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Written by 9:29 am Blog, Securities Fraud Articles

H.D. Vest Sanctioned by the SEC

The Securities and Exchange Commission recently charged H.D. Vest Investment Securities with violating key customer protection rules after failing to adequately supervise registered representatives who misappropriated customer funds.

H.D. Vest Investment Securities agreed to settle the charges by paying a financial penalty and retaining an independent compliance consultant to improve its supervisory controls.

According to the SEC’s order instituting a settled administrative proceeding, H.D. Vest has more than 4,500 registered representatives typically working as independent contractors who also operate tax businesses outside of their securities businesses.  H.D. Vest allegedly failed to have proper policies and procedures in place to monitor its representatives’ outside business activities, and as a result some representatives used their outside businesses to defraud brokerage customers in such ways as transferring or depositing customer brokerage funds into their outside business accounts.

The SEC’s order further finds that H.D. Vest did not follow customer protection rules in the wake of the wrongdoing by its representatives.  Under these rules to protect customer funds and securities in the possession of broker-dealers, H.D. Vest was required to make certain calculations and, if necessary, deposit funds into a reserve account for the benefit of customers who were harmed by the representatives’ misconduct.  H.D. Vest neither made the calculations nor maintained a reserve account, according to the SEC announcement.

The SEC’s order finds that H.D. Vest violated the supervision requirements of Section 15(b)(4)(E) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 as well as the customer protection rules found in Section 15(c)(3) of the Exchange Act and in Rule 15c3-3.  H.D. Vest also violated the document preservation requirements in Section 17(a) of the Exchange Act and in Rule 17a-4(b)(4).  H.D. Vest consented without admitting or denying the findings in the SEC’s order to cease and desist from committing these violations and pay a $225,000 penalty.  The representatives involved in the misconduct have since been the subject of criminal, civil, or FINRA enforcement actions.

The foregoing information, which is available on the SEC’s website, is being provided by The White Law Group.  The White Law Group, LLC is a national securities fraud, securities arbitration, investor protection, and securities regulation/compliance law firm with offices in Chicago, Illinois and Franklin, Tennessee.  The firm represents investors throughout the country in claims against their brokerage firm.

For a free consultation with a securities attorney, please call the firm’s Chicago office at 312/238-9650.  For more information on the firm, visit https://whitesecuritieslaw.com.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , Last modified: July 17, 2015