Securities and Investment Blog

DOES YOUR FINANCIAL ADVISER HAVE PROFESSIONAL LIABILITY INSURANCE?
Believe it or not, your trusted financial adviser is only human. He or she can make a very costly mistake despite his or her best intentions. Perhaps you have taken comfort in the fact that your adviser, whether a registered representative or an investment adviser representative, has a company with whom they are affiliated. Surely the company has insurance, right? Well, I have more bad news for you – that company might not have an errors and omissions policy either, particularly if they are a small outfit. Our advice is that you ask to receive a copy of your advisor’s policy at the beginning of your relationship. If your...

CAN A FINANCIAL ADVISER BE SUED BY A NON-CLIENT FOR NEGLIGENCE?
The answer to that question is “probably.” At least in Missouri, New York, and Iowa.             Missouri courts apply a balancing test when determining if a “non-client” intended beneficiary of professional services can sue for negligence despite a lack of privity. The leading case in Missouri, at least as to accountants, is Aluma Kraft Manufacturing Co. V. Elmer, 493 S.W.2d 378(1973). The Aluma court stated:  “The determination of whether in a specific case the defendant will be held liable to a third person not in privity is a matter of policy and involves...

Missouri Securities Division is Investigating new Missouri Limited Liability Companies
          A membership interest in a limited liability company is a “security” as broadly defined under the Missouri Securities Act of 2003.[1] Now the Missouri Commissioner of Securities, through its Enforcement Section of the Securities Division (“Enforcement Section”), is sending letters to specified companies that have newly filed with the Missouri Secretary of State as limited liability companies or as foreign companies, which state it has received information of participation in prohibited conduct by these companies.          Section 409.6-602(b) of the Missouri...

The Evolution of a Wells Process and the Anticipated SEC Sweeps
       The Wells Process has a long history dating back to 1972 when SEC Chairman William J Casey appointed John Wells along with two others to the “Wells Committee.” The SEC is charged with the compliance and enforcement of the federal securities law to protect citizens from fraud and theft while maintaining a fair and efficient market. Before the Wells Committee, the SEC could investigate, as it does today, but did not bring forth any notice as to what they were investigating or even who they were investigating. Attorneys who were specialized in this field could formally write to the SEC, ask what...

Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC wins FINRA Award sum of $15,300,000.00+ in Damage
     On February 2, 2023, a FINRA arbitration panel awarded the Claimant, Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC a sum of 15,300,000.00 in Compensatory Damages and over $4,000,000.00 in additional costs and attorney fees. Case Summary:             In October 2018, Kent Jackson Rhoades left his job at Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC in Mountain Home, Arkansas to start an independent financial consulting firm with Raymond James Financial Services, Inc. Rhoades not only left the corporate company to venture out on his own but also hired on a 12- person team, all of which...