Investment Suitability 101_1

Post on: 16 Март, 2015 No Comment

Investment Suitability 101_1

All advisers and brokerage firms have a fundamental responsibility to deal fairly with investors. All sales efforts are judged based upon the ethical standards of Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) rules that also play a crucial role in setting industry wide standards. The suitability rule contains three primary brokerage responsibilities: 1. To perform reasonable-basis suitability analysis, 2. To perform customer-specific suitability analysis, and 3. To perform quantitative suitability analysis.

Reasonable-Basis Suitability: All brokers and broker-dealers must have a reasonable basis to believe, based on appropriate research and diligence, that all recommendations are suitable for at least some investors. FINRA recognizes that there are some investment products and strategies that are inappropriate for all investors and other investments that are only appropriate for a very small group of investors. The standards for reasonable diligence vary depending on the complexity of the investment product or the investment strategy employed. Regardless of the specific product or investment strategy being recommended, investment advisers must convey the potential risks and rewards associated with the recommended security or strategy before bringing it to an investors attention.

Customer-Specific Suitability: All brokers and broker-dealers must have a reasonable basis to believe that the recommended investment strategy is suitable for the particular customer. All sales efforts must be reasonable and appropriate for the investor based upon the investors risk tolerance, investment objectives, age, financial circumstances, other investment holdings, and experience. An advisor must attempt to obtain and analyze a broad array of customer-specific factors to provide suitable investment advice.

Quantitative Suitability: All brokers and broker-dealers must have a reasonable basis for recommending a series of transactions, even if suitable when viewed in isolation, are not excessive and unsuitable for the customer when taken together in light of the customers objectives. Thus, while a small investment in a particular product may be suitable for the investor, a large portfolio concentration in the same or similar products may be unsuitable for the same investor. In addition, the pattern and type of securities activity in the account can also be unsuitable for the investor. Factors such as turnover rate, cost-equity ratio, and use of in-and-out trading tactics indicate excessive activity that violates quantitative suitability standards.

Investment Suitability 101_1

Institutional- Investor Exemption: Under FINRA Rule 2111(b), a broker or broker-dealer fulfills the customer-specific suitability obligation for institutional investors differently than with individual customers. For institutional customers the broker or broker-dealer must have a reasonable basis to believe the institutional customer is capable of evaluating investment risks independently, both in general and with regard to particular investment strategies and also the institutional customer must affirmatively indicate that it is exercising independent judgment in evaluating the brokers recommendations.

The foregoing rules play a crucial role in protecting investors from unscrupulous sales tactics. However, far too often brokers do not understand the risks of the investments they recommend or their clients investment goals, or place large bets on unsuitable strategies. The attorneys at Gana LLP can help you to analyze your account holdings and determine whether your advisers recommendations were unsuitable.


Categories
Cash  
Tags
Here your chance to leave a comment!