The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD), two agencies working to bring integrity back to the financial marketplace, have long identified the following practices of brokers and financial planners as being unlawful:
Churning - excessive trading of your account for commission purposes
Unsuitability - investment recommendations inconsistent with your risk tolerance
Overconcentration - concentrating on one investment for too long instead of diversifying your portfolio
The end of the stock market surge in the late ‘90s saw a new kind of fraud being perpetrated on the unsuspecting investor:
Conflict of Analyst Interest simply means that a brokerage’s financial analysts are attempting to wear two hats. Initially, they are serving you, as an investor, by carefully evaluating stocks based on the financial stability and profitability of each company. Secondly, analysts serve their institution’s investment bankers’ attempt to underwrite initial public offerings (IPOs) of large companies by offering favorable recommendations of that company’s financial stability and potential profitability.
By offering favorable recommendations, the brokerage virtually ensures that large quantities of a particular company’s IPO stock will be sold via their brokers. This means big commissions for both the firm’s investment bankers and its brokers.
Since the late ‘90s witnessed a surge of profitable technology-based IPOs, were the analysts serving the interest of their investors…or investment bankers? Did they compromise the future of millions of people like you solely to generate huge commissions by selling worthless stock from unstable companies?
The following are your Investor’s Bill of Rights:
Recently in the news, big investment names like Merrill Lynch, Salomon Smith Barney, and Morgan Stanley have been popping up. These are just three brokerage firms, which have been over-profiting by allegedly fraudulent practices for several years. Unfortunately, much of their profits have been at the expense of unsuspecting people like you, the investor. A new study based off the Securities Exchange Commission’s records says, as of June 2002, investors lose $4 billion a year from fraudulent investment practices.
Since Conflict of Analyst Interest is the newest and most costly form of fraud happening recently, choosing an investment house with independent underwriters is a safe bet. A recent study revealed stock prices of firms recommended by non-underwriting analysts had a near 60 percent greater return on the day of the IPO than those recommended by underwriting analysts. *
* Roni Michaely & Kent Womack, professors at Cornell’s Johnson Graduate School of Management.
The following are well-known claims by which you could receive compensation in securities arbitration against your investment advisor:
Churning - excessive trading of your account for commission purposes
Unsuitability - investment recommendations inconsistent with your risk tolerance
Overconcentration - concentrating on one investment for too long instead of diversifying your portfolio
Conflict of Analyst Interest - the practice of analysts negligently offering unwarranted “favorable” recommendations for stocks only to help secure commissions from selling large quantities of the same stock through initial and subsequent public offerings
Are you in need of a stock fraud lawyer? Contact a Kentucky or Tennessee stock fraud lawyer today. We have offices in Bowling Green, Louisville, Lexington, Murfreesboro, Nashville, Knoxville, Chattanooga, and Clarksville. Complete a Free Online Consultation Form or call us toll free at 1(800)489-6000.