Focusing on 'yield chasing,' Finra issues watch list

FEB 24, 2012
In a market defined by low interest rates, investors are searching for higher returns. But brokers had better be careful about how they try to deliver those results, according to their primary regulator. In a 16-page letter posted on its website Tuesday, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. outlined its regulatory and examination priorities for this year. At the top of the list was conduct and products meant to beat the market but instead are unsuitable for investors. “Finra is informing its examination priorities against the economic environment that investors have faced since 2008, as these circumstances have steadily contributed to conditions that foster an increased risk of aggressive yield chasing, inappropriate sales practices, unsuitable product offerings, and misappropriation and fraud,” according to the letter. “Given the low yields on Treasuries, we are concerned that investors may be inadvertently taking risks that they do not understand or that are inadequately disclosed as they chase yields,” the letter said. Lack of liquidity and inadequate cash flow in investments also are red flags that Finra is monitoring. Among the products that are on Finra's watch list for suitability problems are residential- and commercial-mortgage-backed securities, nontraded real estate investment trusts, municipal securities, exchange-traded funds that use synthetic derivatives and significant leverage, variable annuities, structured products, private placements and life settlements. Finra said that it is undertaking a “broader data collection effort” and targeting its enforcement efforts on high-risk firms. The regulator warned brokers not to enhance their balance sheets by taking on excessive debt or manipulating their assets and liabilities. “Finra is concerned about the additional risks that are being taken as a result of increased leverage, including market, credit and liquidity risk,” according to the letter. “We will continue to monitor firms that employ a high degree of leverage, both on-balance-sheet and off-balance-sheet, during the upcoming year.” Finra also is zeroing in on fees. “We remain concerned about firms' charging retail investors hidden, mislabeled or excessive fees,” according to the letter. “In 2011, Finra brought cases against several broker-dealers that charged such excessive fees in the form of postage-and-handling charges that were unrelated to actual costs, and we will continue to investigate firms that appear to be taking advantage of investors through fee schemes.”

SOCIAL MEDIA

The regulator's guidance on social media is less explicit. Finra said that social media “is a topic on which we continue to receive many questions from firms.” “Core regulatory requirements apply to all communications with the public, irrespective of the me-dium or device used to communicate. Firms must be able to appropriately supervise business communications made using personal devices,” according to Finra High-frequency trading, and oversight of the creation and redemption of ETFs, also are listed among Finra's many priorities. Finra oversees about 4,460 broker-dealers and enforces the suitability standard, which requires brokers to sell products that fit their clients' investment needs, timelines and risk appetites.

WELCOME GUIDANCE

The Finra guidance is welcome, said Linda Riefberg, special counsel at Fried Frank Harris Shriver & Jacobson LLP. “It gives the industry a chance to prepare for what's on the exam and to do an introspective review to make sure they're up to snuff in these areas,” said Ms. Riefberg, a former Finra chief counsel. Other regulators also are paying attention to Finra's priorities. “States look at these very highly,” said Steve Thomas, director of Lexington Compliance, a division of RIA in a Box LLC, and a former South Dakota chief compliance examiner. “They make individual decisions on whether these items should be added to their state's examinations.” [email protected]

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