Subscribe

SEC penalizes RIA more than $2 million for 12b-1 violations

Pennsylvania advisory firm invested client funds in expensive share classes when less costly ones were available.

A Pennsylvania investment advisory firm on Friday agreed to pay $2.1 million in a settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission over sales of high-fee mutual fund share classes.

In the order, the SEC alleged that from April 2013 through March 2016, Capital Analysts LLC, which is based in Fort Washington, Pa., invested client funds in mutual fund share classes with 12b-1 fees in its wrap fee program when share classes without the fees were available in the same fund.

The agency also alleged that from April 2013 through March 2017, the firm failed to disclose to its clients that its broker-dealer, Lincoln Investment Planning, received service fee revenue from a clearing broker when Capital Analysts invested client assets in certain funds that did not pay 12b-1 fees.

Capital Analysts agreed to return $936,181 to investors for the best-execution violation involving 12b-1 fees along with $113,692 in pre-judgment interest. It will return $691,125 to investors and pay $79,351 in prejudgment interest related to the failure to disclose Lincoln’s third-party compensation.

In addition, the SEC levied a $300,000 fine on Capital Analysts.

Earlier this year, the SEC encouraged investment advisers to report themselves if they inappropriately recommended high-fee share classes. Under that program, which ended in June, advisers would have to repay clients but would not be fined.

A spokeswoman for Capital Analysts was not immediately available for comment.

The SEC has made share-class violations an enforcement priority, asserting that they constitute a breach of advisers’ fiduciary duty.

“When an advisory client in a fee-based program is eligible for a non-12b-1 fee share class, it generally is in the client’s best interest to invest in this share class rather than a 12b-1 fee share class of the same fund because the clients’ returns will not be reduced by 12b-1 fees,” the SEC order states.

Related Topics:

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

FPA, CFP Board diverge on DOL investment advice proposal

While the CFP Board supports the proposal, the FPA has expressed concerns about the DOL rule potentially raising compliance costs for members, increasing the cost of advice and reducing access to advice for some.

Braxton encourages RIAs to see investing in diversity as a business strategy

‘If a firm values its human capital, then it will make an investment to make sure that their talent can flourish for the advancement of the bottom line,’ says Lazetta Rainey Braxton, co-CEO of 2050 Wealth Partners.

Bill chips away at SALT block but comes with drawbacks, advisors say

'I’d love to see the [full] SALT deduction come back but not if it means rates go up,' one advisor says.

Former Morgan Stanley broker running for office reviewing $147K award

Deborah Adeimy claimed firm blocked her from running in GOP primary, aide says 'we're unclear how award figure was calculated.'

GOP bill to kill SEC proposal on advisor AI conflicts faces obstacles

It’s more likely the GOP will make a point about their frustrations with the SEC than actually get the bill through the Democratic-controlled Senate.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print