Subscribe

Raymond James, Baird to pay $850,000 for SEC wrap-fee violations

Some of the firms' clients weren't aware of costs paid beyond the wrap-fee programs

The Securities and Exchange Commission said Raymond James Financial Inc. and Robert W. Baird & Co. will pay $850,000 in penalties for failing to establish procedures needed to determine what their clients were being charged in commissions beyond their wrap-fee programs.

The firms’ financial advisers weren’t able to determine the magnitude of fees charged to their clients when sub-advisers “traded away” with a broker-dealer outside their wrap fee programs, according to an SEC statement Thursday. Raymond James agreed to pay a $600,000 penalty and Baird $250,000 to settle the SEC’s charges.

Scrutinizing wrap-fees has been an area of focus under the SEC’s national exam program. The regulator’s investigation found that some clients of Raymond James and Baird were unaware they were being charged beyond the single wrap fee they paid for bundled investment services.

“Costs are a critical factor when firms determine whether a particular investment product or strategy is suitable for a client,” Andrew Ceresney, director of the SEC’s enforcement division, said in the statement.

“Baird and Raymond James lacked policies and procedures to consider an entire category of cost information and didn’t fully evaluate whether these wrap fee programs were a good fit,” he said.

The firms agreed to the fines without admitting or denying the SEC’s charges.

Related Topics:

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Advisers on front lines in battle against financial abuse of the elderly

As the population ages, more seniors are at risk of becoming victims of financial exploitation.

Finra panel directs UBS to pay $750,000 for Puerto Rico investment damages

Awards for damages tied to the island's debt crisis continue to climb this year.

Massachusetts regulator William Galvin charges broker with high-pressure sales tactics that harmed elderly

One customer with stage 4 cancer allegedly had nearly all her assets placed in a variable annuity.

Morgan Stanley to keep commission-based IRA business despite DOL rule in contrast to Merrill Lynch

Morgan Stanley clients may also choose individual retirement accounts that are fee-based.

Trump victory prompts optimism, risk-taking among wealthy investors, UBS survey finds

More than half of those surveyed plan to talk to their financial advisers about policy changes that will impact their investment portfolios and financial planning strategies.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print