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Morgan Keegan & Co. - Private Funds Group
The Private Funds Group sat inside Morgan Keegan & Company, the Tennessee-headquartered regional investment bank and brokerage founded in 1969.
Morgan Keegan & Co. - Private Funds Group
The Private Funds Group sat inside Morgan Keegan & Company, the Tennessee-headquartered regional investment bank and brokerage founded in 1969. Morgan Keegan built its reputation as a full-service securities firm rooted in the Southeast — equity research, municipal finance, fixed-income sales and trading, and a network of financial advisors serving individual investors. The Private Funds Group emerged as a natural extension of that advisory infrastructure, offering Morgan Keegan's client base a diversified private equity allocation through multi-manager fund structures. The group did not operate as a standalone limited partner; it functioned within the larger wealth-management division, drawing on capital aggregated from individual investors across the firm's branch network. The group's mandate centered on assembling portfolios of external private equity funds rather than direct company investments. Commitments typically targeted mid-market buyout strategies and growth-equity vehicles, with ancillary allocations to venture capital and energy-oriented partnerships. Morgan Keegan's regional presence shaped its fund-selection universe — the group maintained relationships with general partners who valued distribution through a non-institutional, advisor-driven channel. Geographic emphasis fell on North American strategies, with periodic exposure to Western European and select emerging-market funds. Because the underlying capital was sourced from individual investors, fund selection criteria emphasized manager track-record stability and alignment of terms alongside institutional peers. As a division within a publicly-traded regional brokerage, the group's scale was modest relative to freestanding fund-of-funds platforms. Regions Financial Corporation acquired Morgan Keegan in 2001, and the combined entity operated the Private Funds Group under the broader Morgan Keegan brand throughout the 2000s. In January 2012, Raymond James Financial completed its acquisition of Morgan Keegan from Regions Financial (per SEC filings, 2012). The transaction absorbed Morgan Keegan's wealth-management infrastructure into Raymond James; the fate of the standalone Private Funds Group label after the acquisition is not separately disclosed in public filings. Prior to the acquisition, the group's professional staff drew on Morgan Keegan's Memphis headquarters, with some client-facing personnel embedded in regional offices. What distinguished the Private Funds Group from its firm-of-funds peers was its distribution mechanism. Most fund-of-funds platforms raise commitments from pension funds, endowments, and sovereign institutions. This group accessed a different pool — individual investors routed through a brokerage network concentrated in a specific American region. That structure made it a useful distribution partner for GPs seeking diversified, non-correlated capital flows and gave Morgan Keegan's advisors a product suite differentiating them from wirehouse competitors. The model required dual expertise: the due-diligence rigor of institutional fund selection wedded to the suitability and client-communication standards of retail wealth management.
General information
Firm type
Private Equity
Year founded
—
AUM
Undisclosed
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
Memphis
Corporate office
Memphis, TN, United States
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
What was the Private Funds Group's relationship to Morgan Keegan's broader business?
The group operated as a specialized unit within Morgan Keegan's wealth-management division rather than as a separate legal entity. It provided the firm's financial advisors with pre-packaged private equity fund-of-funds products that could be offered to accredited retail clients. This arrangement meant the group's investment activity was interwoven with the firm's overall brokerage and advisory infrastructure, relying on Morgan Keegan's existing compliance, operations, and client-relationship systems.
Did the group invest directly in companies or only in funds?
The Private Funds Group committed capital exclusively to external private equity funds — it did not make direct company investments. As a fund-of-funds manager, it selected underlying general partners and spread allocations across multiple vintage years and strategies. This approach was designed to give individual investors diversified exposure without requiring them to evaluate individual fund managers independently.
What happened to the group after Raymond James acquired Morgan Keegan?
Raymond James completed its acquisition of Morgan Keegan in January 2012, folding the Memphis-based operations into its own wealth-management platform. Public disclosures at the time focused on the transfer of financial advisors and client accounts; no separate announcement detailed the continuation or dissolution of the Private Funds Group under its original brand. The group's fund-of-funds activities were likely either integrated into Raymond James' existing alternative-investment offerings or discontinued during post-merger consolidation.
How did the group source private equity fund managers?
Manager sourcing relied on relationships cultivated by the group's investment team, supplemented by the broader Morgan Keegan institutional network. Because Morgan Keegan maintained a corporate finance and equity research presence, some fund-manager connections likely originated from investment-banking and capital-markets relationships. The group's non-institutional capital base also attracted GPs seeking diversified limited partner rosters beyond the endowment and public pension universe.
What types of private equity strategies did the group allocate to?
The group allocated primarily to middle-market buyout and growth-equity funds, with smaller commitments to venture capital and energy-focused strategies. These allocations were packaged into multi-manager vehicles designed for accredited investors who could meet the suitability standards of private placements. The regional concentration in the Southeast and Mid-South meant some underlying fund managers had geographic overlap with Morgan Keegan's own footprint, though positions were not limited to that region.
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