Texas broker-dealer fined $100,000 over variable annuity exchanges

IMS Securities, a shop with around 110 brokers, didn't have adequate supervisory procedures in place to ensure brokers weren't abusing annuity exchanges.
OCT 06, 2016
A small, Texas-based broker-dealer has been fined $100,000 for failures in monitoring variable annuity exchanges, within months of firm executives being targeted in a pair of multimillion-dollar customer disputes involving variable annuities and real estate investment trusts. The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. handed down the fine to IMS Securities Inc., a firm with approximately 110 registered representatives, due to a lack of “adequate supervisory procedures for problematic rates of exchange” in variable annuity transactions, according to the broker-dealer industry watchdog. A recent analysis of Finra's enforcement activity estimates the group is on pace this year to break the previous record for level of fines against broker-dealers and their reps. An annuity exchange — also known as a 1035 exchange, named after a provision in the tax code — allows brokers to transfer funds in an annuity to a new policy without subsequent tax penalties. Finra requires firms have surveillance procedures in place to ensure brokers don't abuse the practice by performing frequent exchanges to benefit themselves through upfront commissions at the expense of a customer. From July 15, 2013 through July 8, 2014, IMS Securities relied upon its chief financial officer to review annuity exchanges, but “provided him with no guidance or tools such as exception reports or trend analysis to assist with reviews for problematic rates of exchange,” according to a Finra enforcement document filed Sept. 30. Instead, the reviews were limited to the annuity application and the order records for the exchange, and IMS consequently “failed to investigate potentially problematic patterns of variable annuity exchanges,” according to Finra. In addition to violations regarding variable annuity exchanges, the firm also failed to enforce written supervisory procedures around consolidated reports, which combine account information regarding customer assets, Finra said. The firm neither confirmed nor denied Finra's allegations. Jackie Wadsworth, the owner and chief executive of IMS Securities, didn't respond to a request for comment. Over the summer, Ms. Wadsworth, along with her firm's chief financial and compliance officers, were subjects of a $3 million Finra arbitration complaint over the sale of variable annuities and real estate securities, as well as a separate $1.7 million complaint over REIT sales, according to BrokerCheck records. The cases are pending.

Latest News

Advisory firm moms share high satisfaction but report early parenthood hurdles
Advisory firm moms share high satisfaction but report early parenthood hurdles

Early parenthood linked to lower fulfillment and fewer leadership roles, despite otherwise strong industry-wide support.

Creative Planning CIO warns of short-term private equity flips
Creative Planning CIO warns of short-term private equity flips

“It's the Golden Age, we're all blessed that this is where we are, what we do for a living, and that the sun is shining on the transition towards the RIA space," Creative Planning CIO Jamie Battmer said at a forum hosted by Goldman Sachs.

Munis poised to outshine fixed income in coming summer redemption season
Munis poised to outshine fixed income in coming summer redemption season

Strategists expect municipal bonds to best Treasuries during the four-month window from May until August, following a historical trend.

Advisor moves: Veteran UBS ensemble managing $2B splits to Sanctuary
Advisor moves: Veteran UBS ensemble managing $2B splits to Sanctuary

Elsewhere, Raymond James adds two advisors from Edward Jones and LPL, forming an LGBTQ+ focused practice in New Hampshire.

Fintech bytes: Wealth.com and Vestwell strike new integration partnerships
Fintech bytes: Wealth.com and Vestwell strike new integration partnerships

Leading estate-planning tech provider Vanilla has also unveiled key AI upgrades to help its advisor users.

SPONSORED The evolution of private credit

From direct lending to asset-based finance to commercial real estate debt.

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.