UBS to pay ex-76ers owner $2M over sale of '100% principal-protected' notes

UBS to pay ex-76ers owner $2M over sale of '100% principal-protected' notes
Notes didn't protect Croce's principal -- once issuer Lehman went belly up; at least 40 cases still pending
JUL 27, 2011
By  John Goff
UBS AG, Switzerland's biggest bank, will pay Pat Croce, former part-owner of the Philadelphia 76ers basketball team, about $2 million to compensate for losses on structured products backed by Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. A Financial Industry Regulatory Authority arbitration panel ruled June 9 that UBS is responsible for $1.52 million plus interest in damages. A UBS broker sold $2 million of “principal-protected” Lehman notes to Croce and his wife, Diane, on June 25, 2008, less than three months before the bank failed, said Jacob Zamansky, their attorney. The Zurich-based bank sold $1 billion of the Lehman products to U.S. investors, according to spokeswoman Allison Chin-Leong. It's been ordered to repay investors some or all of their losses in seven of the eight cases involving the securities that have been decided by Finra panels. “We showed the arbitration panel that UBS knew that Lehman was in serious financial trouble following the collapse of Bear Stearns,” Zamansky said in a telephone interview, “It misrepresented what it knew to its customers and its brokers” The broker who sold the notes has since quit the firm, saying he was misled by UBS, Zamansky said. The New York-based lawyer has more than 40 pending cases against UBS for Lehman “100% Principal-Protection Notes,” totaling more $25 million, he said. “The vast majority of Lehman notes were sold appropriately,” and the failure of Lehman was “unexpected and unprecedented,” Chin-Leong said. The panel voted 2 to 1 and didn't provide a reason for its decision. Banks create structured products by bundling debt with derivatives and offer them to individual investors as an alternative to traditional investments. Derivatives are contracts whose value is derived from stocks, bonds, currencies and commodities.

Latest News

Maryland bars advisor over charging excessive fees to clients
Maryland bars advisor over charging excessive fees to clients

Blue Anchor Capital Management and Pickett also purchased “highly aggressive and volatile” securities, according to the order.

Wave of SEC appointments signals regulatory shift with implications for financial advisors
Wave of SEC appointments signals regulatory shift with implications for financial advisors

Reshuffle provides strong indication of where the regulator's priorities now lie.

US insurers want to take a larger slice of the retirement market through the RIA channel
US insurers want to take a larger slice of the retirement market through the RIA channel

Goldman Sachs Asset Management report reveals sharpened focus on annuities.

Why DA Davidson's wealth vice chairman still follows his dad's investment advice
Why DA Davidson's wealth vice chairman still follows his dad's investment advice

Ahead of Father's Day, InvestmentNews speaks with Andrew Crowell.

401(k) participants seek advice, but few turn to financial advisors
401(k) participants seek advice, but few turn to financial advisors

Cerulli research finds nearly two-thirds of active retirement plan participants are unadvised, opening a potential engagement opportunity.

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.

SPONSORED Beyond the dashboard: Making wealth tech human

How intelliflo aims to solve advisors' top tech headaches—without sacrificing the personal touch clients crave