Bank of America chips away at brokerage industry truce

By Elizabeth Dilts

NEW YORK, Feb 23 (Reuters) - For the last decade, Wall Street brokerages have had a pact not to sue brokers that leave their firms and try to take clients with them. Now Bank of America Merrill Lynch, one of the founding signers of the truce, is taking steps to erode the agreement, industry lawyers say.

The bank is making it harder for brokers to take some of their clients with them when they leave Merrill Lynch-specifically, clients that were referred to the broker by a Bank of America branch. Brokers in recent months have been asked to sign contracts saying that if they leave Merrill Lynch, they can't take the names or phone numbers of those customers with them, because those clients belong to the bank.

Lawyers said this policy chips away at the decade-old truce among brokerages known as the Protocol for Broker Recruiting. The agreement was meant to end the continual and costly legal battles between brokerages and their brokers over who had the right to keep clients, and allows departing brokers to take client information including names and phone numbers with them.

The original 2004 signers were Merrill Lynch, UBS AG and Smith Barney, then part of Citigroup Inc, and more than 1,200 brokerages have since signed onto the pact known among industry veterans as "the protocol." Bank of America acquired Merrill Lynch in 2009 in the wake of the financial crisis.

"One of founders is trying to create exceptions to the protocol that are at odds with the stated goal laid out in the very first sentence: to further the clients' freedom of choice," said Joe Dougherty, a lawyer at Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney who represented wealth management firm Stifel Nicolas & Company in protocol cases against Wells Fargo. "It's at odds with the stated goals to begin to make exceptions based on referral leads."

Bank of America is not trying to do away with the protocol, said spokeswoman Susan McCabe.

"We are strong supporters of the broker protocol, which offers important protections to advisers industry-wide," she said.

She said the bank's policy is four years old, but more than 20 people familiar with the bank that Reuters contacted, including current brokers, outside lawyers, and recruiters, said that many brokers were asked to sign the contract for the first time in recent months.

The bank appears to be ramping up the program to encourage retail bank branches to refer more customers to Merrill Lynch, brokers there said. The brokers said that clients referred from bank branches account for a negligible portion of their business.