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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.  |
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.  |
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.  |
Registered Rep. December 21, 2004 Will Leitch |
Ed Jones Agrees to Pay $75 Million in Revenue-Sharing Case Edward Jones has agreed to a $75 million settlement with the SEC, the NASD and the New York Stock Exchange as punishment for failing to disclose to clients information about the firm's revenue-sharing arrangements with mutual funds.  |
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. June 1, 2004 Will Leitch |
Accused A recent mutual fund scandal at Edward Jones causes a temporary hiccup in the firm's reputation.  |
Registered Rep. April 6, 2004 Will Leitch |
SEC Investigates Edward Jones' Fund Sales Edward Jones--a firm that hasn't attracted much regulatory scrutiny over the years--has been under considerable fire of late, thanks mainly to previously undisclosed revenue-sharing arrangements.  |
Registered Rep. August 18, 2004 Will Leitch |
SEC Unanimously Votes to Ban Directed Brokerage The 5-0 vote surprised few. Perhaps more worrisome was the call for comment on overhauling or banning outright 12b-1 fees, which were described as disguised commissions.  |
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. May 21, 2004 Will Leitch |
Roye Blasts Revenue Sharing at ICI Conference; Strong Settles The SEC's director of its investment management division delivered perhaps his strongest remarks yet on mutual fund malfeasance.  |
Registered Rep. August 1, 2004 Will Leitch |
The Reformation When the scandal craze that has gripped the securities industry first began two years ago, few in the industry recognized how deep it might go.  |
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. June 5, 2006 John Churchill |
Edward Jones' to Pay for Revenue Sharing, Still Faces Civil Complaints The financial firm will soon be writing a lot of checks to a lot of clients: $75 million in checks, to be exact. The payday is actually a payback per the terms of Jones' 2004 settlement with regulators for inadequate disclosure of revenue-sharing practices in its mutual funds sales.  |
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.  |
Registered Rep. September 9, 2005 Stan Luxenberg |
Imagine 50 Eliot Spitzers When are mutual fund companies charging too much in advisory fees? What constitutes proper disclosure of revenue sharing? And which governmental authority has jurisdiction over these issues?  |
Registered Rep. May 26, 2005 Kristen French |
Under ERISA, No Padding Profits with Revenue Sharing Under a recent Department of Labor directive, revenue-sharing arrangements between mutual funds and advisors to employee benefit plans can no longer be used to pad profits.  |
The Motley Fool March 24, 2005 Tim Beyers |
B Is for Broker More fines against fund industry bigwigs. What a shocker.  |
Financial Advisor April 2004 Tracey Longo |
Wanted: Real Disclosure Rules on brokers compensation disclosure are changing---but slowly.  |
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.  |
Registered Rep. September 1, 2004 Will Leitch |
Directed Brokerage Goes Down for the Count The first target has been hit: Directed brokerage is no more, and 12b-1 fees might be in more danger than had been thought.  |
Registered Rep. June 1, 2005 Will Leitch |
Edwards Weighing How to Settle A.G. Edwards is ready to talk about paying for its transgressions in the sale of Class B and Class C mutual fund shares.  |
Registered Rep. August 26, 2004 Will Leitch |
SEC Fines Seven More Broker/Dealers The SEC has nailed some additional broker/dealers for failing to disclose payment relationships they had with companies their research departments covered.  |
Registered Rep. November 1, 2005 |
Blotter Cooked Books... Direct Violation... Busted Market Timers...  |
Registered Rep. August 23, 2005 John Churchill |
Proprietary Matters for AEFA and UBS Selling proprietary product via a firm's own sales force was once considered a great strategy for maximizing revenue. In another sign that that strategy is dead: UBS and Ameriprise are now embroiled in separate class-actions suits.  |
BusinessWeek September 5, 2005 Anne Tergesen |
Slow To Reveal The Deals Sure, brokerage firms and fund companies are disclosing more about their financial dealings. Dig deep enough, though, and you may unearth more questions than answers.  |
Registered Rep. April 1, 2006 Kristen French |
Your Fees Under the Regulator Microscope Financial advisors had better be able to justify their fees, because regulators have been busy examining fees charged to retail clients.  |
Registered Rep. January 1, 2005 David A. Geracioti |
A Whole New Ball Game Financial advisors who grew accustomed to the little, and sometimes not so little, treats that mutual fund wholesalers lavish on them may have noticed a certain lack of swag lately.  |
Registered Rep. April 1, 2007 |
Turf Wars Over Advice The age-old debate between the b/d and investment advisor (RIA) industries over who should be able to provide advice and when, and whose regulatory regime offers better investor protections, is far from over.  |
Registered Rep. August 30, 2006 David A. Geracioti |
American Funds Slapped Today, an NASD Hearing Panel fined American Funds Distributors, the principal underwriter and distributor of the shares of the American Fund family, for directed brokerage.  |
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. 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.  |
Financial Planning March 1, 2005 Kristen French |
To B or Not to B Once-popular B shares have seen their sales dwindle since 2001--and may soon be extinct completely.  |
Registered Rep. February 18, 2004 John Churchill |
SEC Puts Forth Mutual Fund Rules Proposals The SEC has put forth three proposals that could drastically change the way mutual funds are sold.  |
Registered Rep. October 1, 2004 Will Leitch |
RIAs Kickin' Back Three registered investment advisors were accused by the SEC of accepting cash payments from TD Waterhouse in return for putting client assets with Waterhouse.  |
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. March 1, 2006 Kristen French |
The Best of Both Worlds Advisors say the broker/dealer-RIA hybrid model gives them freedom to choose what products, services and fees are best for their clients.  |
Registered Rep. January 30, 2007 Halah Touryalai |
At Independent B/D Confab, Optimism and Skepticism The head of the Financial Services Industry Institute is feeling a little more comfortable with regulators. But, on the other hand, the chairman of the FSI also warns that the combining of the NYSE and NASD might create a power struggle among "second-level" regulatory staffers.  |
Registered Rep. December 1, 2005 Andrew Osterland |
Brokering Advice The essential difference between brokers and registered advisors, say financial planners, is fiduciary duty. The notion that b/ds have a lighter burden of regulation than registered advisors, however, is something the securities industry vigorously disputes.  |
The Motley Fool February 17, 2005 Tim Beyers |
Is American Funds Un-American? And you thought the fund scandal was over. But don't despair; there is something you can do. From now on, recognize that your broker and advisor are often salespeople first. Your portfolio will thank you for it.  |
Registered Rep. October 1, 2004 John Churchill |
BrokerAdvisor BrokerAdvisor Let's Call the Whole Thing Off! The Financial Planning Association and some consumer groups are in court in an effort to block brokers from introducing themselves tp prospective clients as finanical advisors or financial consultants.  |
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.  |
Registered Rep. September 10, 2008 |
Bank of America to Buy Its ARs Back The nation's second-largest bank by assets settled an investigation by Massachusetts regulators, agreeing to buy back $4.5 billion worth of the securities.  |
Registered Rep. August 1, 2005 Matt Barthel |
The Ten to Watch 2005: Learning to Live With the New Normal Lately, there is a palpable sense of acceptance in the brokerage industry that the new regulatory climate is likely to be a permanent one. Heralds of the new order: John Mack... Chris Cox... etc.  |
Registered Rep. December 1, 2006 John Churchill |
Blotter Shelf Space No No... Broker Gets 14 Years...  |
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. 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.  |
Bank Systems & Technology July 5, 2004 Ivan Schneider |
SEC to Banks: Selling Securities? Get a License Industry convergence slowed by multiple regulators and accounting system limitations.  |
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.  |
Registered Rep. April 1, 2005 Stan Luxenberg |
A Benign Disaster? An academic, hired by Putnam to calculate losses attributable to market-timing and excessive trading, reckons the number is $4.4 million, not the $110 million Putnam agreed to pay the SEC and Massachusetts regulators.. And that includes interest.  |
The Motley Fool March 17, 2006 Selena Maranjian |
Beware of Revenue Sharing Have you ever heard of a practice called "revenue sharing" by mutual fund companies and brokers? It isn't as magnanimous as it sounds. You could lose $213,000.  |