Business 8( Professional Money Meets Ideas Four partners take financial management to the next level. Bill Carroll Special to the Jewish News T elemus, the mythical Greek "seer of the future probably wasn't Jewish; but four local Jewish financial experts have used his name to create what they call a "financial services boutique" to take advantage of a financial services boom in Michigan — arid a trend away from broker- ages and banks. They offer wealthy clients a selection of stocks, bonds-and real estate. Telemus Capital Partners LLC launched last February in a small office; received approval in June from the National Association of Securities Dealers and in July moved into sleek headquarters in 14,000 square* feet of space in the Two Towne Square building in Southfield. It already his 300 clients, 22 employees and $1.2 billion under management or advise- ment. Three of the four are brothers- in-law: Gary L. Ran of Bloorhfield Hills, the chairman and CEO; Lyle M. Wolberg of Huntington Woods, a managing director; and Robert A. Stone of Bloomfield Township, also a managing director. Ran and Wolberg are married to Stone's sisters. The fourth partner is Steven J. Greenwald of Bloomfield Township, president and COO. The four range in age from their mid-30s to mid-40s. The company operates three subsidiaries within Telemus Capital Partners: Telemus Wealth Advisors, which offers financial planning and services; Telemus Investment Brokers, which pro- vides stock and bond trading, and Telemus Investment Management, which creates and manages equity and fixed- income portfolios. "We work with individuals, as well as small businesses and institutions, who have at least $1 million in investable assets; and that covers a lot of wealthy Jewish families:' said Ran, the grandson of the late Philip Stollman, a well-known real estate developer and philanthro- pist in the local Jewish commu- nity. Ran got interested in the financial business at an early age, tripling his $10,000 bar mitzvah money in three years. He recently was named one of "America's Top 100 Brokers" by Barron's magazine. "Our new setup allows us to provide customized, tailored, • high-end service to people who pay on a fee-for-service basis:' said Ran. "We like to call this office a meeting place between good ideas and money; if the client has the money, we have an idea." "We try to come up with inno- vative investment ideas, such as real estate, not just the regular • stocks and bonds; and our clients like dealing with inde- pendent brokers:' added Wolberg, whose father, Jerry Wolberg of Huntington Woods, is a CPA in Southfield. Stone's father, the late Ron Stone, was an • advertising executive in the Lyle Wolberg, Gary Ran, Robert Stone and Steven Greenwald . pose in "the pit" area of Telemus Capital Partners in Southfield. The pit is where employees monitor news events on large-screen TVs and trade stocks and bonds. Detroit area. Explains Wolberg, "There's a huge concentration of family wealth in southeast Michigan, not from attorneys and other professionals, but from people who started their own business- es and created the wealth. I call this 'money in motion; with family businesses being sold or cashed out and inheritances passed along. This has created quite a bit of opportunity for financial services firms like ours:' Through The Ranks Ran, Wolberg and Stone were executives at Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc. for several years and were known as the "Ran Group:' until they left to join UBS Financial Services Inc. (formerly PaineWebber), where they were senior vice presidents. Green- wald, originally from St. Louis, had spent 14 years at UBS and was a senior vice president and local branch manager. At UBS, Ran, Wolberg and Stone managed about $1 billion worth of client assets. The partners say they left Merrill Lynch not on the best of terms because of philosophical conflicts. The group then got into a legal skirmish with Merrill Lynch in 1999 over whether their clients belonged to the company or to them. The partners say they left UBS on amicable terms. Impressed by the trio, many of their clients have moved with them through the years and are now at Telemus. One is Michael B. Serling of Orchard Lake, who has a law office in Birmingham. "I've been with Gary Ran and his team for 10 years, and they're very. service-oriented and acces- sible Serling said. "They're also very multi-dimensiorial; I can buy anything from them., not just equities. They keep a keen eye on the market, and they guided me when the market went through some rough times. At Telemus, they're able to offer even more diversified products:' Serling is a member of-the Michigan State University Jewish Studies Advisory Board and recently endowed a chair in Israel studies at MSU. The Service Area The Telemus services include a "family financial suite" — com- plete with a concierge — that insures privacy for investors and even electronically scans and stores important documents owned by clients, such as wills, trust agreements, etc. "It's like an electronic safe deposit box:' Ran said. There's a large trading area in the center of the office, called "the pit:' where seven employees monitor news events on large screens, and do daily trading of stocks and bonds. "I pop in several times a day to see what's new and how some jig breaking news might help us make a quick investment:' said Ran. "When Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf Coast states, I bought stock in a building prod- ucts distributor, which quickly rose,from $9 to $14 a share. "In fact, the biggest challenge we now face in this business is the 'time factor:' Ran said, "hav- ing enough time in the day to get things done:' Assisting the four partners are six Jewish employees with exten- sive financial backgrounds: managing director Andrew Bass; directors Jonathan Eber, Randy Otis and Ronald Turett; and associates Matthew Lash and Joshua Levine. The partners also are active in local communal and charitable programs. -Ran, who attended Lawrence Technological University in Southfield, is active with the Jewish Federation of • Metropolitan Detroit, Bar-Ilan University and ORt. Stone, a University of Michigan graduate, is on the board of the Detroit-based Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer Institute. Wolberg, a graduate of the University of Michigan busi- ness school, is on the board of the Berkley Education Foundation. Greenwald, who has a B.S. degree in engineering from the University of Kansas and an M.B.A. in finance from Washington University in St. Louis, is active with Variety — The Children's Charity. [1] December 15 * 2005 55