Bond fund costs Schwab more than $500,000

The Charles Schwab Corp. short-term-bond fund that blew up this year because of its exposure to mortgage-backed securities is now costing the firm as a result of significant legal losses.
OCT 10, 2008
By  Bloomberg
The Charles Schwab Corp. short-term-bond fund that blew up this year because of its exposure to mortgage-backed securities is now costing the firm as a result of significant legal losses. On Oct. 2, an arbitration panel of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. of New York and Washington ruled that San Francisco-based Schwab and one of its representatives were liable for $542,340 in an investor claim against them. The investor, Jeffrey Nielson, alleged that Schwab and the rep, Darin Beckering, duped him when he bought the Schwab YieldPlus Fund by not disclosing its exposure to the subprime-mortgage market and the fact that it was a proprietary fund. YieldPlus is an ultrashort-bond fund that offered high yields. At its peak last year, it had more than $13 billion in assets. On Friday, the fund had $432 million in assets. There are many individual arbitration claims as well as class actions against Schwab due to the fund, which has dropped more than 30% for the year. “This arbitration award may in fact be significant,” said Jacob H. Zamansky, an attorney in New York who represents investors in securities arbitration claims. He said that a half dozen investors have contacted him recently about the YieldPlus fund. Schwab recorded a $16 million charge this year for “individual client complaints and arbitration claims” stemming from the YieldPlus Fund. A search of the Finra arbitration award database showed that Schwab had lost one other claim this year over the YieldPlus Fund, but that was a much smaller award of $18,425. A Schwab spokesman, Michael Cianfrocca, didn’t immediately return a phone call seeking comment.

Latest News

New RIA aggregator United Wealth Partners gives majority ownership to advisors
New RIA aggregator United Wealth Partners gives majority ownership to advisors

RIA industry veterans Jay Hummel and John Phoenix have launched a firm which offers 60% equity to advisors with plans to grow to over $5 billion in AUM, before selling to an institutional investor within five years.

Wealth team launches KRM Investment Counsel
Wealth team launches KRM Investment Counsel

A high-net-worth advisory group leaves Wintrust to embrace independence.

Modern Wealth marks two-year milestone with 16th acquisition
Modern Wealth marks two-year milestone with 16th acquisition

Independent firm joins expanding national advisory network.

Shift toward fee-based models accelerates among independent advisors
Shift toward fee-based models accelerates among independent advisors

New research reveals shifting strategies in financial guidance.

EP Wealth Advisors acquires NBS Financial Services
EP Wealth Advisors acquires NBS Financial Services

Westlake Village office strengthened by acquisition.

SPONSORED Compliance in real time: Technology's expanding role in RIA oversight

RIAs face rising regulatory pressure in 2025. Forward-looking firms are responding with embedded technology, not more paperwork.

SPONSORED Advisory firms confront crossroads amid historic wealth transfer

As inheritances are set to reshape client portfolios and next-gen heirs demand digital-first experiences, firms are retooling their wealth tech stacks and succession models in real time.