Wealth Management Madness
Wealth Management Madness 2015: Sweet 16 Recap

Wealth Management Madness 2015: Sweet 16 Recap

There will be no back-to-back champion this year in Wealth Management Madness.

After sneaking past the first round, Bob McCann, CEO of UBS Group America and the 2014 champion, was defeated by the head of Wells Fargo Advisors, Mary Mack, in the Sweet Sixteen.

Mack is one of three women to advance to the Elite Eight. Also moving on is Elizabeth Warren, the U.S. Senator from Massachusetts, who defeated Ken Bentsen, the president and CEO of SIFMA. Despite a record amount of enforcement and fines in 2014, the threat of rising interest rates appeared to weigh heavily on the minds of voters and helped propel Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen to a victory over SEC chair Mary Jo White for the second year in a row. Yellen and Warren will go head-to-head in round three.

One of the story lines in the Sweet Sixteen was the matchup between president and CEO of MarketCounsel Brian Hamburger and author Tony Robbins, who was a featured speaker at the 2014 MarketCounsel Summit in Las Vegas.

Hamburger did indeed bring his best game, and cruised to a victory over Robbins with some help from the Twitterverse.

Social media support didn’t help Tom Nally, the president of TD Ameritrade Institutional. It was the closest decision of the Sweet Sixteen, but the #Rally4Nally campaign fell short as Nally lost to Raymond James Financial CEO Paul Reilly.

 

Despite making headlines by throwing down the gloves with Charles Schwab, Wealthfront CEO Adam Nash, the most dominant force in the first round, lost in the Sweet Sixteen to Fidelity Wealth Technologies’ Mike Durbin. And though AR Capital Chairman Nicholas Schorsch was in the news due to accounting errors at his former firm American Realty Capital Properties, he was unable overcome a flying, two-handed dunk from Rob Arnott, the founder Research Affiliates.

Only eight competitors remain, and the next round of Wealth Management Madness begins Monday. Don’t forget to cast your vote for who should move on to the Final Four. 

TAGS: Blogs People
Hide comments

Comments

  • Allowed HTML tags: <em> <strong> <blockquote> <br> <p>

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
Publish