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TAG | leveraged inverse ETF’s

Feb/13

14

FINRA Fines Broker $1.8mill in Sale of ETFs

Nicholas Rowe and his firm, Focus Capital Wealth Management, Inc. of Bedford, New Hampshire, were found liable in a case alleging negligence, civil fraud, and other misdeeds, involving the sale of risky ETFs (Exchange Traded Funds) to nine investors, according to a ruling by a Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) arbitration panel. Some of these investors were in their fifties and sixties, including two widows. Rowe was ordered to pay $1.8 million to the investors.

The Reuters article goes on to explain that leveraged and inverse ETFs were designed to amplify short-term returns by using debt and derivatives and are considered more suitable for professional traders than for long-term investors or anyone does not want a high-risk portfolio. In 2009, FINRA and other regulators began issuing warnings about the sale of leveraged and inverse ETFs because they worried that brokers were selling them to buy-and-hold investors – a strategy likely to cause heavy losses.

The Reuters article says that FINRA arbitration may be the last hope for some investors whose advisers guided them to leveraged and inverse ETFs and then mismanaged the investments.

Investors in the Rowe case were all heavily concentrated in leveraged and inverse ETFs. That strategy is nearly guaranteed to lead to losses, since the investments effectively require betting on whether the market is going up or down.

Securities Lawyer, Lars K. Soreide, of Soreide Law Group, PLLC, represents clients nationwide. If you invested with Nicholas Rowe or Focus Capital Wealth Management, Inc., or had losses in other leveraged and inverse ETFs, call: 888-760-6552, or you may visit our website and complete the online form at: http://www.securitieslawyer.com.

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Oct/12

31

Did You Invest in ETF’s?

Soreide Law Group, PLLC, is currently investigating the marketing and sales of non-traditional exchange traded funds (ETFs) to investors. Many of the country’s leading banks – including Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, UBS and Wells Fargo – were recently sanctioned by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) for more than $9.1 million over their failure to supervise retail sales of leveraged and inverse exchange-traded funds (ETFs).

In addition to supervisory failures, FINRA said the banks failed to have “a reasonable basis” for recommending the products to investors.

“The added complexity of leveraged and inverse exchange-traded products makes it essential that brokerage firms have an adequate understanding of the products and sufficiently train their sales force before the products are offered to retail customers,” said J. Bradley Bennett, FINRA enforcement chief, in a statement.

“Firms must conduct reasonable due diligence and ensure that their representatives have an understanding of these products,” he added.

The fines were issued as follows:

Wells Fargo – $2.1 million fine and $641,489 in restitution

Citigroup – $2 million fine and $146,431 in restitution

Morgan Stanley – $1.75 million fine and $604,584 in restitution and

UBS – $1.5 million fine and $431,488 in restitution.

Both the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the North American Securities Administrators Association and FINRA have issued separate and joint warnings to investors about leveraged and inverse exchange-traded funds in recent months.

Regulators are concerned about the increasing complexity of the products, their lack of transparency, and the potential to cause significant financial losses to the investors who do not completely understand how inverse and leveraged funds actually work.

Securities Attorney, Lars Soreide, of Soreide Law Group, PLLC, has represented clients nationwide. If you have sustained investment losses due to your stock broker or financial advisor’s recommendations regarding ETFs, call for a free consultation on how to potentially recover your losses. To speak with an attorney call 888-760-6552, or visit our website at: http://www.securitieslawyer.com.

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Oct/12

8

FINRA Paying Attention to Brokerage Conflicts Involving Complex Products

In a recent Reuters article, they write that FINRA, or The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, is examining major brokerages regarding potential conflicts of interest and financial incentives associated with the sale of complex securities, said the Wall Street regulator’s chief.

Richard Ketchum, FINRA’s chairman and chief executive, said that FINRA is looking “very closely” at how brokerages control, analyze and supervise the effects of incentive compensation, such as commission, that may motivate brokers to sell certain complex securities.

FINRA is also looking at conflicts and incentives at broker-dealers that both develop and sell certain complex products, Ketchum said during remarks at an industry conference in New York.

FINRA, the industry-funded watchdog, has been clamping down on sales practices related to a range of complex securities, including leveraged and inverse exchange-traded funds. Investors are often drawn to the securities because of the promise of high returns, but are not fully aware of the risks, Ketchum said. Leveraged and inverse ETFs, for example, are designed to amplify short-term returns by using debt and derivatives and are more suitable for professional traders than for long-term retail investors.

FINRA is also asking brokerages about their training practices to ensure that brokers fully understand the features and risks of complex securities before recommending them to investors, Ketchum said.

Securities Lawyer, Lars K. Soreide, of Soreide Law Group, PLLC, represents clients nationwide. For a free consultation on how to potentially recover your losses call: 888-760-6552, or you may visit our website and complete the online form at: http://www.securitieslawyer.com.

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May/12

8

Royal Bank of Canada (RBC) to Repay Investors of ETFs

It was recently announced that the Royal Bank of Canada (RBC) will repay investors in Massachusetts, $2.9 million on losses from leveraged and non-leveraged exchange-traded funds, also know as ETFs.  This is just another example of the losses experienced, and now the crackdown on these very volatile funds.

Massachusetts’ top securities regulator, William Galvin, said in a recent statement,   “This settlement details an inexcusable set of facts where the company was selling products it did not understand, and when it finally realized the risk and pitfalls of these investments it did not immediately restrict their marketing.”

The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, FINRA, began issuing warnings regarding ETFs in 2009.  They warned that these investments were not for the ‘long-term,’ conservative investors  They are more for the short-term, professional, or day-trader. They are designed for short-term market returns on a day-to-day basis using derivitives.

Securities Lawyer, Lars K. Soreide, of Soreide Law Group, has warned investors through his website and marketing materials, as early as 2009, against buying and holding leveraged ETFs. Soreide Law Group has been filing lawsuits related to sales practices surrounding leveraged ETFs against brokerage firms nationwide since then. 

If you or a loved one invested in a leveraged ETF that was held as a long position at the advice of your broker call (888)760-6552 or visit http://www.securitieslawyer.com.

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May/12

7

ETFs Need Closer Attention, Says Senator Reed

This past Tuesday, May 1st., FINRA, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc. fined four major brokerages $9.1 million for selling complex ETFs (Exchange Traded Funds) to investors whose portfolios were otherwise conservative. 

Without admitting or denying the charges, the brokerges will be paying $7.3 million in fines, and $1.8 million in restitution to the clients who bought inverse and leveraged ETFs.  Those brokerages are:  Citigroup Global Markets Inc, Morgan Stanley & Co., LLC, Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC, and UBS Financial Services.

The chairman of the Senate Banking Subcommitte on Securities, Insurance, and Investment, Sen. Jack Reed, D-RI, announced that he will follow up on the hearing he held last October on ETFs with another hearing in the next few weeks.

“My hearing last fall shined a light on these products, which may be affecting market structure, volatility and price discovery and has the potential to harm investors,” Sen. Reed said. “I think this market deserves more attention from both domestic and foreign regulators, and I plan to hold another hearing on ETFs and related issues in the near future.”

Finra felt he brokerages it disciplined had failed to educate their reps about the complexities – and dangers – of leveraged and inverse ETFs, which hold derivatives and magnify market movements. The brokers then sold them to uninformed investors.

“The added complexity of leveraged and inverse exchange-traded products makes it essential that brokerage firms have an adequate understanding of the products and sufficientily train their sales force before the products are offered to retail customers,” Brad Bennett, Finra executive vice president and chief of enforcement, said in a statement. “Firms must conduct reasonable due diligence and ensure that their representatives have an understanding of these products.”

Soreide Law Group warned investors through our blog and marketing materials as early as 2009 against buying and holding leveraged ETFs, and we have been filing lawsuits related to sales practices surrounding leveraged ETFs against brokerage firms nationwide since then.
 
If you or a loved one invested in a leveraged ETF that was held as a long position at the advice of your broker call (888)760-6552 or visit http://www.securitieslawyer.com.

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Jan/12

22

Complex Investment Products to See More Scrutiny by Finra

In an InvestementNews.com article from January20,2012, Dan Jamieson writes that in a regulatory notice, Finra outlined characteristics of what it calls “complex products,” which could include structured notes, inverse or leveraged exchange-traded funds, hedge funds and securitized products such as asset-backed securities.

Finra stated that brokerage firms should have formal written procedures covering everything from the initial due diligence to post-sale performance. This notice specifically identifies duties that fall to individual brokers in understanding complicated products and explaining them to customers. The notice also said that registered representatives should consider whether less complex and cheaper products might achieve the same objectives.

“Finra is letting it be known that recommendations of complex products will be given even more scrutiny going forward,” said Mary Harris-King, co-founder of Comprehensive Securities Compliance Solutions Inc.

Jamieson writes that in its notice, Finra reviewed what a number of European regulators had done in characterizing various complex products. The notice also said that registered representatives should consider unbundling structured products.

“Registered representatives should compare a structured product with embedded options to the same strategy through multiple financial instruments on the open market, even with any possible advantages of purchasing a single product,” Finra said in the notice.

This was good news to Robert Gordon, chief executive at Twenty-First Securities Corp., which replicates structured notes by buying underlying instruments like zero-coupon Treasuries and options on ETFs.

“It looks like Finra is saying that brokers can’t say this [structured note] is simpler — that’s not a good excuse” to buy it, he said.

The InvestmentNews.com article goes on to say that buying the components of a note that guarantees principal is 2% to 3% cheaper than buying the package, offers tax advantages, and lessens counterparty risk, Mr. Gordon said.

If you or a family member have sustained losses in  your investments due to your stock broker or financial advisor’s recommendation, call 888-760-6552, or visit www.securitieslawyer.com.
 
Soreide Law Group, PLLC., representing investors nationwide before FINRA the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.
 

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Recently warnings from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) siting the dangers of leverged ETFs and inverse ETFs (exchange-traded funds). These funds are extremely complex products that carry a great deal of risk. Soreide Law Group, PLLC, has launched an investigation into these funds.

It is noted that ETFs are investments that track an underlying benchmark or index, similar to a traditional mutual fund. Unlike mutual funds, non-traditional ETFs trade throughout the day on securities exchanges like stocks. Over the last several years, ETFs have become more common, but also more complicated. So rather than track underlying benchmarks, some non-traditional ETFs have been designed to multiply or return the opposite of a given benchmark.

Leveraged ETFs use futures or derivatives to multiply the daily return of a given index, such as the S&P 500. Some ETFs try to double or even triple the daily return. Leveraged ETFs are frequently marketed with the term “Ultra” or “2X” in their ETF trade name. Inverse ETFs seek to return the opposite of a given index, or double or triple the opposite of an index. Inverse ETFs are marketed as a way to hedge an investment strategy and they frequently carry the term “Short” or “Ultra Short” in their ETF trade names.

Recently, the SEC and FINRA warned investors that leverged ETFs and inverse ETFs are not designed to be held for long periods of time, and FINRA has warned that inverse ETFs and leveraged ETFs may not be suitable for retail investors who plan to hold them for more than one trading session, particularly in volatile markets.

These leveraged and inverse ETFs suffered losses following the market volatility of 2008 and 2009. The following list are those ETFs commonly sold ETFs during this time:

ProShares Ultra Short Real Estate Fund (SRS)
ProShares UltraShort Dow 30 ETF (DXD)
ProShares UltraShort Financials ETF (SKF)
ProShares UltraShort FTSE/Xinhua China 25 ETF (FXP)
ProShares UltraShort Gold ETF (GLL)
ProShares UltraShort DJ-AIG Crude Oil ETF (SCO)
ProShares UltraShort Oil & Gas ETF (DUG)
ProShares UltraShort MSCI Emerging Markets ETF (EEV)
ProShares Ultra Financials ETF (UYG)

Your stockbroker/dealer may have misrepresented the risks involved with these ETFs, failed to fully explain the risks and how ETFs work, or recommended ETFs to someone the investment was not suitable.

Securities Attorney, Lars Soreide, of Soreide Law, PLLC, has represented clients nationwide. If you or a family member have experienced a loss through the sale of ETFs, particularly in 2008 and 2009, call a Securities Arbitration Lawyer for a free consultation on how to potentially recover your losses.  To speak with an attorney, call 888-760-6552, or visit www.securitieslawyer.com.  

Soreide Law Group, PLLC., representing investors nationwide before FINRA  the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority

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In a June 20, 2011, article from Bloomberg News, it was reported that Massachusetts’ top securities regulator is suing RBC Capital Markets LLC and one of its former registered representatives over the sale of leveraged exchange-traded funds, saying they sold them to clients who didn’t understand how the investments worked.

The Massachusetts Secretary of the Commonwealth, William F. Galvin, said RBC Capital and Michael Zukowski, a former agent, used “dishonest practices” in selling the funds, according to a statement e-mailed today. Galvin is seeking restitution to Massachusetts investors, a cease and desist order, and an administrative fine.

“The point of the complaint is not that the investors lost money,” Galvin said in the statement. “The dishonesty here is that the investors, and indeed the agent soliciting their investment, did not understand the workings of these funds.”

The Bloomberg article adds Galvin said that Zukowski, who worked in the firm’s Osterville office, sold clients “non-traditional” leveraged and inverse ETFs. Leveraged ETFs use swaps or derivatives to amplify daily index returns, while the inverse funds are designed to move in the opposite direction of their benchmark. The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority warned investors and fund sellers in June 2009 that such ETFs might not be a good fit for long-term investors. Galvin opened a probe into the products in July 2009.

It was noted that RBC Capital is a subsidiary of Toronto-based Royal Bank of Canada.

Securities Attorney, Lars Soreide, of Soreide Law, PLLC, has represented clients nationwide. If you or a family member feel you have become a victim of the sale of non-traditional ETFs by broker Michael Zukowski or RBC Capital Markets, LLC, of Massachusetts, call a Securities Arbitration Lawyer for a free consultation on how to potentially recover your losses.  To speak with an attorney, call 888-760-6552, or visit www.securitieslawyer.com.  

Soreide Law Group, PLLC., representing investors nationwide before FINRA  the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.

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