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LPL Financial Waives Clawback for Departing CLO Althea Brown Amid Career Break

LPL Financial will not seek repayment of a $270K signing bonus and relocation expenses from outgoing CLO Althea Brown, who is stepping down after less than two years for a career break.

Key points:

  • LPL Financial will not claw back $270K in bonus and relocation costs from outgoing CLO Althea Brown.
  • Brown will serve as a consultant through September as part of her transition agreement.
  • Brown departs after less than two years, citing a personal decision to take a career break.

LPL Financial has opted not to reclaim a $270,000 signing bonus and relocation expenses from its outgoing chief legal officer, Althea Brown, despite her departure after just 23 months with the company. The decision came as part of a transition agreement in which Brown will remain in a consulting role through September to support the legal department during the leadership handover, according to a regulatory filing last week.

Brown joined LPL in September 2023 following an 11-year tenure at Google, where she served as a legal director. In her time at LPL, she oversaw the company’s corporate and government relations, litigation and regulatory matters, legal operations, and business management. Her exit comes amid what the company has described as a personal decision to take a career break following nearly three decades in high-level legal roles.

Under the terms of the agreement, LPL will also allow Brown’s 5,400 restricted stock units to continue vesting through September. While the value of those RSUs wasn’t disclosed in the latest filing, LPL’s 2024 proxy statement estimated that accelerated or continued vesting of her awards upon termination “without cause or for good reason” would amount to $521,437.

Brown’s total compensation for 2024 was $2.96 million, including $500,000 in base salary, $1.45 million in stock awards, and nearly $1 million in non-equity incentive compensation.

The leadership transition at LPL marks another shift in its C-suite. Brown had succeeded Michelle Oroschakoff, who retired after a decade at the firm. Brown’s hiring was initially touted by then-CEO Dan Arnold as a move to further modernize the legal department. However, Arnold himself was dismissed last year for violating the company’s code of conduct. LPL later confirmed he received no severance, though a subsequent settlement granted him $12 million in compensation—estimated to be just 15% of the full value of his forfeited benefits and equity.

There is currently no public information about Brown’s successor. LPL remains the largest independent broker-dealer in the U.S., with 29,500 advisers and more than 10 million client accounts. Its 2024 revenues increased 23% to $12.4 billion.

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