Jim Nagengast, Securities America CEO, wins Finra board seat

Jim Nagengast, Securities America CEO, wins Finra board seat
He prevails over a candidate backed by Finra's board to fill one of three large-firm positions.
JUN 28, 2018

Jim Nagengast, chief executive of Securities America Financial Corp., won a seat on the Finra board in a special election Thursday. Mr. Nagengast will fill one of the three seats on the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. board that are reserved for representatives of large firms. He prevailed over Shelley O'Connor, co-head of wealth management at Morgan Stanley. Mr. Nagengast will replace Stephen Cutler, former general counsel and vice chairman of JPMorgan Chase & Co., who resigned from JPMorgan and the Finra board earlier this year to join the law firm Simpson Thacher & Bartlett. The race was decided at a special meeting of Finra large-firm members. Mr. Nagengast, who was nominated by petition, won in an upset over Ms. O'Connor, who had been tapped by the Finra board's nominating committee. "The fact that the Finra board-backed candidate lost the election may mean that Finra doesn't have its finger on the pulse of industry sentiment," said Ben Edwards, associate professor of law at the University of Nevada-Las Vegas. A Finra spokesman declined to comment. Finra elections are most often contested for the three seats reserved for small firm representatives, although there are occasionally competitive races for large-firm seats and the seat for medium-size firms. The Financial Services Institute, which represents independent broker-dealers and financial advisers, endorsed Mr. Nagengast. FSI helped Brian Kovack, president of Kovack Securities, win a write-in campaign for the Finra board in 2015. Another leader of an IBD, Amy Webber, CEO of Cambridge Investment Research Inc., also serves on the Finra board. "We were proud to endorse Jim and work with him and his team to help him win this election and shape Finra's future for the better," FSI president and chief executive Dale Brown said in a statement. "Working through FSI, independent financial services firms are growing their representation and effectiveness with regulators and elected officials ... through constructive engagement." Finra's board has been criticized in the past for operating with too little transparency. Over the past year, the organization has posted more information about the body on its website and is considering other governance reforms as part of its Finra 360 self-examination. Most Finra board decisions are reached by consensus, according to board members who spoke at Finra's annual conference in Washington in May. The body is comprised of 24 members — 10 of whom are industry members and 13 public members. Finra chief executive Robert W. Cook also sits on the board. "Finra will benefit from Jim's industry knowledge and experience as we work to advance our mission of protecting investors and ensuring the integrity of our markets," Finra chairman William H. Heyman, vice chairman and chief investment officer at the Travelers Companies Inc., said in a statement. Mr. Nagengast has worked at Securities America, an Omaha, Neb., independent broker-dealer, since 1994 and has served as its CEO since 2010.

Latest News

Investing for accountability: How to frame a values-driven conversation with clients
Investing for accountability: How to frame a values-driven conversation with clients

By listening for what truly matters and where clients want to make a difference, advisors can avoid politics and help build more personal strategies.

Advisor moves: Raymond James ends week with $1B Commonwealth recruitment streak
Advisor moves: Raymond James ends week with $1B Commonwealth recruitment streak

JPMorgan and RBC have also welcomed ex-UBS advisors in Texas, while Steward Partners and SpirePoint make new additions in the Sun Belt.

Cook Lawyer says fraud claims are Trump’s ‘weapon of choice’
Cook Lawyer says fraud claims are Trump’s ‘weapon of choice’

Counsel representing Lisa Cook argued the president's pattern of publicly blasting the Fed calls the foundation for her firing into question.

SEC orders Vanguard, Empower to pay more than $25M over failures linked to advisor compensation
SEC orders Vanguard, Empower to pay more than $25M over failures linked to advisor compensation

The two firms violated the Advisers Act and Reg BI by making misleading statements and failing to disclose conflicts to retail and retirement plan investors, according to the regulator.

RIA moves: Wells Fargo pair joins &Partners in Virginia
RIA moves: Wells Fargo pair joins &Partners in Virginia

Elsewhere, two breakaway teams from Morgan Stanley and Merrill unite to form a $2 billion RIA, while a Texas-based independent merges with a Bay Area advisory practice.

SPONSORED How advisors can build for high-net-worth complexity

Orion's Tom Wilson on delivering coordinated, high-touch service in a world where returns alone no longer set you apart.

SPONSORED RILAs bring stability, growth during volatile markets

Barely a decade old, registered index-linked annuities have quickly surged in popularity, thanks to their unique blend of protection and growth potential—an appealing option for investors looking to chart a steadier course through today's choppy market waters, says Myles Lambert, Brighthouse Financial.