National Planning slammed with $6.2M arbitration award

In a dispute focused on real estate investments, the indie B-D and a former broker 'breached fiduciary duty, were negligent,' complaint says. Big award comes with split decision.
FEB 24, 2014
National Planning Corp., a leading independent broker-dealer, was ordered to pay a $6.2 million arbitration award to two Minnesota investors in a dispute that focused on real estate investments. The investors in the matter, Ronnie and Stacy Erickson and various trusts on their behalf, alleged that NPC and a former broker, Christopher R. Olson, breached their fiduciary duty, were negligent, made misrepresentations and violated other industry rules, according to the award, which was issued Nov. 18 by a three-person Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. dispute resolution panel. The Ericksons filed the complaint, which involved real estate investment trusts and other private real estate investments, in February 2012 and sought $12.5 million in compensatory damages. Mr. Olson filed for bankruptcy this May, and in accordance with such a bankruptcy filing, all claims are halted, according to the award. The award, large by Finra arbitration standards, was a split decision. The two public arbitrators consented, while the nonpublic or securities industry arbitrator didn't agree with the award. NPC is part of the National Planning Holdings Inc., a network of four broker-dealers affiliated with Jackson National Life Insurance Co. A spokeswoman for NPC, Melissa Hernandez, declined to comment on the award. An attorney for the Ericksons, Bryan Keane, didn't return a call seeking comment on Tuesday. The award doesn't list the specific REITs in which the Ericksons were invested. It does state that the other real estate investments were in a company called Waterway Holdings Group, which was owned by Mr. Olson and another employee of Preferred Resource Group Inc., a network in the Minneapolis area of financial consultants, certified public accountants and attorneys. Preferred Resource Group was named in the complaint but wasn't liable for the award, according to the Finra filing. A message for Mr. Olson at his Preferred Resource Group office on Tuesday wasn't returned. The Ericksons “asserted that they also had to satisfy outstanding loan amounts on mortgages on the real estate investments in order to prevent foreclosure,” according to the Finra award. The couple “further alleged that Olson manipulated them into undertaking significant debt, paying millions of dollars in cash that cannot be recovered, and liquidating, annuitizing and structuring their investment assets earmarked for retirement to pay the staggering debt obligations related to the real estate investment recommendations," according to the award. Mr. Olson was permitted to resign from NPC in March for “failure to disclose outside business activities and failure to disclose client involvement in said activities,” according to his report on BrokerCheck. In April, he became registered with Berthel Fisher & Co. Financial Services Inc., according to BrokerCheck. Dow Jones first reported the $6.2 million award.

Latest News

Consumer sentiment continues lower, businesses see uncertain future
Consumer sentiment continues lower, businesses see uncertain future

Two separate readings of American sentiment reflect worrying outlook

Treasuries hold steady ahead of key market events
Treasuries hold steady ahead of key market events

Quarterly refunding, economic data are in focus.

Veteran investor Mobius says he's 'keeping the cash' in funds
Veteran investor Mobius says he's 'keeping the cash' in funds

95% of his funds' holdings are in cash amid trade uncertainty.

Gold-backed ETFs are back in favor
Gold-backed ETFs are back in favor

Report shows trade wars has fueled inflows to funds.

Global AUM at new record high of $128T but industry reform is required, report warns
Global AUM at new record high of $128T but industry reform is required, report warns

Remaining competitive requires reduced vulnerability to external conditions

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.