Wall Street Sends Wine, Masks to Clients With Steakhouses Closed

Wall Street investment funds won’t let a pandemic and riots stop them from wooing clients.

With boozy steakhouse meetings no longer an option, evenings on the town are being replaced with wine tastings via conference call and online concerts. There are also care packages tailored to the times -- packed with masks -- and donations to food banks and charities.

Disruptions set off by the coronavirus pandemic, now complicated by protests and curfews, are prompting asset managers overseeing products such as mutual funds and exchange-traded funds to figure out new ways to remotely grab the attention of wealthy customers, institutional investors and financial advisers. That often means trying to hobnob in the virtual world.

It’s accelerating a shift that was already underway, as big firms rely less on social outings to generate and work leads, said Amanda Walters, principal at Casey Quirk, a division of Deloitte Consulting. “Asset managers are asking, ‘Do we need to be face-to-face as much as we were before?’ And the answer is probably no,” she said.

Country music artists including Darius Rucker and Luke Bryan performed from home for AllianceBernstein Holding LP’s private wealth clients in a virtual concert last month that supported relief for Covid-19, said Adam Sansiveri, a managing director. The firm also sets up wine-and-cheese tastings for wealthy clients, featuring a remote sommelier.

Picking Charities

JPMorgan Asset Management has flooded its calendar with more than 170 virtual events since mid-March, according to a person with knowledge of the matter. Nuveen, a subsidiary of Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of America, has a program that lets clients direct grants of about $5,000 to food banks and charities of their choice.