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[[File:Darin Pastor.jpg|thumb|Darin Pastor]]
[[File:Darin Pastor.jpg|thumb|Darin Pastor]]


'''Darin Richard Pastor''' (born February 19, 1971) is an [[United States|American]] business executive. He has worked at major financial firms across the country, including American Mortgage Affiliates, [[JPMorgan Chase|JPMorgan Chase & Co.]], and [[Prudential Financial|Prudential]], and is the current chairman, president, and chief executive officer of Capstone Affluent Strategies. He was named as one of the Top 100 Financial Services Branch Managers by On Wall Street,<ref>http://www.onwallstreet.com/news/The-2012-Branch-Manager-Awards-Top-100-Honorees-2683289-1.html</ref> and has been nominated as Entrepreneur of the Year by [[Orange County Business Journal|The Orange County Business Journal]].<ref>http://capstoneaffluentstrategies.com/affluent/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/OCBJ-EiE-Nominee-Supplement-2-18-2013.pdf</ref> The Pastor family has been highly regarded in the Buffalo community for decades, as they owned the Pepsi-Cola Buffalo Bottling Corp. and the [[Buffalo Bisons (AHL)|Buffalo Bison Hockey Club]]. Pastor recently made headlines for his interest in acquiring the NHL’s [[Phoenix Coyotes]] franchise in 2013.
'''Darin Richard Pastor''' (born February 19, 1971) is an [[United States|American]] business executive. He has worked at major financial firms across the country, including American Mortgage Affiliates, [[JPMorgan Chase|JPMorgan Chase & Co.]], and [[Prudential Financial|Prudential]], and is the current chairman, president, and chief executive officer of Capstone Affluent Strategies. He was named as one of the Top 100 Financial Services Branch Managers by On Wall Street,<ref name=autogenerated1>[http://www.onwallstreet.com/news/The-2012-Branch-Manager-Awards-Top-100-Honorees-2683289-1.html The 2012 Branch Manager Awards Top 100 Honorees | On Wall Street<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> and has been nominated as Entrepreneur of the Year by [[Orange County Business Journal|The Orange County Business Journal]].<ref name=autogenerated4>http://capstoneaffluentstrategies.com/affluent/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/OCBJ-EiE-Nominee-Supplement-2-18-2013.pdf</ref> The Pastor family has been highly regarded in the Buffalo community for decades, as they owned the Pepsi-Cola Buffalo Bottling Corp. and the [[Buffalo Bisons (AHL)|Buffalo Bison Hockey Club]]. Pastor recently made headlines for his interest in acquiring the NHL’s [[Phoenix Coyotes]] franchise in 2013.


==Early life==
==Early life==
Pastor was born in Buffalo, New York to Sydney and Miriam (O'Mahony) Pastor, the eldest of two children. He is of Irish and Jewish descent and attended St. Andrews Episcopal Academy in Oceanside, N.Y. His paternal grandfather was a Jewish immigrant and entrepreneur, eventually securing the Buffalo Pepsi-Cola franchise in his 40's. He has a younger sister, Kathleen, and a half brother, Richard. Pastor's father and grandfather were both owners of Pepsi Cola Buffalo Bottling Corporation, and held various other business interests, including a professional hockey team, trucking company, bottling plant, and a Miller Beer franchise located in Cherry Hill, N.J.
Pastor was born in Buffalo, New York to Sydney and Miriam (O'Mahony) Pastor, the eldest of two children. He is of Irish and Jewish descent and attended St. Andrews Episcopal Academy in Oceanside, N.Y. His paternal grandfather was a Jewish immigrant and entrepreneur, eventually securing the Buffalo Pepsi-Cola franchise in his 40's. He has a younger sister, Kathleen, and a half brother, Richard. Pastor's father and grandfather were both owners of Pepsi Cola Buffalo Bottling Corporation, and held various other business interests, including a professional hockey team, trucking company, bottling plant, and a Miller Beer franchise located in Cherry Hill, N.J.


Pastor majored in psychology and sociology at [[Drexel University]] in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and worked full-time in the family's Pepsi-Cola business. He enrolled in numerous executive management programs and earned several certificates from the [[Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania|University of Pennsylvania, Wharton School of Business]].<ref>http://executiveeducation.wharton.upenn.edu/for-individuals/all-programs/certificate-of-professional-development/cpd-circle?q=MP</ref> He completed his MBA at the [[University of Liverpool]] in England and was recently accepted to the [[Harvard Business School]]'s Advanced Management Program, where he will receive alumni status upon the program’s completion. Additionally, Pastor is a candidate to earn his Master of Laws, LLM, in International Banking and Finance.
Pastor majored in psychology and sociology at [[Drexel University]] in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and worked full-time in the family's Pepsi-Cola business. He enrolled in numerous executive management programs and earned several certificates from the [[Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania|University of Pennsylvania, Wharton School of Business]].<ref>[http://executiveeducation.wharton.upenn.edu/for-individuals/all-programs/certificate-of-professional-development/cpd-circle?q=MP CPD Circle | Wharton Exec Ed<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> He completed his MBA at the [[University of Liverpool]] in England and was recently accepted to the [[Harvard Business School]]'s Advanced Management Program, where he will receive alumni status upon the program’s completion. Additionally, Pastor is a candidate to earn his Master of Laws, LLM, in International Banking and Finance.


==Career==
==Career==
Pastor began his career working at the family-owned Pepsi-Cola Buffalo Bottling Corp, where he was a Division Manager and Owner. In 1996, after working at the plant for seven years, Pastor became the owner of American Mortgage Affiliates (NYS EIN: 46-470427), opening seven retail financial center locations throughout New York state. Pastor was also working his way to becoming a senior vice president at [[JPMorgan Chase|JPMorgan Chase & Co.]] during this time, which became his primary role after selling American Mortgage Affiliates to his partner in 2004.<ref>http://capstoneaffluentstrategies.com/leadership/</ref>
Pastor began his career working at the family-owned Pepsi-Cola Buffalo Bottling Corp, where he was a Division Manager and Owner. In 1996, after working at the plant for seven years, Pastor became the owner of American Mortgage Affiliates (NYS EIN: 46-470427), opening seven retail financial center locations throughout New York state. Pastor was also working his way to becoming a senior vice president at [[JPMorgan Chase|JPMorgan Chase & Co.]] during this time, which became his primary role after selling American Mortgage Affiliates to his partner in 2004.<ref>[http://capstoneaffluentstrategies.com/leadership/ Financial Advisory & Wealth Strategies | Capstone Affluent Strategies<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


Pastor worked at [[JPMorgan Chase|JPMorgan Chase & Co.]] for four years, where he was senior vice president and senior investment manager.<ref>http://www.coloniallife.com/Newsroom/~/media/acrobat/newsroom/news%20releases/news-release-20100908.ashx</ref> In the fall of 2007, Pastor mentioned during a conference call with the financial advisors under his management that he believed they should move their clients out of the stock market and place their money into gold and cash equivalents. Pastor was reprimanded for his suggestion, and nearly removed from his position. The [[Great Recession]] of 2008 took place one year later. Undeterred, Pastor left Chase in 2010 to become territory sales manager for the greater Los Angeles area with Colonial Life & Accident Insurance Company, and then Managing Director at the [[Prudential Financial|Prudential Insurance Company of America]].<ref>http://www.coloniallife.com/Newsroom/~/media/acrobat/newsroom/news%20releases/news-release-20100908.ashx</ref>
Pastor worked at [[JPMorgan Chase|JPMorgan Chase & Co.]] for four years, where he was senior vice president and senior investment manager.<ref name=autogenerated2>http://www.coloniallife.com/Newsroom/~/media/acrobat/newsroom/news%20releases/news-release-20100908.ashx</ref> In the fall of 2007, Pastor mentioned during a conference call with the financial advisors under his management that he believed they should move their clients out of the stock market and place their money into gold and cash equivalents. Pastor was reprimanded for his suggestion, and nearly removed from his position. The [[Great Recession]] of 2008 took place one year later. Undeterred, Pastor left Chase in 2010 to become territory sales manager for the greater Los Angeles area with Colonial Life & Accident Insurance Company, and then Managing Director at the [[Prudential Financial|Prudential Insurance Company of America]].<ref name=autogenerated2 />


Pastor’s leadership and work ethic has earned him several distinctions from the companies he has worked for. [[Prudential Financial|Prudential]] ranked him as the No. 1 managing director in the nation measured by year-over-year sales growth, and he was ranked as the top-selling senior investment manager in the nation during his tenure at [[JPMorgan Chase|JPMorgan Chase & Co.]]<ref>http://capstoneaffluentstrategies.com/leadership</ref>
Pastor’s leadership and work ethic has earned him several distinctions from the companies he has worked for. [[Prudential Financial|Prudential]] ranked him as the No. 1 managing director in the nation measured by year-over-year sales growth, and he was ranked as the top-selling senior investment manager in the nation during his tenure at [[JPMorgan Chase|JPMorgan Chase & Co.]]<ref>[http://capstoneaffluentstrategies.com/leadership Financial Advisory & Wealth Strategies | Capstone Affluent Strategies<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


From Southern California, Pastor spoke with many of his clients and contacts about creating an independent financial firm of his own.<ref>http://ceopeergroups.podbean.com/wp-content/plugins/podpress/podpress_backend.php?podPressPlayerAutoPlay=yes&standalone=yes&action=showplayer&pbid=0&b=151107&id=4770627&filename=http://ceopeergroups.podbean.com/mf/play/3zrwew/Critical-030513.mp3</ref> In October 2012, he realized his goal with the opening of Capstone Affluent Strategies.<ref>http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/nationally-ranked-financial-advisory-team-launches-capstone-affluent-strategies-174604541.html</ref>
From Southern California, Pastor spoke with many of his clients and contacts about creating an independent financial firm of his own.<ref>[http://ceopeergroups.podbean.com/wp-content/plugins/podpress/podpress_backend.php?podPressPlayerAutoPlay=yes&standalone=yes&action=showplayer&pbid=0&b=151107&id=4770627&filename=http://ceopeergroups.podbean.com/mf/play/3zrwew/Critical-030513.mp3 Critical Mass Shows<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> In October 2012, he realized his goal with the opening of Capstone Affluent Strategies.<ref>[http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/nationally-ranked-financial-advisory-team-launches-capstone-affluent-strategies-174604541.html Nationally-Ranked Financial Advisory Team Launches 'Capstone Affluent Strategies' - NEWPORT BEACH, Calif., Oct. 17, 2012 /PRNewswire/<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


==Capstone Affluent Strategies==
==Capstone Affluent Strategies==
Capstone Affluent Strategies, an independent wealth management firm headquartered in Irvine, California, was founded in October 2012 by Pastor and five other top financial advisors.<ref>http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/10/17/lpl-financial-idUSL1E8LHJPP20121017</ref> Established with the goal of creating a company that truly acts in the best interest of the client, Capstone advisors are not commission-based, tied to quotas, or responsible for pushing proprietary products. The firm has offices in Newport Beach, Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego, Phoenix, Dallas, Houston, New Orleans, Parsippany, and New York. Within a year of the company’s launch, Capstone grew its staff by over 900% from six advisors to more than 60.<ref>http://capstoneaffluentstrategies.com/affluent/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/Capstone-Affluent-Strategies-William-Regan-and-Mentorship-Program.pdf</ref> The post-graduate tuition reimbursement program and Financial Advisor Associates program have helped attract top talent to the firm.<ref>http://capstoneaffluentstrategies.com/the-importance-of-education-in-corporate-america/</ref>
Capstone Affluent Strategies, an independent wealth management firm headquartered in Irvine, California, was founded in October 2012 by Pastor and five other top financial advisors.<ref>[http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/10/17/lpl-financial-idUSL1E8LHJPP20121017 ON THE MOVE-LPL Financial adds team with $450 mln in assets | Reuters<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> Established with the goal of creating a company that truly acts in the best interest of the client, Capstone advisors are not commission-based, tied to quotas, or responsible for pushing proprietary products. The firm has offices in Newport Beach, Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego, Phoenix, Dallas, Houston, New Orleans, Parsippany, and New York. Within a year of the company’s launch, Capstone grew its staff by over 900% from six advisors to more than 60.<ref>http://capstoneaffluentstrategies.com/affluent/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/Capstone-Affluent-Strategies-William-Regan-and-Mentorship-Program.pdf</ref> The post-graduate tuition reimbursement program and Financial Advisor Associates program have helped attract top talent to the firm.<ref>[http://capstoneaffluentstrategies.com/the-importance-of-education-in-corporate-america/ The Importance of Education in Corporate America<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


In 2013, Pastor was recognized as one of On Wall Street’s “Top 100 Branch Managers” for his leadership, commitment to advisors, and ability to recruit and retain talent.<ref>http://www.onwallstreet.com/news/The-2012-Branch-Manager-Awards-Top-100-Honorees-2683289-1.html</ref> He was also a nominee for the 2013 Excellence in Entrepreneurship Award hosted by the Orange County Business Journal.<ref>http://capstoneaffluentstrategies.com/affluent/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/OCBJ-EiE-Nominee-Supplement-2-18-2013.pdf</ref>
In 2013, Pastor was recognized as one of On Wall Street’s “Top 100 Branch Managers” for his leadership, commitment to advisors, and ability to recruit and retain talent.<ref name=autogenerated1 /> He was also a nominee for the 2013 Excellence in Entrepreneurship Award hosted by the Orange County Business Journal.<ref name=autogenerated4 />


==Family==
==Family==
The Pastor family has a long history of involvement in professional hockey in the Buffalo, New York area. Ruby, Sam, and Al Pastor, Darin’s grandfather and great-uncles, bought the [[Buffalo Bisons (AHL)|Buffalo Bison Hockey Club]] of the [[American Hockey League]] in 1956 when the previous owner threatened to move the team. With many future [[National Hockey League]] stars on the roster, the team went on to win the [[Calder Cup]] in 1960, 1964, and 1970 and became one of the top clubs in minor league hockey with an average attendance of 10,500 per game.<ref>http://buffalosportshallfame.com/member/ruby-sam-and-al-pastor/</ref> The Pastor family sold the Bisons in 1971 shortly after the franchise joined the NHL as the expansion [[Buffalo Sabres]].<ref>http://www.marketwatch.com/story/darin-pastor-to-lead-investor-group-seeking-to-purchase-nhls-phoenix-coyotes-2013-03-29</ref>
The Pastor family has a long history of involvement in professional hockey in the Buffalo, New York area. Ruby, Sam, and Al Pastor, Darin’s grandfather and great-uncles, bought the [[Buffalo Bisons (AHL)|Buffalo Bison Hockey Club]] of the [[American Hockey League]] in 1956 when the previous owner threatened to move the team. With many future [[National Hockey League]] stars on the roster, the team went on to win the [[Calder Cup]] in 1960, 1964, and 1970 and became one of the top clubs in minor league hockey with an average attendance of 10,500 per game.<ref name=autogenerated3>[http://buffalosportshallfame.com/member/ruby-sam-and-al-pastor/ Ruby, Sam and Al Pastor (D)<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> The Pastor family sold the Bisons in 1971 shortly after the franchise joined the NHL as the expansion [[Buffalo Sabres]].<ref>[http://www.marketwatch.com/story/darin-pastor-to-lead-investor-group-seeking-to-purchase-nhls-phoenix-coyotes-2013-03-29 Darin Pastor To Lead Investor Group Seeking To Purchase NHL's Phoenix Coyotes - MarketWatch<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


The family established the Sam Pastor Pepsi Memorial Hockey Tournament in 1975, which was the area’s largest youth hockey event, attracting approximately 12,500 people every spring. Held in March and April, the two-month long tournament attracts as many as 300 teams from Canada, Pennsylvania, and Ohio<ref>http://www.bizjournals.com/buffalo/stories/1998/05/11/story7.html?page=all</ref> and provided an estimated $6.75 million boost to the local economy each year.<ref>http://buffalosportshallfame.com/member/ruby-sam-and-al-pastor/</ref>
The family established the Sam Pastor Pepsi Memorial Hockey Tournament in 1975, which was the area’s largest youth hockey event, attracting approximately 12,500 people every spring. Held in March and April, the two-month long tournament attracts as many as 300 teams from Canada, Pennsylvania, and Ohio<ref name=autogenerated5>[http://www.bizjournals.com/buffalo/stories/1998/05/11/story7.html?page=all Rink naming rights pour it on for Pepsi - Buffalo - Business First<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> and provided an estimated $6.75 million boost to the local economy each year.<ref name=autogenerated3 />


The Pastor family owned the Pepsi-Cola Buffalo Bottling Corp., a regional Pepsi distribution business that grew from a single-truck operation in 1936 to a successful upstate New York plant in 1954, until they eventually sold the company in 2002.<ref>http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-122881323.html</ref> Pepsi Buffalo won the naming rights to the Amherst skating and recreational center on May 11, 1998, bidding $550,000 plus incentives that included scoreboards, marketing dollars, and tournament underwriting for the $18.3 million center that opened in the fall of 1998.<ref>http://www.bizjournals.com/buffalo/stories/1998/05/11/story7.html?page=all</ref>
The Pastor family owned the Pepsi-Cola Buffalo Bottling Corp., a regional Pepsi distribution business that grew from a single-truck operation in 1936 to a successful upstate New York plant in 1954, until they eventually sold the company in 2002.<ref>[http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-122881323.html Buffalo, N.Y., Family Sells Pepsi Bottling Firm. - The Buffalo News (Buffalo, NY) | HighBeam Research<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> Pepsi Buffalo won the naming rights to the Amherst skating and recreational center on May 11, 1998, bidding $550,000 plus incentives that included scoreboards, marketing dollars, and tournament underwriting for the $18.3 million center that opened in the fall of 1998.<ref name=autogenerated5 />


==Phoenix Coyotes==
==Phoenix Coyotes==
An avid hockey fan, Pastor announced on March 29, 2013 that he had formed an exploratory committee in an effort to acquire the [[Phoenix Coyotes]] franchise of the NHL.<ref>http://www.foxsportsarizona.com/nhl/phoenix-coyotes/story/Another-group-pursuing-Coyotes-purchase?blockID=886017&feedID=3702</ref> Pastor’s group, which included several seasoned municipal financing veterans, as well as immediate family members, formally submitted its bid to purchase the team to the NHL on May 10, 2013. Pastor, who hired Scottsdale-based law firm Kutak Rock LLP to help guide the submission of his proposal, sought to keep the Coyotes in Glendale and developed a plan to boost youth hockey participation in the region by partnering with schools, charities, and team sponsors in this area.<ref>http://www.bizjournals.com/phoenix/news/2013/05/10/darin-pastor-submits-bid-to-nhl-to-buy.html?page=all</ref> Pastor’s bid to purchase the team was rejected by the NHL on May 13, 2013.<ref>http://www.foxsportsarizona.com/nhl/phoenix-coyotes/story/NHL-rejects-Pastors-bid-to-purchase-Coyo?blockID=901921#.UZFffzWXdOs.twitter</ref>
An avid hockey fan, Pastor announced on March 29, 2013 that he had formed an exploratory committee in an effort to acquire the [[Phoenix Coyotes]] franchise of the NHL.<ref>[http://www.foxsportsarizona.com/nhl/phoenix-coyotes/story/Another-group-pursuing-Coyotes-purchase?blockID=886017&feedID=3702 New investor-led group pursuing Coyotes deal<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> Pastor’s group, which included several seasoned municipal financing veterans, as well as immediate family members, formally submitted its bid to purchase the team to the NHL on May 10, 2013. Pastor, who hired Scottsdale-based law firm Kutak Rock LLP to help guide the submission of his proposal, sought to keep the Coyotes in Glendale and developed a plan to boost youth hockey participation in the region by partnering with schools, charities, and team sponsors in this area.<ref>[http://www.bizjournals.com/phoenix/news/2013/05/10/darin-pastor-submits-bid-to-nhl-to-buy.html?page=all Darin Pastor submits bid to NHL to buy Phoenix Coyotes - Phoenix Business Journal<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> Pastor’s bid to purchase the team was rejected by the NHL on May 13, 2013.<ref>[http://www.foxsportsarizona.com/nhl/phoenix-coyotes/story/NHL-rejects-Pastors-bid-to-purchase-Coyo?blockID=901921#.UZFffzWXdOs.twitter NHL rejects Pastor's bid to purchase Coyotes<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


==Personal life==
==Personal life==

Revision as of 01:26, 4 July 2013

File:Darin Pastor.jpg
Darin Pastor

Darin Richard Pastor (born February 19, 1971) is an American business executive. He has worked at major financial firms across the country, including American Mortgage Affiliates, JPMorgan Chase & Co., and Prudential, and is the current chairman, president, and chief executive officer of Capstone Affluent Strategies. He was named as one of the Top 100 Financial Services Branch Managers by On Wall Street,[1] and has been nominated as Entrepreneur of the Year by The Orange County Business Journal.[2] The Pastor family has been highly regarded in the Buffalo community for decades, as they owned the Pepsi-Cola Buffalo Bottling Corp. and the Buffalo Bison Hockey Club. Pastor recently made headlines for his interest in acquiring the NHL’s Phoenix Coyotes franchise in 2013.

Early life

Pastor was born in Buffalo, New York to Sydney and Miriam (O'Mahony) Pastor, the eldest of two children. He is of Irish and Jewish descent and attended St. Andrews Episcopal Academy in Oceanside, N.Y. His paternal grandfather was a Jewish immigrant and entrepreneur, eventually securing the Buffalo Pepsi-Cola franchise in his 40's. He has a younger sister, Kathleen, and a half brother, Richard. Pastor's father and grandfather were both owners of Pepsi Cola Buffalo Bottling Corporation, and held various other business interests, including a professional hockey team, trucking company, bottling plant, and a Miller Beer franchise located in Cherry Hill, N.J.

Pastor majored in psychology and sociology at Drexel University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and worked full-time in the family's Pepsi-Cola business. He enrolled in numerous executive management programs and earned several certificates from the University of Pennsylvania, Wharton School of Business.[3] He completed his MBA at the University of Liverpool in England and was recently accepted to the Harvard Business School's Advanced Management Program, where he will receive alumni status upon the program’s completion. Additionally, Pastor is a candidate to earn his Master of Laws, LLM, in International Banking and Finance.

Career

Pastor began his career working at the family-owned Pepsi-Cola Buffalo Bottling Corp, where he was a Division Manager and Owner. In 1996, after working at the plant for seven years, Pastor became the owner of American Mortgage Affiliates (NYS EIN: 46-470427), opening seven retail financial center locations throughout New York state. Pastor was also working his way to becoming a senior vice president at JPMorgan Chase & Co. during this time, which became his primary role after selling American Mortgage Affiliates to his partner in 2004.[4]

Pastor worked at JPMorgan Chase & Co. for four years, where he was senior vice president and senior investment manager.[5] In the fall of 2007, Pastor mentioned during a conference call with the financial advisors under his management that he believed they should move their clients out of the stock market and place their money into gold and cash equivalents. Pastor was reprimanded for his suggestion, and nearly removed from his position. The Great Recession of 2008 took place one year later. Undeterred, Pastor left Chase in 2010 to become territory sales manager for the greater Los Angeles area with Colonial Life & Accident Insurance Company, and then Managing Director at the Prudential Insurance Company of America.[5]

Pastor’s leadership and work ethic has earned him several distinctions from the companies he has worked for. Prudential ranked him as the No. 1 managing director in the nation measured by year-over-year sales growth, and he was ranked as the top-selling senior investment manager in the nation during his tenure at JPMorgan Chase & Co.[6]

From Southern California, Pastor spoke with many of his clients and contacts about creating an independent financial firm of his own.[7] In October 2012, he realized his goal with the opening of Capstone Affluent Strategies.[8]

Capstone Affluent Strategies

Capstone Affluent Strategies, an independent wealth management firm headquartered in Irvine, California, was founded in October 2012 by Pastor and five other top financial advisors.[9] Established with the goal of creating a company that truly acts in the best interest of the client, Capstone advisors are not commission-based, tied to quotas, or responsible for pushing proprietary products. The firm has offices in Newport Beach, Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego, Phoenix, Dallas, Houston, New Orleans, Parsippany, and New York. Within a year of the company’s launch, Capstone grew its staff by over 900% from six advisors to more than 60.[10] The post-graduate tuition reimbursement program and Financial Advisor Associates program have helped attract top talent to the firm.[11]

In 2013, Pastor was recognized as one of On Wall Street’s “Top 100 Branch Managers” for his leadership, commitment to advisors, and ability to recruit and retain talent.[1] He was also a nominee for the 2013 Excellence in Entrepreneurship Award hosted by the Orange County Business Journal.[2]

Family

The Pastor family has a long history of involvement in professional hockey in the Buffalo, New York area. Ruby, Sam, and Al Pastor, Darin’s grandfather and great-uncles, bought the Buffalo Bison Hockey Club of the American Hockey League in 1956 when the previous owner threatened to move the team. With many future National Hockey League stars on the roster, the team went on to win the Calder Cup in 1960, 1964, and 1970 and became one of the top clubs in minor league hockey with an average attendance of 10,500 per game.[12] The Pastor family sold the Bisons in 1971 shortly after the franchise joined the NHL as the expansion Buffalo Sabres.[13]

The family established the Sam Pastor Pepsi Memorial Hockey Tournament in 1975, which was the area’s largest youth hockey event, attracting approximately 12,500 people every spring. Held in March and April, the two-month long tournament attracts as many as 300 teams from Canada, Pennsylvania, and Ohio[14] and provided an estimated $6.75 million boost to the local economy each year.[12]

The Pastor family owned the Pepsi-Cola Buffalo Bottling Corp., a regional Pepsi distribution business that grew from a single-truck operation in 1936 to a successful upstate New York plant in 1954, until they eventually sold the company in 2002.[15] Pepsi Buffalo won the naming rights to the Amherst skating and recreational center on May 11, 1998, bidding $550,000 plus incentives that included scoreboards, marketing dollars, and tournament underwriting for the $18.3 million center that opened in the fall of 1998.[14]

Phoenix Coyotes

An avid hockey fan, Pastor announced on March 29, 2013 that he had formed an exploratory committee in an effort to acquire the Phoenix Coyotes franchise of the NHL.[16] Pastor’s group, which included several seasoned municipal financing veterans, as well as immediate family members, formally submitted its bid to purchase the team to the NHL on May 10, 2013. Pastor, who hired Scottsdale-based law firm Kutak Rock LLP to help guide the submission of his proposal, sought to keep the Coyotes in Glendale and developed a plan to boost youth hockey participation in the region by partnering with schools, charities, and team sponsors in this area.[17] Pastor’s bid to purchase the team was rejected by the NHL on May 13, 2013.[18]

Personal life

Pastor donates primarily to the Democratic Party, yet describes himself as a "Pro-business Democrat," stating "the government does not need to prevent successful people from being successful."

Pastor also supports numerous philanthropic causes, including donating and volunteering to many non-profit organizations including: Dream Center Los Angeles , Cops 4 Causes, and Vitamin Angels.

In 2000, Pastor married long-time girlfriend Dr. Kathryn Gutillo, who he had been dating since they were in college. Recently separated, Darin and Kathryn were married by a pastor in a Christian service. They have identical twin daughters, Cassidy and Kayleigh.

References

References: