Which Firm is No. 1 in Investor Satisfaction?

Edward Jones, top ranked

Edward Jones came out on top of J.D. Power's just-released 2019 satisfaction rankings.

Edward Jones ranks highest in investor satisfaction with full service brokerage firms, topping RBC Wealth Managementand Advisor Group according to the J.D. Power 2019 U.S. Full Service Investor Satisfaction Study.

The study, released March 14, measures overall investor satisfaction with 18 full-service investment firms based on eight factors including financial advisor; account information; investment performance; firm interaction; product offerings; commissions and fees; information resources; and problem resolution.

St. Louis-based Edward Jones scored 853 in overall satisfaction, 18 points over the industry average and five points higher than second-place RBC Wealth Management and seven higher than third-place Advisor Group. Morgan Stanley (844) and Charles Schwab (842) rounded out the top five among the 18 companies ranked.

“What a great honor it is to be recognized for what matters most, which is making a difference in the lives our clients,” said Edward Jones Managing Partner Penny Pennington. “We illustrate the value of the Edward Jones client experience every day and help our clients achieve financially what is most important to them. We can bring something truly special to clients who experience us. This is why we exist.”

2019 Customer Satisfaction Index Ranking

1) Edward Jones – 853

2) RBC – 848

3) Advisor Group – 846

4) Morgan Stanley – 844

5) Charles Schwab – 842

6) UBS – 840

7) Ameriprise – 838

8) Fidelity – 836

8) Raymond James – 836

INDUSTRY AVERAGE – 835

10) Wells Fargo Advisors – 829

11) Stifel, Nicolaus & Company – 827

12) Chase – 826

13) Merrill Lynch – 825

14) Citigroup – 820

14) Lincoln – 820

14) Northwestern Mutual – 820

17) LPL – 814

18) AXA Advisors – 797

Source: J.D. Power 2019 Full Service Investor Satisfaction Study

Overall satisfaction ratings decline

This year’s overall satisfaction ratings dropped compared to a year ago, illustrating investors’ increasingly negative perceptions of their investment performance.

The study’s authors note it was conducted largely in December 2018, when market volatility was at a four-year high and many investors were experiencing the worst returns since the financial crisis. Not surprisingly, investor satisfaction suffered, but amidst that struggle, important insights about what separates the best advisors in any market have emerged.

“In recent years, investor satisfaction with full-service advisors and wealth management firms had been buoyed by the prolonged bull market, but with challenging markets returning investors are increasingly reexamining the value of their advisor relationships,” said Mike Foy, Senior Director of Wealth Intelligence at J.D. Power. “What we have found is that it’s not enough just to maintain frequent communication with clients; advisors also need to effectively explain and manage expectations around performance. It can be a difficult conversation when clients are losing money, but advisors who fail to have those hard conversations are putting at risk both their future growth opportunities, resulting in reduced client referrals and, in more extreme situations, losing their current clients either to other advisors or to alternative service models.”

Key findings of the 2019 study

The U.S. Full Service Investor Satisfaction Study, now in its 17th year, is based on responses from 4,629 investors who make some or all of their investment decisions with a financial advisor, and was fielded from November 2018 through January 2019.

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