High-living broker Cliff Popper commits suicide in Florida

Cliff Popper, a broker notorious for high living and high commissions from sales of mortgage-backed securities, committed suicide on Tuesday.
JUN 04, 2012
Cliff Popper, a broker notorious for high living and high commissions from sales of mortgage-backed securities, committed suicide Tuesday, according to a preliminary report from the Highland Beach (Fla.) Police Department. His body was found at his condominium Tuesday. Just last month, Mr. Popper defended himself at his federal civil fraud trial in West Palm Beach. Mr. Popper, who had offices in Coral Springs and Boca Raton, Fla., was the broker at the center of the downfall of Brookstreet Securities Corp., which collapsed in 2007 after its clearing firm, National Financial Services LLC, made a margin call on accounts with collateralized mortgage obligations. His team at Brookstreet was instrumental in selling those CMOs, according to Securities and Exchange Commission complaints. With 500 representatives at the time, Brookstreet was the first notable collapse in a string of failures of an independent broker-dealer from the sale of a specific high-risk product. In May 2009, the SEC charged Mr. Popper and nine other brokers with misleading people into putting their life savings into investments that collapsed along with the real estate market. In all, 750 people bought the CMOs, according to the SEC, and clients who had margin accounts lost over $36 million. Mr. Popper and his team made more than $18 million in salary and commissions on the mortgage-backed securities in just three years, according to the SEC. He was well-known in the brokerage industry for his “rock star” tastes and lifestyle. Mr. Popper drove a BMW Z8, entertained clients in a sky box at Sun Life Stadium and owned a $2.4 million condominium on South Beach, according to the Miami Herald. In a story about stretch limousines from The New York Times in January 2005, he said that he had rented a stretch Bentley limousine to take clients to the Hawaiian Tropic model party the weekend of Super Bowl XXXIX. The limo cost $2,000. “It makes a statement. It turns heads and it's equated with being successful,” Mr. Popper told the Times. “It's the premier event in this country in terms of visibility, so you want to be in sync with that,” Mr. Popper told the publication. According to the Herald, he represented himself in the SEC matter, arguing in court that he never should have been charged. Mr. Popper began his career in the securities industry in 1983 with Merrill Lynch Pierce Fenner & Smith Inc., according to his profile on BrokerCheck. He worked for 20 firms, with the last being Workman Securities Corp. in 2008. He had not worked in the securities industry since. Mr. Popper said that he “never made any intentional misrepresentations to anyone,” and his business was hit by the same market force that wiped out big firms such as The Bear Stearns Cos. Inc. and Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. Jeffrey Kaplan, a former lawyer for Mr. Popper, didn't return a call Friday afternoon seeking comment. But Mr. Kaplan told the Herald that Mr. Popper was recently “under a massive amount of personal stress.”

Latest News

JPMorgan mulls new asset lending scheme aimed at crypto ETF investors
JPMorgan mulls new asset lending scheme aimed at crypto ETF investors

Insiders say the Wall Street giant is looking to let clients count certain crypto holdings as collateral or, in some cases, assets in their overall net worth.

Fintech bytes: Future Capital adds RayJay alum to C-suite, Advyzon welcomes ex-Envestnet leader
Fintech bytes: Future Capital adds RayJay alum to C-suite, Advyzon welcomes ex-Envestnet leader

The two wealth tech firms are bolstering their leadership as they take differing paths towards growth and improved advisor services.

UBS 'wrongfully' fired Idaho advisor in 2021: FINRA panel
UBS 'wrongfully' fired Idaho advisor in 2021: FINRA panel

“We think this happened because of Anderson’s age and that he was possibly leaving,” said the advisor’s attorney.

Cetera Trust hires Fidelity vet Kerri Scharr for chief fiduciary officer role
Cetera Trust hires Fidelity vet Kerri Scharr for chief fiduciary officer role

The newly appointed leader will be responsible for overseeing fiduciary governance, regulatory compliance, and risk management at Cetera's trust services company.

Trump's 'revenge tax' might come back to bite US borrowers, experts say
Trump's 'revenge tax' might come back to bite US borrowers, experts say

Certain foreign banking agreements could force borrowers to absorb Section 899's potential impact, putting some lending relationships at risk.

SPONSORED Beyond the dashboard: Making wealth tech human

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

SPONSORED The evolution of private credit

From direct lending to asset-based finance to commercial real estate debt.