1. How do I
know if I have a case against my broker?
Answer:Just because you
lost money invested in mutual funds and stocks doesn’t mean you
have a case against your broker. The financial markets have always
gone through periodic down turns and upturns and these swings are
not the fault of your broker. However, it is the responsibility of a
broker to invest your money in accordance with your investment
objectives at the time any invest selection is made and your broker
has a continuing obligation to monitor the status of your
investments over time.
Unfortunately, some brokers invest
client monies with the sole purpose of generating commissions for
themselves without any concerns for the client’s best financial
interests. Such wrong doing would include frequent in and out
trading known as churning, the purchase of large concentrations of
speculative securities on margin, frequent switching out of mutual
funds, options trading, unauthorized trading and sales practice
abuses involving annuities and retirement accounts.
The best approach would be to have
an attorney experienced in representing investors with grievances
against brokerage firms make an evaluation of your case after an
in-depth interview and review of your entire financial history.
top
2.How do I go
about pursuing a claim against my broker?
Answer: Virtually all
brokerage firms incorporate a pre-dispute arbitration clause in the
new account documentation which customers usually sign when they
open their accounts with their brokers. This requires customers to
arbitrate their claims before three (3) arbitrators in the event of
a dispute against a broker as opposed to pursuing their grievance
through the courts and a jury trial.
Most customer disputes are
arbitrated before the Arbitration Department of the The Financial
Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA), which conduct hearings
right here in the Capital District. The New York Stock Exchange
maintains arbitration facilities as well and both the
FINRA and
NY
Stock Exchange have their own separate arbitration procedures which
require the filing of a Statement of Claim with their respective
arbitration departments in order to initiate a claim against your
broker.
A comprehensive Statement of Claim
should include a biographical sketch, a chronology of the alleged
wrong doing committed in your account and an enumeration of the
various causes of action and a precise calculation of the financial
damages sustained in the account.
Most claimants who file
arbitration claims are represented by attorneys experienced in the
field of securities arbitration who in turn retain the services of
expert witnesses to assist in the preparation of damage calculations
as well as the proof of the case at the arbitration hearing.
Once you have filed your claim for
arbitration, the case goes through a discovery phase, wherein the
investors are usually required to produce all essential
documentation relating to your financial history including bank
account statements, securities brokerage statements, financial
documents and tax returns. Likewise, brokerage firms are required to
produce all documentation pertaining to your account, including a
number of very industry specific behind the scenes documents which
the average investor never sees but which contain very pertinent
information relative to trading activity which may have occurred in
their accounts.
The discovery phase often includes
discovery conferences and motion practice designed to resolve
discovery disputes. During the discovery phase, the arbitrator may
also recommend the possibility of mediation in the intervening time
to see whether or not the dispute can be resolved without the
necessity of full arbitration proceedings.
After the discovery phase
comes the hearing preparation phase which includes the preparation
of briefs, subpoenas, expert witnesses and essential documents
required to prove the losses you are requesting from the Arbitration
Panel. This will require considerable cooperation of the investor
but a carefully prepared case is the best way of assuring a better
likelihood of financial recovery.
The hearing stage is when the
actual hearings are conducted and when testimony is taken from
various parties and proof is given of the alleged damages sustained
by the claimant. Hearing usually take two to three days, but could
take considerably longer for more complex cases. Simple cases
involving single transactions can often take a single day only.
top
3. Can I
arbitrate my claim right in the Capital District?
Answer: Yes, arbitration
hearing are conducted right here in the Capital District by the
The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) and usually take place in
hotel conference rooms.
top
4. What are
the costs associated with an arbitration case?
Answer: Several main costs
included in bringing an arbitration case include the following:
(i) filing fee - $450.00 to
$1,450.00;
(ii) damage analysis and loss
calculations - approx. $400.00;
(iii) expert witness charges at
hearing - $3,000.00;
(iv) investigative costs, data
retrieval costs and costs associated with copying charges and
exhibit production fees - $100-500.
top
5. How long does
the arbitration process take?
Answer: From beginning to
end, arbitration proceedings usually take from ten (10) months to
one (1) year. In other words, from the date of filing of your
Statement of Claim through the date of an award of the Arbitration
Panel, the average time associated with the average
FINRA Arbitration
hearings is ten (10) months to one (1) year.
top
6. Once I make
a decision to hire a lawyer, will I have any continued involvement
with my attorney as my case proceeds?
Answer: Absolutely, your
decision to file a claim in arbitration against your broker will
also require your commitment to work closely with your attorney as
your case proceeds. This will include several in-depth interviews
with your attorney to discuss the facts and circumstances of your
relationship with your broker as well as your financial history over
all. You will also have to work with your attorney in providing him
with your entire financial documentation as well as meeting with
your lawyer for hearing preparation and actual testimony at the
hearing of your case.
top
7. What types
of claims do customers make against brokerage firms?
Answer: Customers make a
number of claims against their brokers which include the following
in order of frequency:
(i) Unsuitable investments
- This means the purchase of investments, usually risky or
illiquid investments, which aren’t probably suited for the
investor which have been sold to an investor by a broker without
informing the customer of the risk characteristics of the
investment.
(ii) Churning - This
means the repeated purchase and sale of securities in a customers
account for the sole purpose of generating commissions for the
broker without any concern for the investors best financial
interests.
(iii) Margin trading -
Often used in combination with unsuitable trading and churning
type activity referenced in (i) and (ii) above. This is when a
broker places your account into a margin position in order to
engage in leveraged borrowing against your existing account
holdings thereby increasing the risk in your account, but which
also enables your broker to generate more sales commissions.
(iv) Unauthorized trading
- Unauthorized trading occurs when a broker buys or sells
securities in your account without your permission and this type
of illegal behavior is also often combined with unsuitable
trading, churning and margin trading referenced in (ii) and (iii)
above.
The average investor has no
business speculating through margin type trading activity, but a
number of brokers have nonetheless used margin trading to
victimized elderly, inexperienced or unsophisticated investors
with representations of great profit while at the same time
generating exuberant commissions for themselves.
(v) Mutual fund switching
- This involves the repeated switching out of different families
of mutual funds for the purpose of generating excessive
commissions without any concern for the investor’s best
financial interests.
(vi) Retirement account
abuses - This includes a broker engaging in prohibited trading
activity in IRA, 401k and other investment type accounts which
should normally be invested for the long term and which can
include unsuitable trading activity, churning, unauthorized
trading, margin trading and mutual fund switching referenced in
(i), (ii), (iii), (iv) and (v) above.
(vii) Variable annuity abuses
- Variable annuity investment products aren’t for every investor
and their purchase is often accompanied with high commissions
which are oftentimes not disclosed to investors. Further, some
unscrupulous brokers repeatedly switch customers on a different
annuity contract for the sole purpose of generating commissions.
Some brokers purchase variable
annuity products for the supposed tax benefits, even though they
might be purchased in an IRA account which is already tax deferred
in nature. Many investors, especially seniors and the
unsophisticated, are sold the death benefit feature of variable
annuities when in fact they would be far better off purchasing an
inexpensive policy of term insurance.
(viii) Selling away -
This is where a licensed broker sells investment products
including oil wells, investments in businesses, promissory notes
and a number of other different types of "investments"
whose prices cannot be readily ascertained by looking in the daily
financial pages and the sale of which were not actually approved
by your brokers’ superiors or employer. Some brokers are tempted
to engage in "selling away" due to the high commissions
promised them by their promoters. Hundreds of capital region
investors have been victimized by selling away schemes.
(ix) Forgery/theft/embezzlement
- This is when a broker or broker working in conjunction with
another person conspires to transfer investments out of a
customers account with forged signatures and false
representations. In many instances this is actually theft for
which criminal intervention is necessary.
(x) Failure to execute -
This is where a broker fails to follow a customer’s instructions
to buy or sell securities as a result of which the customer
sustains financial damages when the securities in question rise or
fall in price.
top
8. How do I
know if I will be successful with my claim against my broker?
Answer: There is no way of assuring that
you will get all of your money back with the filing of a claim
against your broker in arbitration. No attorney can give any
guarantee of a specified recovery which you might receive in an
arbitration proceeding. Attorneys experienced in the area of
representing customers in securities arbitrations, however,
generally will not accept cases for which they do not feel a
monetary settlement or award will be
forthcoming. The decision by an experienced arbitration attorney to
accept your case is his or her vote of confidence that there is a
considerable likelihood that some recovery of monies will be had.
top
9. What kind
of damage awards can an arbitration panel make?
Answer: Arbitration Panels
can make any number of awards in an arbitration case including the
following:
(i) trading losses;
(ii) realized and unrealized
losses;
(iii) margin interest charges;
(iv) commissions;
(v) margin account debit balance
losses;
(vi) lost opportunity or losses
associated with how your account would otherwise have performed if
it was properly managed by your broker;
(vii) attorneys fees;
(viii) any fees paid by you
associated with the filing of your claim with the
FINRA including
filing fees, forum fees, arbitrators fees, and administrative fees;
(ix) punitive damages .
Keep in mind, however, that no assurance can be
made that any specified level of recovery will be made by an
arbitration panel and arbitration panels oftentimes do not specify
what category or categories of damages monies are being awarded
under, but rather, they sometimes simply make lump sum awards to
investors.
top
10. How do I
pay my attorney if I don’t have any money left because I was
victimized by my stock broker?
Answer: Attorneys
experienced in representing investors in securities arbitration
proceedings often accept customer cases on a contingency fee basis.
This means that the attorneys fees are paid to the attorney if and
only if a settlement or award is recovered through the case. Under
New York State law, clients remain obligated for the costs
associated for bringing their claim, such as those outlined in
answer 4 above. However, when a settlement or award is made,
customers are first fully compensated from any available settlement
or award funds for costs which they have laid out before any
attorneys contingency fee calculation is made.
top