After Merrill Lynch allegedly 'crippled' their careers, two advisors are prepping a big counterstroke, lawyer says
FINRA may decide whether the wirehouse pulled the trigger too whimsically on its PBIG stars
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Charles 'Chuck Schwab' called James Gorman to protest a two-broker poach, kicking off a hydra-headed legal battle, costing Morgan Stanley millions, so far
The Schwab founder and chairman invoked Charles Schwab Corp.'s zero-tolerance policy against Wall Street -- or RIA -- poaching of talent and AUM from Schwab branches.
March 9, 2023 at 1:23 AM
Why FINRA's late appearance into smoothie-throwing broker James Iannazzo's life might be rough
It's been about 11 months since Merrill Lynch fired him, and the CFP Board stripped him of the CFP mark; attracting the SRO's attention means more woes.
December 29, 2022 at 1:05 AM
Infamous stockbroker resolves civil suit stemming from violent tirade -- the apparent final chapter in an incident that went viral and forever branded him the 'Fairfield Smoothie Guy'
Broker Jim Iannazzo went all out with high-powered attorneys and slick Las Vegas crisis pr team to limit the damage from his actions, but whether he can ever live down the incident remains to be seen.
September 1, 2022 at 5:11 AM
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Jack Waymire
Good luck with a FINRA controlled arbitration. Not the fairest court in the land. One more reason for advisors, who want to build fee-for-service businesses, to leave the wirehouses before they get too big and the wirehouses lose too much future revenue if they leave. It is all about the money. Investors are caught in the middle.
Stephen Winks
What ever happened to the brokerage business being a gentleman’s business which highly valued honor?
Every week top brokers who are thought of by their clients as being advisors are being taken to FINRA arbitration to settle disputes with their b/d, which they invariably seem to lose. In many of these arbitration proceedings, if the broker accepted a recruiting bonus and there is a balance of a promissory note outstanding, the dispute is arbitrarily ruled by FINRA as a promissory note issue regardless of the nature of the dispute and the broker is denied due process to have their dispute fairly heard. The arbiters will not even hear the nature of the dispute. This heavy handed approach to arbitration by FINRA does not instill trust or confidence in the impartiality of it serving justice.It is almost as if you are and advisor in a brokerage firm, where you are not accountable for your recommendations and have no ongoing responsibility to act in the consumer’s best interest, you can be severely punished by your firm’s internal compliance protocol for doing the right thing—acting in the consumers best interest as required by statute.
It is not just a matter of unfair arbitration but a matter of whether FINRA even understands advice, advisors and fiduciary duty.
This has got to change, but FINRA is so insular it doesn’t care.
SCW
Marty Morua
...........and what about the clients?
I’m no authority on the wire-house universe but barely a mention of 'who’ is now overseeing the clients of Stephen S. Brown and James P. Goetz? What happens to the clients during a tumultuous week like we are experiencing. S & P down 2.5%, then up 2%, then down 1.9%. Are there other Merrill brokers taking their calls?
Is it really just all about $$ and clients are secondary? :-/
Marty Morua
brooke southall
Good question, Marty.
I wonder if Steve and James are fielding calls at home.
I wonder what the legalities are.
Brooke