Editor’s note: This story has been corrected to remove a reference to Georgia law regarding punitive damages. The part of the statute originally cited applies to product liability cases. It does not apply to the Finra arbitration award.
A $36.7 million Finra arbitration award against Oppenheimer & Co. Inc. was vacated earlier this year, but it appears the investors harmed by an alleged Ponzi scheme perpetrated by one of the firm’s former brokers still received a substantial amount of damages.
The claimants in the case, several investors including Donald Robinson, and Oppenheimer agreed to vacate the award, according to a March 27 order signed by Judge Yolanda Park-Smith of the DeKalb County Superior Court in Georgia.
The parties reached the agreement after a Jan. 30 hearing in the court on Oppenheimer’s motion to vacate the award. The court ruled to uphold the arbitration decision, but then the parties reached their accord to vacate it “prior to the Court’s entry of its written judgment,” Park-Smith wrote in the order.
The order to vacate the arbitration award was first reported by the Securities Arbitration Alert in its May 31 edition.
The fact that the arbitration decision was struck down doesn’t mean that the claimants are missing out on a massive arbitration award payment. In its annual report for 2022 filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Oppenheimer noted that it has paid tens of millions of dollars to end arbitration cases.
“Oppenheimer has settled, or settled in principle, eleven of the Horizon related arbitrations, including the Robinson arbitration, with approximately forty-one individual complainants,” the Oppenheimer annual report states. “The aggregate settlement payments for those eleven arbitrations total approximately $48.6 million.”
The Horizon reference relates to the Horizon Private Equity III fund, an alleged Ponzi scheme that John J. Woods launched in 2008 when he worked out of an Oppenheimer branch office in Atlanta.
Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. arbitrators originally ruled in favor of the claimants and awarded them the $36.7 million in a decision last September.
A spokesperson for Oppenheimer declined to comment. A lawyer for the claimants also declined to comment.
Both sides may be maintaining their silence because they each got what they wanted. Oppenheimer eliminated an arbitration loss. The harmed investors likely received a substantial payment as part of its agreement to vacate the award.
“If there was a settlement, it might have been rich enough to satisfy the claimant,” said Rick Ryder, president of SAC Inc., the owner and operator of Arbcheck.com, an online arbitrator search platform. “It’s not something you see every day.”
Oppenheimer recently lost another Finra arbitration case tied to the Horizon investment scheme. More cases are in the pipeline, according to securities lawyers.
While it's a useful rule of thumb, wealth industry experts agree Social Security benefits, retirement income planning, and individual expenses should also be factored in.
The holdout optimist from Wells Fargo sees market "past peak uncertainty" as trade war fears push many cheerleaders to pare back their predictions.
Last year's standout winners reflect on their triumph as the wealth industry gears up for another unforgettable night in New York City.
Financial advisors are becoming a bit more leery that fees, particularly for their wealthiest clients, are on the verge of taking a hit.
The deal aims to help advisors streamline their compensation processes while expanding AdvicePay’s reach across the full revenue cycle
From direct lending to asset-based finance to commercial real estate debt.
RIAs face rising regulatory pressure in 2025. Forward-looking firms are responding with embedded technology, not more paperwork.