Subscribe

Arbitrators award client of former adviser $875,000

Clyde Mick Jones accused of breach of fiduciary duty, violating state law.

A Finra arbitration panel has awarded claimants in a complaint against former broker and former investment adviser Clyde Mick Jones $625,000 in compensatory damages and $250,000 for legal fees.

From November 2008 through September 2016, Mr. Jones had been a registered investment adviser with Rubicon Investment Management & Analytics, in San Antonio, Texas. He began his securities career at Bache in 1977, and worked at several firms through 2007, when he gave up his securities license. At times, arbitration panels of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority are asked to handle cases involving investment advisers.

While the claimant in the case — Nola Lanell Jenkins, who was acting as trustee of the Kathryn Childress Irrevocable Trust — also sought relief from Rubicon and Scottrade, which served as the RIA’s custodian, the panel did not hold them liable for the award.

Ms. Jenkins alleged violations of Texas Securities Act, violations of equitable principles of trade and fair dealing, supervision violations, breach of fiduciary duty, negligent training and supervision, and participatory and vicarious liability. Specifically, she alleged that Scottrade, Rubicon and Jones made unsuitable investments, concentrating the portfolio in small cap and penny stocks, and that Mr. Jones failed to rebalance the portfolio to reduce risk and volatility despite multiple requests.

Related Topics:

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Cresset adds two J.P. Morgan teams overseeing $5B

The two groups were among several former First Republic teams whose exits from J.P. Morgan were announced Friday.

Ascensus buying Vanguard small-business retirement offerings

The company is acquiring the Individual 401(k), Multi-SEP, and SIMPLE IRA plan businesses from Vanguard.

Raymond James adds advisor from Wells Fargo

South Florida-based advisor had been overseeing $105 million in client assets at Wells.

Dimon says AI could be ‘transformational’

JPMorgan Chase's CEO says AI's impact on the economy could equal that of the steam engine.

Commonwealth case sends crystal-clear message

KO blow from the SEC offers pointed lesson: Don’t fight Uncle Sam

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print