DeWaay Financial closing its doors

AUG 23, 2013
DeWaay Financial Network LLC is the latest broker-dealer to shut down because of the costly fallout of investor lawsuits stemming from high-risk private placements. The firm, which was known for its access to private deals, filed a broker-dealer withdrawal form Nov. 9 with the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc., according to DeWaay's profile on Finra's BrokerCheck. After filing a BDW, broker-dealers typically have two to three months to wind down their businesses. DeWaay, based in Clive, Iowa, and owned by the formidable Iowa broker Donald DeWaay, is in a drawn-out battle with wealthy clients over failed real estate deals. At one time, Mr. DeWaay was a superstar broker, producing between $8 million and $10 million in fees and commissions annually, said Jon Henschen, an industry recruiter who was an affiliated registered representative with the firm before leaving last year. “I'm sorry to see it happen,” Mr. Henschen said. “He used to be my broker.” Mr. DeWaay “was at the wrong place at the wrong time,” Mr. Henschen said. “He thought these [alternative investments] couldn't lose, but they did.” DeWaay built a large part of its reputation on selling alternative investments. In recent months it also has been losing star brokers, including Erin Botsford, to rival firms. The firm faces two class actions seeking a total of $15.2 million. They are by clients who bought securities of Diversified Business Services and Investments Inc., or DBSI, which filed for bankruptcy protection in 2008. Meanwhile, investors have filed arbitration complaints against DeWaay, with Finra seeking $15 million, according to the firm. The company has $820,000 in net capital. DeWaay recorded a loss of $1.8 million in 2011 on total revenue of $14.2 million, according to an SEC filing. DeWaay and claimants in a class action have filed a settlement agreement for $3 million, according to The Des Moines Register. A hearing is tentatively scheduled for Jan. 30, the paper reported. Other investors have objected to the settlement, saying they lost about $250 million. Mr. DeWaay said he intends to work with his clients through his RIA. [email protected] Twitter: @bdnewsguy

Latest News

 Purpose-driven wealth starts with asking the right 'why' 
 Purpose-driven wealth starts with asking the right 'why' 

More clients want their wealth to do something. The advisor's job is to help them figure out exactly what that means and build a plan around it. 

Pension fund sues Microsoft, says it misled investors over Copilot AI
Pension fund sues Microsoft, says it misled investors over Copilot AI

The AI numbers came in far below the pitch - and the stock paid for it.

Delaware court splits Foley pay fight at Fidelity National Financial
Delaware court splits Foley pay fight at Fidelity National Financial

A rewritten governance law gets its first court test, and one pay claim lives on.

$17.5B Modera Wealth expands Florida footprint with NorthStar Financial deal
$17.5B Modera Wealth expands Florida footprint with NorthStar Financial deal

The fee-only integrator is adding $311.6 million in assets and specialized planning expertise to its presence in the Sunshine State.

Robinhood cuts 10% of staff despite record trading volumes
Robinhood cuts 10% of staff despite record trading volumes

CEO Vlad Tenev calls the proactive restructuring a bid to build a leaner team, coming as the brokerage rolled out its RIA referral program earlier this month.

SPONSORED Why direct indexing stopped being optional

Direct indexing is on pace to outgrow ETFs and mutual funds. Northern Trust's Ken Lassner explains why the advisors who get it wish they had started sooner.

SPONSORED Estate planning isn't a service add-on. It's your retention strategy.

As $84 trillion prepares to change hands, advisors who treat estate planning as peripheral are quietly building a sieve, not a book.