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Full-Text Articles in Law
An Overview Of The Regulation Best Interest Rule Package, Christine Lazaro
An Overview Of The Regulation Best Interest Rule Package, Christine Lazaro
Faculty Publications
(Excerpt)
On June 5, 2019, the SEC adopted the Regulation Best Interest Rule Package. The package consists of Regulation Best Interest: The Broker-Dealer Standard of Conduct; Form CRS Relationship Summary and Amendments to Form ADV; Commission Interpretation Regarding Standard of Conduct for Investment Advisers; and Commission Interpretation Regarding the Solely Incidental Prong of the Broker-Dealer Exclusion from the Definition of Investment Adviser. This article will summarize each of the releases.
Defining "Fiduciary": Differences In Fiduciary Standards Within The Securities Industry, Christine Lazaro
Defining "Fiduciary": Differences In Fiduciary Standards Within The Securities Industry, Christine Lazaro
Faculty Publications
Investment professionals are subject to varying standards of conduct when providing advice to clients. The standards range from providing advice which is suitable to acting consistently with a fiduciary standard.
The article provides a brief history of the applicable securities statutes governing investment advice. It discusses the differences in the enactment of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, and the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974.
Next, the article discusses how each statute has impacted the standards applicable to brokers and investment advisers. Investment advisers are deemed fiduciaries. Brokers are held to the …
Suitability Obligations Applicable To Securities And Annuities, Christine Lazaro, Benjamin P. Edwards
Suitability Obligations Applicable To Securities And Annuities, Christine Lazaro, Benjamin P. Edwards
Faculty Publications
(Excerpt)
Brokers are subject to different regulatory obligations depending on the type of product being recommended to a customer. Generally, brokers are subjected to overlapping oversight and are regulated at both the federal and state level. This oversight becomes even further complicated when a broker sells a product that spans multiple regulatory schemes such as certain annuities, which may be both insurance and securities products.
This article describes a broker’s suitability obligations under the new suitability rule when making recommendations which are covered by that rule. Next, it describes the additional obligations that a broker has when making a recommendation …
Has Expungement Broken Brokercheck?, Christine Lazaro
Has Expungement Broken Brokercheck?, Christine Lazaro
Faculty Publications
Stockbrokers are subject to one of the most comprehensive public disclosure regimes. They must disclose substantial information about their backgrounds, their employment history, and their disciplinary history. FINRA, the self-regulatory organization that regulates the brokerage industry, also requires that brokers disclose customer complaints and makes much of this information available to the public through an online database called BrokerCheck. The allegations of wrongdoing remain on the broker’s record permanently, unless the broker succeeds at having customer dispute information expunged. The broker is able to accomplish this by requesting that the arbitration panel that hears the customer dispute grant expungement, and …
Ethical Concerns When Settlement Includes An Agreement About Expungement, Christine Lazaro
Ethical Concerns When Settlement Includes An Agreement About Expungement, Christine Lazaro
Faculty Publications
(Excerpt)
When a customer makes a complaint against his or her broker, oftentimes that complaint is reported on the broker’s public record and made available to the public through the BrokerCheck system provided by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA). The National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD) established BrokerCheck in 1998 to provide the public with information about the professional background, business practices, and conduct of brokers and brokerage firms.
Understandably, brokers generally attempt to keep as clean a record as possible because potential clients may use BrokerCheck to decide whether to invest with a particular broker. To remove a …