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Registered Rep. January 8, 2003 Will Leitch |
NASD: Firms Are Overcharging Clients The NASD, acting on a tip acquired during an investigation, has sent several brokerage firms word that it has discovered brokers are not providing earned discounts to mutual fund investors, therefore overcharging them. |
Registered Rep. February 1, 2003 Will Leitch |
NASD Investigates Potential Breakpoint Violations The confusing slew of regulations that have followed on the heels of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act has tapped a strange feeling in brokers: the fear of violating securities rules unwittingly. A recent investigation by the NASD shows their worries are not unfounded. |
Registered Rep. November 5, 2003 Will Leitch |
NASD: Brokerages Owe $86M To Investors The summer 2003 scandal involving unpaid breakpoints -- sales-charge discounts that mutual fund companies provide investors who put in a certain amount in a selected fund -- might have been dwarfed by the market-timing scandal, but the SEC and the NASD haven't forgotten about it. |
Registered Rep. July 30, 2003 Will Leitch |
SIA Says "Me Too" on Sales Fee Investigations Amid the brewing investigations into mutual fund sales practices, the Securities Industry Association came out last week in support of the new Joint NASD/Industry Task Force. |
Registered Rep. November 20, 2003 John Churchill |
LPL Financial Awaits Regulatory Enforcement on Breakpoints Enforcement actions are pending as a consequence of certain clients not receiving appropriate commission discounts, otherwise known as "breakpoints," on Class A mutual fund purchases. LPL is one of roughly 2,000 firms conducting internal examinations into breakpoints. |
Registered Rep. August 26, 2003 Will Leitch |
NASD Sets Guidelines On Giving Money Back The Joint NASD/industry task force released its study on breakpoints last month, confirming that millions are owed to clients by firms for not applying discounts on breakpoints. The NASD is now making sure the firms know exactly how to rectify the situation. |
Registered Rep. December 9, 2003 Will Leitch |
Raymond James Audits Itself In the wake of last week's news that regulators have recommended "enforcement action" against Raymond James Financial for failure to offer clients breakpoints, the Florida-based brokerage has called for an all-hands-on-deck audit of its mutual fund trading. |
Wall Street & Technology February 12, 2004 Jessica Pallay |
Operation Mutual Fund The SEC is on a mission to bring order to the chaotic state of the mutual-fund industry. |
Registered Rep. June 2, 2004 Will Leitch |
SEC Passes Breakpoint Amendment---With an `Ethics' Twist The Securities and Exchange Commission has issued its long-awaited amendments on breakpoints (sales-charge discounts on mutual funds), and the end result of months of deliberations surprised no one. |
Registered Rep. April 1, 2005 Luxenberg & French |
A Pile of Reasons Regulators and broker/dealer management have gone overboard with mutual fund disclosure. Take the case of the B-share class of mutual funds. |
CIO July 1, 2004 Elana Varon |
Mutual Benefits To regain investor confidence and improve the bottom line, the mutual fund industry needs to integrate transactions up and down the supply chain. |
Wall Street & Technology January 4, 2004 Jessica Pallay |
Is Time on Your Side? As trading abuses are exposed, the mutual-fund industry contemplates how to stop the late bird from getting the worm. |
Registered Rep. April 7, 2005 Kristen French |
NASD Advocates More Disclosure, Less Paper Broker/dealers and their reps may get a big break on point-of-sale disclosure if the Securities and Exchange Commission heeds recent NASD advice. |
Registered Rep. February 1, 2006 Kristen French |
Both Sides Now Brokers who hold dual licenses -- both the Series 7 and Series 65 licenses -- will have to take fiduciary responsibility on some accounts. But they can also sell investments, after they make it crystal clear that they're doing so. |
Knowledge@Wharton September 24, 2003 |
Mutual Fund Scandals: Once Again, Individual Investors Are the Losers Is the mutual fund industry going to become mired in the kind of scandal that has afflicted so many public companies over the past few years? |
Wall Street & Technology March 26, 2004 Jessica Pallay |
Product Watch Infrastructure Instructions... Counting Credit... Mending Breakpoints... |
Registered Rep. August 10, 2004 John Churchill |
Hidden Market-Timers A new study of mutual fund firms' enforcement capabilities affirms what many in the industry have known for some time---that omnibus accounting practices by fund intermediaries make catching timers virtually impossible. |
Financial Advisor June 2004 Tracey Longo |
Compliance Overload A white-hot regulatory agenda is bedeviling independent broker-dealers in the U.S. |
Registered Rep. July 1, 2004 David A. Gaffen |
The Great Compliance Witch Hunt! Many clean brokers jump firms, only to discover their old broker/dealer besmirched their U4s. In a business where client realtionships are at stake, things can get ugly very quickly. |
Entrepreneur January 2004 Scott Bernard Nelson |
Under Fire Is it still possible to invest without getting burned? |
Investment Advisor March 2006 Melanie Waddell |
Piling On Keeping up with compliance chores will continue to occupy a substantial portion of advisors' time, as industry officials and observers are steadfast in their belief that regulatory scrutiny by the SEC and NASD isn't going away. |
The Motley Fool March 21, 2007 S.J. Caplan |
Check Out Your Broker A redesigned website tells you what you need to know before you invest. |
Registered Rep. August 29, 2006 Kristen French |
Pru Agrees to $600 Million Market-Timing Settlement Prudential Equity Group admitted to criminal wrongdoing in connection with the market-timing practices of a number of its brokers between 1999 and June, 2003. |
Registered Rep. November 7, 2003 David A. Geracioti |
SEC Chief "Distressed" at "Wrongdoing" in Industry SEC Chairman William Donaldson's favorite word is distressed -- at least that was true during both his speech to the Securities Industry Association annual meeting and the press briefing that followed. |
Registered Rep. February 2, 2006 Kristen French |
Brokers Learning to Play by New Rules It's no longer business as usual on Wall Street. Starting yesterday, broker/dealers must follow a new SEC rule that requires them to disclose at certain times that they may not be acting in their clients' best interest. |
Registered Rep. September 1, 2004 John Churchill |
Hidden Market-Timers A new study of mutual fund firms' enforcement capabilities affirms what many in the industry have known for some time --- omnibus accounting practices by fund intermediaries make catching timers virtually impossible. |
Wall Street & Technology August 22, 2005 Atul Seth |
Mutual Fund Musts Seven key compliance imperatives that will have a major impact on the mutual fund industry over the next year and suggestions on how firms can meet the challenges posed by the requirements successfully. |
Registered Rep. April 1, 2006 Kevin Burke |
Herd Mentality Instead of being the value-adders they're supposed to be, brokers seem to be following the larger herd of investors. A recent survey shows about two-thirds of brokers invest more than half of the asset they manage with a single mutual fund family. |
The Motley Fool May 20, 2004 Tim Beyers |
American Express Unit in Scandal The broker could be a target of a regulatory inquiry into mutual funds revenue-sharing. How can you tell if your own broker or advisor has a conflict of interest? |
OCC Bulletin September 5, 2002 |
Investment Portfolio Credit Risks: Safekeeping Arrangements This guidance alerts banks to the potentially significant credit risks they incur when safekeeping investment portfolio assets with third parties, such as brokers, broker/dealer firms and banks. |
Wall Street & Technology June 4, 2004 Jessica Pallay |
Fund Fixes Mutual funds are taking action to prepare for potential regulations on market timing, but there aren't any easy answers. |
Investment Advisor March 2007 Kara P. Stapleton |
News & Products National Financial announced February 1 that it is expanding its alliance program... NASD has warned older Americans about the potential downside of selling their existing life insurance polices... The SEC has authorized improvements to the NASD... etc. |
Registered Rep. September 28, 2004 David A. Gaffen |
The NASD Has Clients' Number The organization will be increasing its use of unsolicited phone calls to clients within the course of investigations into broker/dealer activities -- including calls to clients who have not lodged complaints, which has angered executives. |
The Motley Fool July 18, 2007 Selena Maranjian |
Check Out Your Broker Finding the perfect broker to whom you would entrust your hard-earned money is difficult. "BrokerCheck," a new online tool from NASD, makes it easier to weed out the unscrupulous ones. |
Registered Rep. February 11, 2004 John Churchill |
Dueling Trend Lines on Complaints Brokers have become more attuned to investor complaints in recent years, but they must be forgiven if they're having a hard time drawing conclusions from the trend numbers reported by regulators. |
Investment Advisor March 2006 Melanie Waddell |
The Playing Field: Here, There and Everywhere Dually registered advisors (advisors who are registered with both the SEC and the NASD, and are collecting both fees and commissions) have the best -- and worst -- of both worlds. However, a new study shows when implemented properly, the hybrid model can be very profitable. |
Investment Advisor May 2006 Ryan G. Murphy |
B/D Briefing: News & Products Fines, Complaints, Mergers: The NASD fined American General Securities Inc... NASD announced the promotion of James Shorris... Raymond James Financial selected PlanningStation... etc. |
Investment Advisor January 2006 Kathleen M. McBride |
Balancing Act The broker/dealer model is changing, spurred by business and regulatory pressures, and reps may stop talking to their clients. |
Registered Rep. January 27, 2004 John Churchill |
New Rule Makes Clearing Your Record Harder Brokers can expect a new rule that will make removing customer complaints and disciplinary actions from their public records much more difficult. |
Registered Rep. July 1, 2004 Gregg Wirth |
It's the Advice, Stupid The NASD's probe definitely has many brokers and branch managers in the industry nervous. They are unsure exactly what regulators are looking for, what constitutes a violation and what, if any, penalties could be levied. |
Investment Advisor June 2007 Kathleen M. McBride |
Interesting Times Independent broker/dealers find opportunity in the face of changing winds. |
BusinessWeek October 20, 2003 Dwyer & Thornton |
Mutual Funds Feel The Heat Did they feed information to hedge funds, brokers, and others? |
Registered Rep. September 1, 2005 Karen Donovan |
Under Siege Executives of broker/dealer firms are not exaggerating when they say it seems like regulators are locked into a competitive battle to collect the most pelts on Wall Street. |
BusinessWeek September 22, 2003 Der Hovanesian et al. |
How to Fix the Mutual Funds Mess Hidden fees, lax boards, and now scandal. Here's what has to be done. |
Investment Advisor June 2006 Kathleen M. McBride |
Stretched For broker/dealers who are already stressed, dually registered advisors are a challenge being met in varied ways. |
Registered Rep. May 1, 2004 Will Leitch |
Out, Damn Spots Already, stockbrokers have located a loophole in a NASD instituted a rule meant to prevent stockbrokers from, in effect, buying their way out of client complaints. |
Investment Advisor October 2009 Melanie Waddell |
B/Ds Warned on Recruiting SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro sent a letter to broker/dealer CEOs, reminding them of their supervisory obligations under federal securities laws. |
Registered Rep. February 27, 2004 David A. Gaffen |
Regulators, Industry Still Divided On Mutual Funds David Brown, bureau chief of investment protection in the New York Attorney General's office, said insurance companies who sold mutual funds wrapped in variable annuities, along with banks and law firms, may end up becoming targets of Eliot Spitzer's ire in coming months. |
Registered Rep. May 17, 2006 John Churchill |
Monster Arbitration Ruling Against Ameriprise Unit An NASD Arbitration panel awarded 32 retired Exxon employees a total of $22 million in damages for losses suffered when their broker put most of their savings in variable annuities and B-share mutual funds. |
Registered Rep. March 2, 2006 John Churchill |
NASD Promotes Its Online Education Program Called the E-learning Exchange, the NASD created the online education tool for reps and firms last May in order to help securities firms head off compliance and regulatory problems before they start. |