Lpl Finl Hldgs — Financial Results
Massive Growth in Assets Under Management, Driven Largely by the Commonwealth Acquisition
| Metric | 2025 | 2024 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total Advisory & Brokerage Assets | $2.4 trillion | $1.7 trillion | +36% |
| Total Net New Assets | $431.5B | $235.6B | +83% |
| Organic Net New Assets | $146.5B | $140.7B | +4% |
Total assets grew by roughly $630 billion in 2025, but the picture splits in two. The headline jump was largely acquisition-driven — organic (internally generated) net new assets grew only modestly, from $140.7B to $146.5B. The organic growth rate actually slipped from 10.4% to 8.4%, worth watching as a sign of how the underlying business is growing without the help of deals.
The Commonwealth Acquisition: A Transformational but Expensive Deal
LPL paid approximately $2.7 billion in cash to acquire Commonwealth Financial Network, closing the deal on August 1, 2025. To fund it, the company raised $2.75 billion in new debt and $1.7 billion in new equity (selling roughly 5.4 million shares at $320 each). The acquisition added significant assets and revenue, but also generated $740 million in one-time acquisition costs — including $228 million in transaction bonuses and $190 million in contract termination fees — which weighed heavily on reported profits.
Reported Earnings Fell, But Underlying Profitability Rose
| Metric | 2025 | 2024 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Net Income | $863M | $1,059M | -18% |
| EPS (diluted) | $10.92 | $14.03 | -22% |
| Adjusted EPS (non-GAAP) | $20.09 | $16.51 | +22% |
| Gross Profit | $5.6B | $4.5B | +24% |
The drop in reported earnings is almost entirely explained by $740 million in acquisition-related costs. Strip those out, and adjusted EPS (earnings per share) rose 22% to $20.09. Gross profit — the revenue the company keeps after paying advisors their share — climbed 24%. This distinction matters: the business is genuinely more profitable, but the bill for the Commonwealth deal hit the income statement hard in 2025.
Debt Has Risen Substantially; Leverage Remains Manageable
| Metric | 2025 | 2024 |
|---|---|---|
| Total Corporate Debt | $7.3B | $5.5B |
| Leverage Ratio | 1.95x | 1.89x |
| Covenant Maximum | 4.0x | 4.0x |
To fund the Commonwealth deal, LPL added $2.75 billion in senior unsecured notes (bonds the company must repay), pushing total debt to $7.3 billion. Interest expense jumped 47% to $403 million for the year. That said, the leverage ratio (debt relative to earnings) sits at 1.95x — well below the 4.0x ceiling required by lenders — so the balance sheet is stretched but not strained. The earliest major debt repayment comes in 2027.
Interest Rate Sensitivity Remains a Key Variable
LPL earns meaningful revenue from client cash sitting in bank sweep accounts and money market funds. Average client cash balances grew to $50.9 billion in 2025 from $44.5 billion in 2024, generating $1.66 billion in client cash revenue. However, the Federal Reserve cut its benchmark interest rate to a range of 3.50%–3.75% by year-end 2025, and further cuts would reduce what LPL earns on those balances. Client cash as a percentage of total assets also fell from 3.2% to 2.6%, suggesting clients are putting more money to work in investments — which is good for advisory revenue but reduces this cash-based income stream.