Subscribe

SEC charges $54 million Louisiana RIA and owners for cherry-picking scheme

Wesley Kyle Perkins and Priscilla Gilmore Perkins, husband and wife owners of World Tree Financial, allegedly benefited themselves by handpicking the most profitable trades.

The Securities and Exchange Commission on Thursday charged a Louisiana-based advisory firm and its two owners — a husband and wife — for defrauding clients via a cherry-picking scheme perpetuated over several years.

World Tree Financial and its owners — Wesley Kyle Perkins, the CEO and CIO, and Priscilla Gilmore Perkins, the firm’s head of compliance, operations and finance — allegedly cherry-picked trades over a four-year span.

The scheme — under which advisers allocated winning trades to themselves or favored clients and allocated the losing trades to other clients — generated in-house profits for World Tree and a select number of clients while causing “substantial losses” for other clients, the SEC claimed.

(More: Regulators use big data to turn up enforcement heat)

The alleged fraud also misled clients who received better trades into thinking the firm managed money better than was true in reality, according to the SEC.

Neither Mr. or Ms. Perkins had returned a call seeking comment on the allegations by press time.

World Tree, based in Lafayette, Louisiana, had $54 million and 161 individual clients as of March 2018, according to the SEC’s civil complaint, which was filed Sep. 18 in the U.S. District court for the Western District of Louisiana. The firm withdrew its SEC registration in June 2012, and is currently registered as investment adviser with the state of Louisiana.

(More: Shorthanded SEC may have to decide investment advice proposal on its own)

Related Topics:

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

SEC issues FAQs on investment advice rule

The agency published answers to four questions about Form CRS.

SEC proposes tougher sales rule for exchange-traded products

The agency, concerned about consumer protection, says clients need a baseline understanding of product risk

Pete Buttigieg proposes a ‘public’ 401(k) program

The proposal is similar to others seeking to improve access to workplace retirement plans but would require an employer match.

DOL digital 401(k) rule not digital enough, industry says

Some stakeholders say the disclosure proposal is still paper-centric and should take into account newer technologies.

Five brokers lose Ohio National lawsuit over annuity commissions

Judge rules the brokers weren't beneficiaries of the selling agreement between the insurer and broker-dealers.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print