Mary Schapiro Will Protect Investors the Same Way Willie Sutton Protected Banks. By Dan Solin
Huffington Post, January 4, 2009 03:24 PM (EST)
We don't have to guess how Mary Schapiro, named by President-elect Obama to head the SEC, will protect investors. As the CEO of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA), she had been a strong advocate of the mandatory arbitration system which requires investors to arbitrate all disputes with their brokers before a panel selected by FINRA and governed by its rules.
How has this worked for investors?
Here is a recent example. It is a true story. You can't make this up.
A 60 year old doctor invested $100,000 he had in an IRA with a FINRA broker.
The broker put the funds into an after-tax account, triggering a $35,000 tax liability.
Over the next 14 months, during which time the S&P 500 increased in value, the portfolio lost a whopping $86,000, reducing its value to $14,000.
This is not surprising given the amount of trading by the broker. His commissions were so huge that the account would have had to earn 31% just to break even! The broker used margin to generate even more trades.
The stocks in the portfolio were 600% more volatile (risky) than the S&P 500.
Before any Judge or jury, the investor would have recovered his losses and most likely would have received a meaningful award of punitive damages.
Not before the FINRA arbitration panel.
They found that the broker had to pay back only the tax liability caused by the transfer of the IRA to a taxable account.
Now for the unbelievable part.
This "impartial" FINRA arbitration panel concluded that the broker did nothing else wrong. No unsuitability. No excessive trading. They gave him a clean bill of health.
Just another day at the office, ripping off investors with impunity. Instead of being drummed out of the industry, he is happily back in his office high fiving his fellow brokers.
So much for FINRA "self-regulation."
This shameful process is "supervised" by the SEC, the very agency Ms. Schapiro will head if she is confirmed.
"Real change" would be to put an investor advocate, and not an industry shill, in charge of the SEC.
"Real change" would be to abolish the FINRA mandatory arbitration system and expose it for the farce it is.
"Real change" would be give investors their constitutional right to a trial by jury.
Do you think Mary Schapiro will represent "real change" at the SEC?
Do you think Willie Sutton protected banks?
No comments:
Post a Comment