Articles Tagged with best interest

FINRA has sanctioned Coastal Equities, Inc. for its failure to reasonably supervise a stockbroker who recommended excessive and unsuitable trades in the accounts of customers.   Coastal Equities, Inc. was censured and ordered to pay $270,320 in restitution to clients, plus $9,589 in interest.

FINRA alleged that between October 2016 and July 2018, Coastal Equities, Inc. failed to reasonably supervise a financial advisor that recommended excessive and unsuitable trading in accounts of four customers.  FINRA also alleged that the financial advisor was making unsuitable recommendations to purchase securities using margin in two of those accounts.  According to the allegations, the financial advisor’s supervisor became aware of multiple instances of unsuitable trading but failed to respond reasonably.

Based on public records, it is believed that the financial advisor at issue is Sam Aziz.  Mr. Aziz worked at Coastal Equities in the Dublin, Ohio branch from September 2015 through July 2018.  In 2019, Mr. Aziz was barred by FINRA from the securities industry.   He has also been the subject of numerous customer complaints.

**Update: 3/22/2021**  On December 21, 2020, the state of Maryland revoked Mr. Wesselt’s registration.   In addition, in December 2020, two additional customers filed complaints concerning the suitability of recommendations made by Mr. Wesselt.

Original Post:

Financial Advisor Richard Michael Wesselt BARRED by FINRA for Recommendations in Unsuitable Variable Annuity Investments to 78 Customers – Collegeville, PA

FINRA has barred stockbroker Lawrence Goldstein from the securities industry.  Lawrence Goldstein was a registered financial advisor with McNally Financial Services Corporation in Sparks, Nevada, from April 2010 until February 28, 2020.

According to public records, Mr. Goldstein refused to cooperate with a FINRA investigation in whether he engaged in unsuitable excessive trading in a customer’s account.

Excessive trading occurs when a financial advisor makes many trades in a customer’s account, not to benefit the customer but to generate commissions for the broker.  Excessive trading is unethical and illegal.

FINRA has suspended financial advisor Ivan Shore from the securities industry for three months and fined him $5,000.  Ivan Shore has been a stockbroker at Oppenheimer & Co. Inc. since 1997.

FINRA alleged that between July 1, 2011, and December 31, 2015, Ivan Shore engaged in an unsuitable pattern of short-term trading of Unit Investment Trusts in customer accounts.

If you have lost money with Ivan Shore, contact New York securities arbitration law firm Iorio Altamirano LLP for a free and confidential evaluation of your accounts.

FINRA has permanently barred stockbroker Vonna Kay Husby from the securities industry.  The expulsion was handed down by FINRA because Ms. Kay Husby ceased cooperating with FINRA in connection with FINRA’s investigation into whether Husby served as a Power of Attorney and opened an undisclosed bank account that she allegedly co-owned with one of her elderly customers.

Vonna Kay Husby was a financial advisor at Raymond James Financial Services, Inc. in Fairbanks, Alaska, from August 2003 until May 2019.   Raymond James terminated her employment on May 9, 2019, alleging that Ms. Kay Husby was a co-owner on a bank account with a customer without providing disclosure to or receiving approval from the firm.

Being an undisclosed beneficiary in a customer account is a serious violation as it may give rise to misconduct, including potential conflicts of interest, or worse, elder abuse.

**Update: 3/22/2021** Ms. Cowden has been the subject of two additional customer disputes since November 2020.  First, in November 2020, a customer filed a securities arbitration complaint alleging $400,000 in damages concerning a real estate security recommendation.   The causes of action included breach of fiduciary duty, unauthorized trading, and elder abuse.   Second, in January 2021, a customer filed a written complaint with NPB Financial Group, LLC alleging $350,000 in damages related to an unsuitable investment recommendation.  The customer has not yet filed a securities arbitration complaint.  If you or a loved one were a customer of Diane Cowden, contact securities arbitration law firm Iorio Altamirano LLP for a free and confidential review of the investment or retirement accounts.

Original Post:

Financial Advisor Cynthia Diane Cowden (CRD# 2054676) BARRED by FINRA for Recommending High- Risk Investments to Three Senior Customers – Lake Isabella, CA

On October 9, 2020, FINRA suspended Donatas B. Vildzius from the securities industry for six months and fined him $5,000.  This sanction is the third time Mr. Vildzius has been suspended by FINRA, with previous suspensions in 2006 and 2014.  Donatas Vildzius is a stockbroker and registered representative at Network 1 Financial Securities Inc. in Danbury, CT.

The latest suspension is the result of a FINRA investigation alleging that between August 2015 and April 2017, while employed by Network 1 Financial Services Inc., Vildzius excessively traded the accounts of two customers.

Excessive trading occurs when a financial advisor makes many trades in a customer’s account, not to benefit the customer but to generate commissions for the broker.  Excessive trading is wrong.

FINRA has filed an enforcement complaint against Stephen Sloane, alleging that from January 2014 to January 2018, he recommended an unsuitable investment strategy to at least 14 customers.  The complaint alleges that Sloane did not have a reasonable basis for recommending that his customers engage in active, short-term trading of U.S. Treasuries with 10- and 30-year maturities.  FINRA alleged that Sloane did not conduct reasonable diligence to understand the effect of the strategy’s costs on the customers’ potential returns.  FINRA has also alleged that Sloane charged five customers excessive markups in violation of FINRA Rule 2121 and 2010.

Stephen Sloane was a financial advisor and registered representative at the following firms:

  • Westpark Capital, Inc., New York, NY (March 2016 – August 2020); and

On August 12, 2020, Morgan Stanley and FINRA entered into a Letter of Acceptance, Waiver, and Consent (“AWC”) over allegations that it failed to reasonably supervise its former broker Kevin Gunnip. As part of the AWC, Morgan Stanley agreed to pay a $175,000 fine and was censured by FINRA. It also agreed to pay eight clients $774,574 in restitution. Two other customers have already settled separately with Morgan Stanley.

The Morgan Stanley AWC allegations involve Kevin Gunnip’s and its own conduct between 2012 and 2017:

  • Gunnip recommended short-term trades in ten customer accounts;

Today, UBS Group AG announced that its net profit almost doubled in the third quarter to nearly $2.1 billion from $1.05 billion from a year earlier.

Meanwhile, as UBS and other large investment banking firms continue to rake in huge profits, UBS’s Yield Enhancement Strategy investors continue to suffer avoidable losses.

UBS’s Yield Enhancement Strategy, or YES, is a complex managed options strategy that UBS marketed as a safe, market-neutral overlay that would provide incremental returns to an investor’s portfolio.

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