, some do not.
A new competitor goes into the garment industry, to the computer industry, chips go up in price.
It's literally an impossible game to master, and it's one of the reasons I love playing this game
is because it's always, it always keeps you on your feet.
Yeah, and hopefully it will keep me at least employed a little longer before I get disrupted
by AI and other solutions.
So from one disruption to another disruption, 10, 20 years ago, when you had this exit, you sold your
company for $50 million in Silicon Valley, 26-year-old that you mentioned, you would go to
J.P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs, UBS, et cetera. And that was what everyone did, or most people did,
unless they sold for a billion dollars. They started their own family office. Today, you're riding
this wave of the independent wealth manager to the tune of, you know, this wave is to trillions
of dollars. How is it that your advisors are able to compete head to head against the large
wirehouses. One of the reasons High Tower exists today is because those
wirehouses have historically been forced for regulatory reasons to centralize their
investment efforts in one location. So there's consistency of allocation and investment
across the entire firm. Now, if you're dealing with thousand, thousands of clients
who are high net worth, who are investing millions and millions of dollars, that excludes
already the wirehouses from investing in many of the smaller funds. Any fund that's below a
billion dollars to a certain degree is off limits for many of the wirehouses because they can't
from a fair perspective offer that solution to all their clients. So they're actually left with
a dwindling or a smaller pool of private market managers to allocate money to. And that's actually
one of the reasons why a majority of the assets, both on the institution,
meaning pension fund and wirehouse side are often allocated to a few select fund managers
who have simply become much larger, much faster than others.
So you have this huge disconnect where there's a select few well-known private equity,
private credit, and private real estate firms that now manage hundreds of billions of dollars
in some cases.
And then you have now a huge growing population of smaller funds that are below a billion
below $500 million, even below $100 million that have some excellent money managers and the
opportunity to invest in much smaller firms, which are, I would almost argue, as a different pool
of alpha from the large players who could only invest in large deals. So to a certainly
the wirehouse is almost at a disadvantage because of their size. And what we're seeing now are
all these smaller RAs or smaller wealth managers with relationships and contacts, knowing their
clients can often access or invest in smaller private equity, private credit, and private real estate
firms that often are, if anything, more profitable often than these larger firms. That's one
differentiating factor. The other factor, there's another trend that's occurring, are very wealthy
families, very successful families. One example would be, let's say, Zuckerberg, Mark Zuckerberg,
and a number of others have created and participated creating their own wealth management firms.
where they look at it as, okay, we've got all this money, rather than giving it to a
wirehouse, why don't we pool our assets, hire the best investors in the world, and have them
not only manage our money, but then open up our firm to third-party managers so we can actually
cover those costs that we hired, but also invest almost as a club or invest alongside each other
and bring other clients on and make this business profitable. And that's happening more and more.
families are doing it. And we've seen some of the most successful firms, recently the Bezos family
have. Mark Bezos has set up his own fund called High Post, a number of others, where they're doing this. And that's
another competitor to the wirehouses. And why they're different is because they're obviously smaller in size.
They don't necessarily have the same centralized or the same requirements or regulatory oversight that a large
warehouse would have. But they also have a network, a direct network of sourcing of ideas and
information that is not typically available to the average private markets allocator that
the wirehouses may be employing. So it's just a very different, the ecosystem is evolving very
quickly. And I'd like to argue that one of the benefits and one of the main advantages, one of the
reasons I joined, Hightower is a firm, is because we actually have the best of both worlds,
where we're first of all smaller, with $300 billion under management, we're smaller than
the average wirehouse. So we can invest in funds, we can invest in $20, $30 billion fund.
managers, but we can also invest in a $250 million or $300 million firm and still offer that on a
fair allocation to all of our advisor practices. But we also have direct relationships with not only
our advisor practices, those 100 plus wealth management firms that are located in 34 different states
around the country, whether it be Seattle, San Francisco, Los Angeles, San Diego, and elsewhere.
But we also have relations with their clients. So one of their clients is like, oh, I'm best
friends with Peter Thiel. He has a fund that I'd like to invest with. That's a relationship that
we can leverage to then gain access. And we actually recently anchored investments with
individuals such as Peter Thiel, individuals such as David Rubenstein from Carlisle, where we've
simply anchored and been co-investors alongside them in different transactions. And that's really
where we have the benefit of cross-pollination and the best of both worlds. You know, individual
white glove relationships with high net worth, often found.
of companies and their clients, and then also this centralized national group such as
Hightower with value-added services such as NEPC, technology, cybersecurity controls, compliance,
and legal that allows those companies to operate in a very efficient way under the same banner.
So that's really where I think we compete pretty aggressively.
It's sort of a sweet spot for us.
I've said another way because of all this education in the space, including my
podcast, people are listening and getting smarter and they realize they don't want KKR fund
17. And when you are one of these large wirehouses and you're centralizing everything,
you have to write checks of 500 million to a billion, which, and you can't be a certain size of
the funds. So you have to go towards the mega funds. And although they have the brands and no
one gets fired for investing KKR, those aren't necessarily where the best returns are.
Well, first of all, I'm on one of the advisory boards with KKR on their RA advisory board.
I'm not going to besmirch. KKR, actually, by the way, KKR, and we-
I'm talking specifically about KKR Fund 17. Nothing against KKR 1.
No, no, no, I got it. No, no, but it's funny because we actually look at it as large,
small cap. And one of things, and I don't know if any other of your guests have talked about
this, but not only do we invest and offer solutions in each asset class, private equity,
private credit and private real estate for both evergreen solutions, often for accredited
investors, which allow for much smaller investments on a periodic basis, but also obviously
qualified purchase or drawdown structures for larger clients. But we also take a large cap, small
cap approach. So for every large KKR type investment, we'll often marry that with a smaller
cap, $200 or $500 million fund. Similar to what you do with an equity portfolio. And by the way, for
anyone who's interested, and you should get, I don't know if Pete Stavros has been a guest, but Pete Stavros runs
the private equity buyout effort at KKR, one of the funds, and he has a YouTube video.
He was featured on 60 Minutes recently, and it's an absolute tearjerker.
It's one of the best videos I've ever seen describing in a positive light the role of private
equity in today's economy.
And it's basically, it's great.
It's a tearjerker.
It's a five-minute video.
I recommend to all of your listeners to listen to it.
Pete Stavros talks about this investment they made in a garage door maker and how it changed
everyone's lives at the firm and at all the employees as equity owners.
It's a really a great story.
And so that's just closing out the KKR.
Yeah.
And also just to give credit to KKR and the Apollo, today, 95% of quote unquote retail money,
which is really $5 million plus net worth money, is going into these five firms.
So they're paving the way for retail.
And some would argue, as I would, that if you want to get high net worth people to invest into
alternatives, you start by giving them brand names, getting them comfortable around the product.
They never lose money.
they could get exposure to alternatives.
And then over time, you bring in the specialists, the lower cap, the funds that could go 5, 10X, the more exotic stuff.
So I do think there's an evolution there.
One of my questions is around this issue, which is in five to 10 years, do you still see high net worth focusing and the retail channel focusing on these five names or are they going to be more diversified?
And if so, what are some of those confluence of factors that's going to kind of diversify away from these five big names?
that are taking today 95% of retail capital?
That's a great question.
And this is where I would do a little bit of a pivot or a shuffle.
I don't know.
I think they'll continue to dominate and be very important,
both on creating new products, evolving technology.
But I think it's going to widen out.
I think it's going to mirror the public markets,
meaning you'll have these large players
who will continue to be large players
because they play an incredibly important.
role within our economy and ecosystem. But I think that you'll just have much more efficiency
and much more availability of research and information about smaller funds, which will invariably
grow more. And I think that's one of the reasons why you're seeing this increased interest in
GP ownership or companies buying or investing minority stakes or in some cases majority stakes
in some of these private markets fund investors because it's an opportunity. You know,
there's going to be significant growth for years to come. It's a growing area and it's a way to add
value to not only participate in generating returns from the actual investments themselves,
but also participate in the revenues generated from the growth of private markets in general.
And that's not just limited to, you know, the larger managers, some of which we've discussed
earlier, but also I think even the smaller managers are going to see a significant change.
And very often I think you're going to see, as we already saw recently, where some of the
wirehouses, some of the firms are going to be, there's going to be more and more consolidation
where they're going to group together. Similar to what Hightower is done on the wealth management
side, I think the same will occur on the investment side. I think just the other day this past
week, a very large family, historically it was a family office out of Dallas was just acquired
by another larger private credit manager or had a strategic investment made. And I think we're
going to see more and more of that happening, which is exciting. I think it's a natural,
It's one of the reasons I love the U.S. economy and have historically loved it, even though I started my career in the euro markets, is the U.S. economy is so transformed. It is so not flexible, but it adapts very quickly and adjusts very quickly. And there's constant movement. And often that's why the U.S. has remained and historically been a leader for both on Silicon Valley, but also I think in the financial industry.
guess, I think it probably follow most markets. So you have these five players today. Mark Rowan has
dedicated a billion dollars in CapEx into retail. So he's investing in billion dollars to get
retail and to get into Apollo. I think you'll get these five players. I think that market share
over time will go down from 95%, maybe to 50%, and we'll, you know, settle somewhere between 25 and 75%.
This is a big range, probably something like that. And then over time, there's going to be more tools.
So everything that Apollo is doing today will become product ties and will be offered to many more managers, and it'll become more accessible.
And then you'll see kind of a smoothing out more of market share.
I agree.
And it'll be interesting to see because look, look, we still have, even on the banking side, we're seeing the banks just getting larger to a certain degree.
I was interested to see Citibank recently outsourcing some of their wealth management.
to Black Rock, which I thought was fascinating and interesting.
But, you know, there's these, these developments that are occurring constantly.
I think the same will occur on the private market side, more and more.
You mentioned it earlier.
You've been in this industry for 35 years.
What has changed and what has remained the same over 35 years?
The change is technology.
The amount of technology, the amount of information we have today.
I remember we used to have to, you know, pick up the phone or do a telex or a fax to
to send out orders back in the 80s and 90s.
And today, you know, what we have available, I mean, it's like the Jetsons, which dates
me again, for those you don't know, the cartoon from the 1960s and 70s, like the fact
that we have on our iPhone, so much information available, one of the big changes, for instance,
we, we now when we present and go through compliance for getting information about fund managers
to our clients, historically you'd send them the marketing deck.
It used to be by FedEx.
Now it's by email.
You send the marketing deck, but now you send a nixieck and
summary, and now you can send videos with them. So clients can just click on the video and
meet the manager and learn very, very quickly. And it's funny. I was talking with John Diamond
from Dial Blue Owl recently. And he used to have a company called Vencast back in 1990 that
unfortunately didn't deal well with broadband or didn't have the bandwidth needed to actually show
videos, but he actually had that same strategy back in 2009, in 2000, I met. And I think that's what we're
seeing is the evolution of technology, the speed of technology, the speed of change.
change, the transparency is increased, the awareness of liquidity. But most importantly, I just
see this democratization, even at the level of private credit, where historically lending was
done by community banks and banks or commercial banks. Today now, we as investors, we have the
technology and the solutions where we can invest in fund companies or fund managers who basically
our money becomes part of the bank. And we're now lending, we can invest in a fund that lends
to subprime borrowers or high net worth borrowers to go buy boats or buy cars or buy homes or
whatever. And we basically generate or earn return on that or earn the income. So there's
these moments that are just really exciting. And that's the biggest change. I think it's just
technology, information, and having it at your hand fingertips instantly. And with AI, I mean,
We were just talking recently about, you know, we have a knowledge base within Hightower where, you know, Q&A about, you know, things you need to know questions about what you need to know about private markets.
And to a certain degree today, we could just literally insert a GUI or a graphic user interface into JATGPT to ask any question because whatever question they ask about, you know, what's a drawdown structure, what's a qualified purchaser will immediately spit it out versus us putting together a PDF with all those questions.
I mean, it's just, it's crazy how much quicker we can.
You know, we're on Zoom calls where we're getting notes summarized where historically
we had two or three people.
Like, I sit in meetings sometimes to this day.
I was in a meeting yesterday on a Zoom.
I shall not talk about who I had the meeting with, but they had four people taking notes
on their computers, like typing and scribbling.
I'm like, why are you taking notes?
Like, what in the world?
I mean, I get it that maybe that helps you listen, but that can all be automatically
transcribed and summarized and you can get clear notes. You can actually listen and really
do what you're supposed to do, which is evaluate the investment and be present versus just
taking notes nonstop. So it's just funny to see how the world has changed. Sorry,
long-winded answer, but those are the main changes. So today, you're head of alternatives at
High Tower. You have over 320 billion, almost a third of a trillion dollars. What is the recent
mistake that you made that you no longer do?
Listen, I make a, David, I make, I make a lot of mistakes.
Please don't tell you one.
No, kidding aside, I think the largest mistake that I'm, I fault myself is when I joined
High Tower, it was one of the reasons I joined is because it was a bit like a puzzle.
We own 100 plus wealth management practices or advisor practices, many of which were investing
or had significant investments in private markets across multiple platforms in feeder funds,
direct investments across a number of platforms, such as case, I capital, P.B. Conway, many
others. And it became clear to me that we needed to centralize or have a technology solution
that would allow us to manage, oversee, and most importantly, provide a much improved user experience
for those teams because teams would call me all day long like where can I find this fund where's this
fund where what's my list where can I select from what what's available and we I basically designed a system
or a platform called the private markets exchange the PMX I'm going to get to where I went wrong so I
designed this PMX and it would basically allow all of our teams to have straight through processing the
experience investing in private markets is really not that enjoyable because you have to fill out
subscription documents. There's K.Y.C. Anti-money laundering, a lot of dozens of pages,
if not hundreds of pages of documents. And then you get approved or not approved. Then it gets
kicked back. You have to go through this process. Very, very tedious. And then the tax reporting,
the reporting mechanism, very, very difficult and challenging. So we created straight through
processing. So from our Salesforce system, straight through, populates subscription documents,
immediately goes through compliance, approved, not approved, goes then to the administrator,
to the fund manager, approve, not approved, it typically gets approved, and then goes to our
reporting engines automatically. So rather than having 40 or 50 separate back offices, we've got one
centralized solution. Now, the reason I'm bringing this up as a mistake, this was a great
architecture. And my mistake was this required work within High Tower of convincing
leadership, our legal team, our compliance team, our risk management team, our operations team,
and our wealth managers.
And the mistake I made was I was too gentle,
meaning I didn't communicate with enough conviction
how great this would be.
And for a number of reasons,
I was a new guy on the block at Hightower.
They didn't really know my background.
They didn't know,
and I think they've had bad experiences
where they might have been burned
with solutions like this in the past.
So there was a lot of hesitancy.
and I just didn't push hard enough.
And I think my big regret is I should have just basically been much more aggressive.
But again, the problem with being aggressive in a corporate world is sometimes that could be off-putting
and you really want it to be very collegial and work, do it in a more gentle fashion.
So I actually went very gentle, took time, and probably could have done it a year earlier.
The good news, though, is we are close to production.
It's expected to be launched early next year and really excited about it.
But I do kick myself as I should have been much more aggressive with my messaging.
And that was just me wanting to be loved and making sure I didn't make enough waves.
Let's put it that way.
I didn't want to make waves.
I wanted to be very conciliatory and collegial in the way I approached it.
And ultimately resulted in a good result.
We are going to be launching, but I could have done faster.
So that's my big, big frustration.
There's a lot of listeners that are just starting their career or 10, 20 years in.
you've been in your career for 35 years, what is one piece of advice that you give yourself
as a young, Robert, just going in 35 years ago, that this timeless advice that would benefit the audience?
The main advice, I would say, is be curious, keep listening. Don't be afraid to trust your
instincts. Like, you know best. Wisdom grows from really humility. And I think that's really
important. That's one. The second one would be maintain your network. I was recently,
at a learning experience at Wharton and they started explaining to us, you know, how important
it is to maintain your network. So your network of camp friends, your network of college friends,
your network of professional friends, and keep in touch with that network. And that is so important.
Now, obviously, it gets difficult because you get to the hundreds, if not thousands,
of contacts and you really have to decide who you want to spend time or spend time connecting
with that. But I think that's really important. Now, obviously, with LinkedIn and other
solutions you can be in contact much quicker. But I think maintain your network and the last
piece, the best piece of advice that I've learned has taken me 30 years to get there is have fun.
Make it fun. Have fun with your team. And if people are cranky, make it fun. Just figure out a way
to make it real, whether it be getting tacos, whether it be doing fantasy football, whether it be playing
bad boys in the morning after fantasy football draft because you drafted, you and your colleague
drafted two suspended players and we're now the bad boys of our league. Just make it fun and make
it interesting. That would be my advice. Well, if the most effective person, human on the planet is
playing Diablo a couple hours a day, I think there's something to that. What would you like our
listeners to know about you, about Hightower, anything else you like to share? I would just emphasize
that we are, we are right now entering into a moment of incredible transformation. And
And you absolutely must think about not only your own career within that transformation, but
most importantly, where you're placing your bets in your investment portfolio to take advantage
and make sure that you're on the right track and writing the right wave within that
transformative moment. Because it is, it's coming and it's coming fast, much faster than we
expect. Well, it's my first interview in our new studio. And there are two seats here. So look
forward to continuing this conversation, having you be back on very soon.
David, thank you so much for having me.
I really appreciate it.
Thank you, Robert.
Thanks for listening to my conversation.
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