Grace Bacon and Matthew Beevers join RSM's partnership
Mid-tier accounting and consulting firm RSM gas admitted two senior lateral hires into its partnership – Grace Bacon and Matthew Beevers.
Grace Bacon has been appointed a partner in the Financial Services practice. A Certified Financial Planner (CFP), she brings over 20 years of experience across the banking and financial services sector including financial planning, wealth management and private banking. Bacon has held senior roles at ANZ, CBA, Macquarie and Westpac.
She specialises in helping high-net-worth-clients and their families with personalised financial advisory and wealth management services. Sydney-based Bacon is particularly passionate about helping clients transfer their wealth to the next generation.
Rod Edwards, National Head of Financial Services at RSM, said “Grace’s extensive wealth management knowledge coupled with her respectfully empathetic, competently dependable, and responsible approach will be well received by our clients. In particular, her experience in advising high-net-worth clients and their families as well as international clients will also bolster the services we currently provide to our clients.”
Drawing from a history in elite sport, Matthew Beevers is an accountant and advisor with more than 14 years professional experience as an audit partner at Big Four firm KPMG. He is experienced in leading the audits of listed and private companies and public sector entities with international, national and local operations across a broad range of sectors, including mining, consumer goods, technology, property, superannuation, infrastructure and not-for-profit.
Beevers is a partner in RSM’s Assurance and Advisory team and is based in the firm’s Perth office.
Alasdair Whyte, Office Managing Partner of RSM’s Perth, said: “Matthew’s commencement in the Perth audit team couldn’t have come at a better time. With an increase in demand for assurance and advisory services, his expertise in leading the audits of clients in agribusiness, mining, technology and the not-for-profit sector will be well-received.”