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Registered Rep. February 1, 2005 |
Blotter Banc One Is No. 1 -- in Fine Size... Fleecing the Flock... Morgan Gets a Slap... |
Registered Rep. April 1, 2006 John Churchill |
Blotter Regulators Collar Bear... Pattern of Abuse... Junk Fax Scalping... Judge Freezes Ponzi Scheme... |
Investment Advisor October 2006 Kathleen M. McBride |
News & Products How sweet it is: KeyCorp is selling its McDonald Investments branch network to UBS... More than a slap: Prudential Securities, Inc. was ordered to pay $600 million to regulators... etc. |
Registered Rep. June 24, 2004 John Churchill |
Morgan Stanley Sued by New Hampshire Regulators New Hampshire securities regulators are suing Morgan Stanley, charging that in 2002 the firm encouraged its brokers to sell proprietary mutual funds by using sales contests, a violation of NASD rules. |
Financial Planning June 1, 2007 David Thetford |
Compliance Tips VA Due Diligence: Rising popularity and complexity have made variable annuities a target for the SEC and NASD. |
Registered Rep. September 1, 2005 Chris O'Leary |
The Trouble With Annuities For registered reps, annuities, one of the most lucrative and complex items in an advisor's repertoire, can appear to be a cure-all for clients. Clients seem to love them, because of the guaranteed income -- even if they don't understand them. |
Registered Rep. March 1, 2007 |
Blotter SEC Front Running Probe... NASD Fines Bank of America... |
Registered Rep. May 1, 2005 |
Blotter Not-So-Hot IPO: The NASD fined Thomas Weisel Partners for levying exorbitant commission charges on "hot" IPO shares... Expelled, Reinstated, Expelled: Brokerage firm LH Ross was officially expelled from the securities industry and fined... etc. |
Registered Rep. April 1, 2005 Will Leitch |
Elder Abuse, Advisor Style The NASD says it will propose "significant" regulatory changes to the way variable annuities are sold, claiming elderly clients are being "scared" into investing in products against their best interests. |
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. November 1, 2005 |
Blotter Cooked Books... Direct Violation... Busted Market Timers... |
The Motley Fool February 18, 2011 Dan Caplinger |
Are Variable Annuities Right for You? Variable annuity sales are way up, but are they a smart move? |
Financial Advisor May 2004 Alan Lavine |
Dramatic Changes Loom For Mutual Fund, Annuities Sales Proposed disclosure rules could hurt level-load sales. |
Financial Planning February 1, 2006 Patrick Ferrer |
Annuities Special: Fee Factor When your clients buy annuities, do you really know what they're paying for? |
The Motley Fool August 16, 2007 Rich Duprey |
The Chatter About Charter Controlling Charter shareholder Paul Allen repeats his interest in taking the company private. With Charter Communications' stock falling, it would seem that the market isn't putting much credence into the scenario. |
Registered Rep. June 1, 2005 Karen Donovan |
No More Slap on the Wrist Regulators are getting tough and creative on registered reps because they suspect that fines aren't a strong enough deterrent to stop illegal behavior. |
Registered Rep. January 1, 2005 |
Blotter John Van, head of Murphy Van Securities, was barred from the industry... The NASD fined 29 firms a total of $9.2 million for late reporting... The NASD's mutual fund task force released its initial report... |
Registered Rep. October 26, 2004 David A. Gaffen |
Citi Fined by NASD for Hedge Fund Marketing Citigroup was censured and fined, but neither admitted nor denied the charges. A company spokeswoman said the firm "took immediate action in cooperating fully with the NASD to make sure all materials comply with current NASD guidance." |
Registered Rep. April 1, 2005 Bill Singer |
Two-Tiered Justice? A recent SEC report shows that the NASD is far less enthusiastic about policing itself --- despite the fact that such self-regulation is part of its charter. |
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. |
Investment Advisor January 2010 Melanie Waddell |
Retirement News News from the SEC, MetLife, and Fidelity: SEC will present recommendations on target date funds early next year... MetLife and Fidelity Investments have introduced a new deferred variable annuity product... more... |
Investment Advisor June 2006 Elizabeth Festa |
B/d Briefing: Regulating Annuity Sales The NASD is taking steps to assess oversight of the sales of all types of annuities by the patchwork quilt of regulatory agencies overseeing the products and move toward a level playing field of regulation without formulating any new rulemaking of its own. |
The Motley Fool November 10, 2011 Dan Caplinger |
Avoid This "Safe" Investment Today Guaranteed investments cost too much. |
Registered Rep. September 1, 2004 Namita Devidayal |
A Fitting Problem Having found the securities industry severely wanting in its policing of research conflicts, market-timing and fee disclosures, the regulators are looking to see if similar abuses exist in the insurance industry. |
Financial Advisor March 2007 Raymond Fazzi |
Annuities Anew No-load variable annuities begin to attract interest among fee-based advisors. |
Investment Advisor November 2005 Melanie Waddell |
The Playing Field: Round Two of Market Timing The SEC designed Rule 22c-2 to help mutual fund companies deal with market timing, but is it working? |
Registered Rep. October 25, 2006 Halah Touryalai |
Another One Bites the Dust: Broker Fined Record Amount for Market-Timing Scheme The NASD fined Paul Saunders, a registered rep, CEO and majority owner of James River Capital Corporation, $2.25 million. That sum represents the largest fine against an individual for marketing timing, including disgorgement of about $750,000 in illegal profits. |
Registered Rep. April 1, 2006 John Churchill |
Merrill Call Centers Gone Wild Merrill Lynch agreed to pay a $5 million NASD fine to settle charges that the firm's brokerage client call centers were poorly supervised. |
Registered Rep. May 18, 2010 Alan Lavine |
No-Load Annuities Gain Momentum As more wirehouse registered reps join RIAs or start their own, as income tax rates rise, and as Baby Boomers continue their march into retirement, expect investments in no-load variable annuities to grow. |
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. 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. |
Investment Advisor September 2009 |
Broker/Dealer News Actions by the SEC and FINRA |
BusinessWeek March 21, 2005 Amy Borrus |
Wall Street's Dirty Rotten Little Scoundrels The SEC has a new plan to turn up the heat on small-time Wall Street fraudsters. |
Registered Rep. March 24, 2005 Kristen French |
Mutual Fund Enforcement Picks Up Steam On March 23, the SEC and NASD handed out fines in mutual fund-related punishments totaling more than $80 million to five firms. And that is likely just the beginning of a coming avalanche of similar regulatory actions, legal experts say. |
Registered Rep. May 1, 2005 Kristen French |
Scandal Scorecard: Mutual Funds on Top With the SEC and NASD recently levying more than $80 million in fines to five firms (for transgressions related to revenue sharing and B shares), mutual fund sales practices officially sit on the front burner. |
The Motley Fool April 13, 2004 Dan Otter |
Annuities in a 403(b) or 457(b)? Before you invest in an annuity, make sure there aren't better options available. It won't take long to find them. |
Registered Rep. February 17, 2005 John Churchill |
NASD Charges American Funds with Directed Brokerage Violation Saying it's just as impermissible to make directed brokerage payments as it is to receive them, the NASD charged American Funds---one of the country's most reputable asset managers---with paying kickbacks to brokerages for selling its funds. |
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? |
Registered Rep. January 16, 2004 John Churchill |
NASD Charges Waddell & Reed With Violations The NASD Wednesday slapped Waddell & Reed with more than 6,700 complaints, charging that the firm systematically encouraged brokers to recommend unsuitable variable annuity exchanges to its customers. |
Registered Rep. July 1, 2005 Christopher O' Leary |
The Fund Family That Said No While in the past few years many funds sued by regulators have been quick to settle, American, the second-largest fund family in the U.S. with $650 billion in assets is fighting back. |
On Wall Street September 1, 2008 Donna Mitchell |
FINRA Seeks to Clarify Rule Mishmash Regulators are taking action regarding what they view as abuse in the way that variable annuity products are sometimes marketed and sold. The latest proposal will codify various practices for marketing variable annuity products. |
Registered Rep. October 1, 2006 Stan Luxenberg |
The Best of Both Worlds Is the line between funds and annuities disappearing? Not yet; regulators and corporate bureaucracies insist on separating the two investments. But in the next decade, the distinctions could blur. |
CFO March 1, 2007 Marie Leone |
Beware the Fine Print Despite some welcome improvements, variable annuities still scream ''caveat emptor.'' |
BusinessWeek October 20, 2003 Dwyer & Thornton |
Mutual Funds Feel The Heat Did they feed information to hedge funds, brokers, and others? |
Financial Advisor April 2004 Tracey Longo |
Wanted: Real Disclosure Rules on brokers compensation disclosure are changing---but slowly. |
The Motley Fool February 26, 2007 Dan Caplinger |
Spring Cleaning for Your Investments Just as getting rid of some unnecessary junk around the house can be good for your personal well-being, taking a critical look at your investments from time to time is extremely valuable. |
Registered Rep. March 1, 2007 Bill Singer |
Don't Mess with Suspension Rules If you are like most working people, you go to the office every day. And, if you like your job, it can even be hard to stay away. But if you are a financial advisor and get a suspension from the NASD, don't give in to temptation. Stay away. Go on vacation. |
Registered Rep. September 14, 2006 Halah Touryalai |
NASD Fines Securities America for Failure to Supervise Securities America was fined $2.5 million for failing to supervise an advisor who allegedly lured clients into early retirement with exaggerated promises of high returns. |
Registered Rep. February 12, 2007 John Churchill |
When Fund Sales Were Entertaining The NASD announced today it fined three mutual fund distributors a total of $700,000 for violations of its non-cash compensation rules. |
Financial Planning July 1, 2006 Elizabeth O'Brien |
A Cheaper Annuity Is Raymond James's new cap on fees the start of a trend in variable annuities? |