TITLE 21. SECURITIES AND RETAIL FRANCHISING
Titles of Regulations: 21VAC5-20. Broker-Dealers,
Broker-Dealer Agents and Agents of the Issuer (amending 21VAC5-20-280).
21VAC5-30. Securities Registration (amending 21VAC5-30-80).
21VAC5-45. Federal Covered Securities (amending 21VAC5-45-20).
21VAC5-80. Investment Advisors (amending 21VAC5-80-10, 21VAC5-80-160, 21VAC5-80-200; adding
21VAC5-80-260).
Statutory Authority: §§ 12.1-13 and 13.1-523 of the Code
of Virginia.
Public Hearing Information: Public hearing available
upon request.
Public Comment Deadline: August 9, 2019.
Agency Contact: Hazel Stewart, Manager, Securities
Retail Franchising, State Corporation Commission, Tyler Building, 9th Floor,
P.O. Box 1197, Richmond, VA 23218, telephone (804) 371-9685, FAX (804)
371-9911, or email hazel.stewart@scc.virginia.gov.
Summary:
The proposed amendments to 21VAC5-20 (i) allow
broker-dealers to delay or refuse transactions and disbursements of funds from
the accounts of vulnerable adults where the financial institution suspects
financial exploitation and (ii) update three documents incorporated by
reference that pertain to continuing education adopted by federal
self-regulatory organizations.
The proposed amendments to 21VAC5-30 (i) update a number of
the statements of policy that apply to the registration of securities,
including underwriting expenses, unsound financial condition, corporate
securities definitions, and loans and other material transactions and (iii)
incorporate by reference all statements of policy previously adopted by the
State Corporation Commission.
The proposed amendments to 21VAC5-45 remove the date of
adoption of Form D, which is the filing form for notices under federal Rule 506
of Regulation D.
The proposed amendments to 21VAC5-80 (i) allow investment
advisors to delay or refuse to place orders or disburse funds that may involve
or result in financial exploitation of an individual; (ii) prohibit mandatory
arbitration clauses in investment advisory contracts; (iii) based on the North
American Securities Administrators Association May 18, 2019 Model Rule, add a
new section that establishes the minimum policies and procedures to protect
client information and privacy, including both physical and cybersecurity
measures; (iv) add these information and cybersecurity policy and procedures to
the list of required documents to be filed by investment advisor applicants and
to the list of required records for investment advisors; (v) conform the
regulation to the new model rule and remove the reference to the Securities and
Exchange Commission and self-regulatory organizations; and (vi) make it a
dishonest or unethical practice for an investment advisor or investment advisor
representative to fail to report unauthorized access to a client's information
to the commission and client within three business days of discovery.
AT RICHMOND, JUNE 27, 2019
COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA, ex rel.
STATE CORPORATION COMMISSION
CASE NO. SEC-2019-00024
Ex Parte: In the matter of
Adopting a Revision to the Rules
Governing the Virginia Securities Act
ORDER TO TAKE NOTICE
Section 12.1-13 of the Code of Virginia ("Code")
provides that the State Corporation Commission ("Commission") shall
have the power to promulgate rules and regulations in the enforcement and
administration of all laws within its jurisdiction. Section 13.1-523 of the Virginia
Securities Act ("Act"), § 13.1-501 et seq. of the Code provides that
the Commission may issue any rules and regulations necessary or appropriate for
the administration and enforcement of the Act.
The rules and regulations issued by the Commission pursuant
to the Act are set forth in Title 21 of the Virginia Administrative Code. A
copy also may be found at the Commission’s website: http://www.scc.virginia.gov/case.
Proposed Revision to Chapter 20. Broker-Dealers, Broker-Dealer
Agents and Agents of the Issuer. Prohibited Business Conduct
Under certain provisions of Chapter 20, a broker-dealer is
required to make securities trades and disburse funds from customer accounts
within a prescribed period of time. The proposed amendment to Chapter 20
provides for an exception to these provisions to allow broker-dealers to
protect vulnerable customers from potential financial exploitation by
permitting the broker-dealer to delay or refuse such transactions and
disbursements.
Financial exploitation is the fastest growing category of
elder abuse in many states. It is estimated that one in every five older adults
have been victimized by financial fraud. These frauds can be perpetrated by
strangers, con artists, or even family members and caregivers in whom these
adults place their trust. During the 2019 General Assembly, the legislature
addressed the growing issue of financial exploitation of vulnerable adults by
passing a new subsection L to § 63.2-1606 of the Code for the Protection
of Aged or Incapacitated Adults.
This new subsection allows financial institutions to delay
transactions and refuse disbursements from the accounts of vulnerable adults
where the financial institution suspects financial exploitation. With this new
subsection a broker-dealer’s staff can report any information or records to the
appropriate authorities if the staff has a good faith belief that the
transaction or disbursement may involve financial exploitation of such adults.
If the broker-dealer staff follows the requirements of the new subsection, they
will be immune from civil or criminal liability, absent gross negligence or
willful misconduct.
To effectuate the new statute subsection, the Division of
Securities and Retail Franchising ("Division") proposes to add a
subsection E to Commission Rule 21 VAC 5-20-280. The new subsection would allow
a broker-dealer to delay distributions or refuse transactions if the
broker-dealer complies with § 63.2-1606 L of the Code.
In addition, Documents Incorporated by Reference in Chapter
21 VAC 5-20-280 contain revisions to certain rules pertaining to continuing
education adopted by federal self-regulatory organizations, including rule
revisions for: (1) one revised effective October 1, 2018, by the Financial
Industry Regulatory Authority ("FINRA"); (2) one revised effective
October 1, 2018. by the New York Stock Exchange (superseded by new FINRA rule);
and (3) one revised by the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board.
Proposed Revision to Chapter 80. Investment Advisors.
A. Dishonest or Unethical Practices.
I. Proposed New Subsection E. Just as with the
broker-dealers, the new legislation protecting vulnerable adults from financial
exploitation, the Division proposes that new § 63.2-1606 L of the
Code apply to the practices of investment advisors. Investment advisors are
charged with acting in the best interests of their clients and should do all
they can to protect them from financial exploitation. The Division proposes to
add a subsection under the Dishonest or Unethical Practices of Chapter 80 to
the provide investment advisors the same relief under § 63.2-1606 L of the
Code as the Division proposes for broker-dealers.
II. Proposed New Subsection F. Over twenty years ago,
investors had a choice of investing with a firm that required arbitration or
one that recognized a judicial forum for disputes. Today, almost all financial
services contracts offered by broker-dealers includes a mandatory predispute
arbitration provision that forces public investors to submit all disputes that
they may have to mandatory arbitration. Many investors are not aware of this
provision, nor do they have a choice, as all disputes are conducted through a
single securities arbitration forum maintained by the securities industry.
In 1996, the United States ("U.S.") Congress
("Congress") passed legislation entitled the National Securities
Markets Improvement Act ("NSMIA").1 NSMIA effectively
divided the regulation of investment advisors between the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission ("SEC") and the states. In general, primary
jurisdiction of investment advisors (known as state-covered advisors) with less
than $100 million in assets under management fall under state regulation.
However, the state-covered investment advisors are now
including boilerplate mandatory arbitration provisions in their clients'
contracts. The Division believes, as do many other states, that these
"take-it-or-leave-it" clauses in client contracts is inherently
unfair to investors. It is particularly unfair when an investment advisor is
required by law to act in the best interests of their clients. An investment
advisor should not be allowed to force clients to bring any disputes to a forum
of the investment advisor's choosing by contract.
Therefore, the Division proposes to add a new subsection F to
the Dishonest or Unethical Practices section of Chapter 80 to prohibit
mandatory arbitration clauses in investment advisory contracts. There is
nothing to prevent the investment advisor and their client from agreeing to
arbitrated disputes after negotiation and discussion between each. To require
mandatory arbitration in standard investment advisor contracts is contrary to
the investment advisors mandate to act in the best interest of their clients.
B. Proposed Investment Advisor Information Security and Privacy
Rule.
In recent years, both state and federal regulators have been
concerned about data privacy and security in the financial markets. By a vote
of its members on May 18, 2019, the North American Securities Administrators
Association ("NASAA"),2 adopted a model rule to address
the basic structure for how state-registered investment advisors may design
their information security policies and procedures. The new Model Rule requires
investment advisors to adopt policies and procedures regarding information
security and to deliver its privacy policy annually to clients. The Model Rule
was adopted to create uniformity in both state regulation and state-registered
investment advisors.
I. Proposed New Section 260. Information Security and Privacy.
This new section will be added to the rules for investment advisors to
establish the minimum policies and procedures to protect client information and
provide information privacy. The current Commission rules require the delivery
of the investment advisor's privacy policy on a yearly basis, but the proposed
new rule would further refine that requirement. In addition, the model rule
adds the new requirements for client information security.
II. Proposed Amendments to Section 10. Application for Registration
as an Investment Advisor and Notice Filing as a Federal Covered Advisor. The
proposed amendments add the information and cyber security policy and
procedures to the list of required documents to be filed by investment advisor
applicants. In addition, the proposed amendment requires the investment advisor
to file a copy of their privacy policy, as required for the proposed new rule.
III. Proposed Amendment to Section 160 A. Recordkeeping
Requirements for Investment Advisors. Under section 160, investment advisors
are required to keep certain records. These records are used by the Division
staff to determine compliance with the securities laws and regulations. This
amendment will add a new subsection 25 which will add the requirement that
investment advisors keep a copy of the policies and procedures required by the
proposed new section 260.
IV. Proposed Amendments to Section 200. Dishonest or
Unethical Practices
(a) Prohibited conduct regarding privacy of information.
Currently, subsection 14 of 200 A requires investment advisors to protect their
client’s information and makes it a violation for the investment advisor to
fail to comply with any applicable privacy provision or standard promulgated by
the SEC or any self-regulatory organization approved by the SEC. Now that the
NASAA membership has adopted similar requirements in the Model Rule, the
Division proposes to amend this section to conform it to the new Model Rule.
The proposed amendment removes the reference to the SEC and self-regulatory
organizations since the state-covered advisors will be governed by the
new section 260, if adopted.
(b) Prohibited conduct regarding an investment advisor's
failure to report an unauthorized access of a client's information to the
Division and the client. The consequences of unauthorized access to a client's
information could be devastating to the client. To address that, the Division
proposes a new subsection G to section 200. The proposed new subsection makes
it a dishonest or unethical practice for an investment advisor or investment
advisor representative to fail to report such unauthorized access to the
Division and the client within three business days of discovery. If properly
reported, the Division can work with the investment advisor and investment advisor
representative to take the appropriate measures to limit the damage and prevent
further unauthorized access.
Proposed Revision to Chapter 30. Adoption of NASAA.
Statements of Policy.
The Division is a member of NASAA, the association of state
securities regulatory agencies. As a part of its mission to provide a uniform
approach to the state regulation of securities, the Division, along with the
member states, develops and adopts statements of policy that apply to the
registration of securities. From time-to-time, NASAA amends these statements of
policy to keep them current and address changes in the types of products
offered by industry members, as well the changing norms for the standards that
will apply to those registrations.
The proposed amendment updates a number of these statements
of policy, including (1) underwriting expenses; (2) unsound financial
condition; (3) corporate securities definitions; and (4) loans and other
material transactions. NASAA vetted the proposed amendments by providing public
notice and opportunity to comment. Following the expiration of the comment
period, the revisions were adopted in May of 2018 by a vote of the NASAA
members.
In addition, Documents Incorporated by Reference in Chapter
21 VAC5-30, will be updated to include all Statements of Policy previously
adopted by the Commission in Section 8.
Proposed Revisions to Chapter 45. Offerings conducted
pursuant to Rule 506 of Regulation D (17 CFR 230.506): Filing Requirements and
issuer-agent exemption.
Many securities offerings today are made through a federal
exemption known as Rule 506, which allows an issuer of securities who meets the
requirements of the exemption to offer and sell securities in every state
without registration. As a part of the adoption of this federal regulation,
Congress provided a means for states to monitor these offerings in their state
by allowing the states to accept notice filings made under the federal
regulation.
To make such notices uniform among the states, the Division
adopted this rule to provide for the notice filing through the use of the
filing form developed by the SEC, known as Form D. Over the years since
Form D was adopted, the SEC has amended the form. In order to make it
easier to keep up with the changes to Form D, and to allow the securities
industry to use the appropriate form, the Division proposes to drop the date of
adoption of Form D from the body of the regulation and instead update its form
list (attached hereto to this Order), as necessary.
The Division recommended to the Commission that the proposed
revisions should be considered for adoption. The Division also has recommended
to the Commission that a hearing should be held only if requested by those
interested parties who specifically indicate that a hearing is necessary and
the reasons therefore.
A copy of the proposed revisions may be requested by
interested parties from the Division by telephone, mail, or e-mail request and
also can be found at the Division's website: http://www.scc.virginia.gov/division/srf. Any comments to the
proposed rules must be received by August 9, 2019.
Accordingly, IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED THAT:
(1) The proposed revisions are appended hereto and made a
part of the record herein.
(2) On or before August 9, 2019, comments or request for
hearing on the proposed revisions must be submitted in writing to Joel H. Peck,
Clerk of the Commission, c/o Document Control Center, P.O. Box 2118, Richmond,
Virginia 23218. A request for hearing shall state why a hearing is necessary
and why the issues cannot be adequately addressed in written comments. All
correspondence shall contain reference to Case No. SEC-2019-00024. Interested
persons desiring to submit comments electronically may do so by following the
instructions available at the Commission's website: http://www.scc.virginia.gov/case.
(3) The proposed revisions shall be posted on the
Commission's website at http://www.scc.virginia.gov/case and on
the Division’s website at http://www.scc.virginia.gov/srf.
Interested persons also may request a copy of the proposed revisions from the
Division by telephone, mail or e-mail.
AN ATTESTED COPY HEREOF, together with a copy of the proposed
revisions, shall be sent to the Registrar of Regulations for publication in the
Virginia Register of Regulations.
AN ATTESTED COPY HEREOF shall be sent to the Director of the
Division of Securities and Retail Franchising who shall forthwith mail a copy
of this Order to any interested persons as he may designate.
_________________________________
1Pub.L. No. 104-290, 110 Stat. 3415 (codified
through various parts of 15 USC 2006).
2NASAA is the membership organization of state
securities regulators.
21VAC5-20-280. Prohibited business conduct.
A. Every broker-dealer is required to observe high standards
of commercial honor and just and equitable principles of trade in the conduct
of its business. The acts and practices described in this subsection are
considered contrary to such standards and may constitute grounds for denial,
suspension, or revocation of registration or such other action authorized by
the Act. No broker-dealer who is registered or required to be registered shall:
1. Engage in a pattern of unreasonable and unjustifiable
delays in the delivery of securities purchased by any of its customers or in
the payment upon request of free credit balances reflecting completed transactions
of any of its customers, or take any action that directly or indirectly
interferes with a customer's ability to transfer his account; provided that the
account is not subject to any lien for moneys owed by the customer or other
bona fide claim, including, but not limited to, seeking a judicial order
or decree that would bar or restrict the submission, delivery or acceptance of
a written request from a customer to transfer his account;
2. Induce trading in a customer's account which is excessive
in size or frequency in view of the financial resources and character of the
account;
3. Recommend to a customer the purchase, sale or exchange of
any security without reasonable grounds to believe that the recommendation is
suitable for the customer. The reasonable basis to recommend any such
transaction to a customer shall be based upon the risks associated with a
particular security, and the information obtained through the diligence and
inquiry of the broker-dealer to ascertain the customer's investment profile. A
customer's investment profile includes, but is not limited to, the
customer's investment objectives, financial situation, risk tolerance and
needs, tax status, age, other investments, investment experience, investment
time horizon, liquidity needs, and any other relevant information known by the
broker-dealer or of which the broker-dealer is otherwise made aware in
connection with such recommendation;
4. Execute a transaction on behalf of a customer without
authority to do so or, when securities are held in a customer's account, fail
to execute a sell transaction involving those securities as instructed by a
customer, without reasonable cause;
5. Exercise any discretionary power in effecting a transaction
for a customer's account without first obtaining written discretionary
authority from the customer, unless the discretionary power relates solely to
the time or price for the execution of orders;
6. Execute any transaction in a margin account without
securing from the customer a properly executed written margin agreement
promptly after the initial transaction in the account, or fail, prior to or at
the opening of a margin account, to disclose to a noninstitutional customer the
operation of a margin account and the risks associated with trading on margin at
least as comprehensively as required by FINRA Rule 2264;
7. Fail to segregate customers' free securities or securities
held in safekeeping;
8. Hypothecate a customer's securities without having a lien
thereon unless the broker-dealer secures from the customer a properly executed
written consent promptly after the initial transaction, except as permitted by
Rules of the SEC;
9. Enter into a transaction with or for a customer at a price
not reasonably related to the current market price of a security or receiving
an unreasonable commission or profit;
10. Fail to furnish to a customer purchasing securities in an
offering, no later than the date of confirmation of the transaction, either a
final prospectus or a preliminary prospectus and an additional document, which
together include all information set forth in the final prospectus, either by
(i) hard copy prospectus delivery or (ii) electronic prospectus delivery;
11. Introduce customer transactions on a "fully
disclosed" basis to another broker-dealer that is not exempt under § 13.1-514
B 6 of the Act;
12. a. Charge unreasonable and inequitable fees for services
performed, including miscellaneous services such as collection of moneys due
for principal, dividends or interest, exchange or transfer of securities,
appraisals, safekeeping, or custody of securities and other services related to
its securities business;
b. Charge a fee based on the activity, value or contents (or
lack thereof) of a customer account unless written disclosure pertaining to the
fee, which shall include information about the amount of the fee, how
imposition of the fee can be avoided and any consequence of late payment or
nonpayment of the fee, was provided no later than the date the account was
established or, with respect to an existing account, at least 60 days prior to
the effective date of the fee;
13. Offer to buy from or sell to any person any security at a
stated price unless the broker-dealer is prepared to purchase or sell at the
price and under such conditions as are stated at the time of the offer to buy
or sell;
14. Represent that a security is being offered to a customer
"at a market" or a price relevant to the market price unless the
broker-dealer knows or has reasonable grounds to believe that a market for the
security exists other than that made, created or controlled by the
broker-dealer, or by any person for whom he is acting or with whom he is
associated in the distribution, or any person controlled by, controlling or
under common control with the broker-dealer;
15. Effect any transaction in, or induce the purchase or sale
of, any security by means of any manipulative, deceptive or fraudulent device,
practice, plan, program, design or contrivance, which may include but not be
limited to:
a. Effecting any transaction in a security which involves no
change in the beneficial ownership thereof;
b. Entering an order or orders for the purchase or sale
of any security with the knowledge that an order or orders of
substantially the same size, at substantially the same time and substantially
the same price, for the sale of any security, has been or will be entered by or
for the same or different parties for the purpose of creating a false or
misleading appearance of active trading in the security or a false or
misleading appearance with respect to the market for the security; however,
nothing in this subdivision shall prohibit a broker-dealer from entering bona
fide agency cross transactions for its customers; or
c. Effecting, alone or with one or more other persons, a
series of transactions in any security creating actual or apparent active
trading in the security or raising or depressing the price of the security, for
the purpose of inducing the purchase or sale of the security by others;
16. Guarantee a customer against loss in any securities
account of the customer carried by the broker-dealer or in any securities
transaction effected by the broker-dealer with or for the customer;
17. Publish or circulate, or cause to be published or
circulated, any notice, circular, advertisement, newspaper article, investment
service, or communication of any kind which purports to report any transaction
as a purchase or sale of any security unless the broker-dealer believes that
the transaction was a bona fide purchase or sale of the security; or which
purports to quote the bid price or asked price for any security, unless the
broker-dealer believes that the quotation represents a bona fide bid for, or
offer of, the security;
18. Use any advertising or sales presentation in such a
fashion as to be deceptive or misleading. An example of such practice would be
a distribution of any nonfactual data, material or presentation based on
conjecture, unfounded or unrealistic claims or assertions in any brochure,
flyer, or display by words, pictures, graphs or otherwise designed to
supplement, detract from, supersede or defeat the purpose or effect of any
prospectus or disclosure;
19. Fail to make reasonably available upon request to any
person expressing an interest in a solicited transaction in a security, not
listed on a registered securities exchange or quoted on an automated quotation
system operated by a national securities association approved by regulation of
the commission, a balance sheet of the issuer as of a date within 18 months of
the offer or sale of the issuer's securities and a profit and loss statement
for either the fiscal year preceding that date or the most recent year of
operations, the names of the issuer's proprietor, partners or officers, the
nature of the enterprises of the issuer and any available information
reasonably necessary for evaluating the desirability or lack of desirability of
investing in the securities of an issuer. All transactions in securities
described in this subdivision shall comply with the provisions of § 13.1-507 of
the Act;
20. Fail to disclose that the broker-dealer is controlled by,
controlling, affiliated with or under common control with the issuer of any
security before entering into any contract with or for a customer for the
purchase or sale of the security, the existence of control to the customer, and
if disclosure is not made in writing, it shall be supplemented by the giving or
sending of written disclosure at or before the completion of the transaction;
21. Fail to make a bona fide public offering of all of the
securities allotted to a broker-dealer for distribution, whether acquired as an
underwriter, a selling group member, or from a member participating in the
distribution as an underwriter or selling group member;
22. Fail or refuse to furnish a customer, upon reasonable
request, information to which the customer is entitled, or to respond to a
formal written request or complaint;
23. Fail to clearly and separately disclose to its customer,
prior to any security transaction, providing investment advice for compensation
or any materially related transaction that the customer's funds or securities
will be in the custody of an investment advisor or contracted custodian, in a
manner that does not provide Securities Investor Protection Corporation
protection, or equivalent third-party coverage over the customer's assets;
24. Market broker-dealer services that are associated with
financial institutions in a manner that is misleading or confusing to customers
as to the nature of securities products or risks;
25. In transactions subject to breakpoints, fail to:
a. Utilize advantageous breakpoints without reasonable basis
for their exclusion;
b. Determine information that should be recorded on the books
and records of a member or its clearing firm, which is necessary to determine
the availability and appropriateness of breakpoint opportunities; or
c. Inquire whether the customer has positions or transactions
away from the member that should be considered in connection with the pending
transaction and apprise the customer of the breakpoint opportunities;
26. Use a certification or professional designation in
connection with the offer, sale, or purchase of securities that indicates or
implies that the user has special certification or training in advising or
servicing senior citizens or retirees in such a way as to mislead any person.
a. The use of such certification or professional designation
includes, but is not limited to, the following:
(1) Use of a certification or designation by a person who has
not actually earned or is otherwise ineligible to use such certification or
designation;
(2) Use of a nonexistent or self-conferred certification or
professional designation;
(3) Use of a certification or professional designation that
indicates or implies a level of occupational qualifications obtained through
education, training, or experience that the person using the certification or
professional designation does not have; or
(4) Use of a certification or professional designation that
was obtained from a designating or certifying organization that:
(a) Is primarily engaged in the business of instruction in
sales or marketing;
(b) Does not have reasonable standards or procedures for
assuring the competency of its designees or certificants;
(c) Does not have reasonable standards or procedures for
monitoring and disciplining its designees or certificants for improper or
unethical conduct; or
(d) Does not have reasonable continuing education requirements
for its designees or certificants in order to maintain the designation or
certificate.
b. There is a rebuttable presumption that a designating or
certifying organization is not disqualified solely for purposes of subdivision
26 a (4) of this subsection, when the organization has been accredited by:
(1) The American National Standards Institute;
(2) The Institute for Credentialing Excellence (formerly the
National Commission for Certifying Agencies); or
(3) An organization that is on the U.S. Department of
Education's list entitled "Accrediting Agencies Recognized for Title IV
Purposes" and the designation or credential issued therefrom does not
primarily apply to sales or marketing.
c. In determining whether a combination of words (or an
acronym standing for a combination of words) constitutes a certification or
professional designation indicating or implying that a person has special
certification or training in advising or servicing senior citizens or retirees,
factors to be considered shall include:
(1) Use of one or more words such as "senior,"
"retirement," "elder," or like words, combined with one or
more words such as "certified," "chartered,"
"adviser," "specialist," "consultant,"
"planner," or like words, in the name of the certification or
professional designation; and
(2) The manner in which those words are combined.
d. For purposes of this section, a certification or
professional designation does not include a job title within an organization
that is licensed or registered by a state or federal financial services
regulatory agency when that job title:
(1) Indicates seniority within the organization; or
(2) Specifies an individual's area of specialization within
the organization.
For purposes of this subdivision d, "financial services
regulatory agency" includes, but is not limited to, an agency that
regulates broker-dealers, investment advisers, or investment companies as
defined under § 3 (a)(1) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (15 USC
§ 80a-3(a)(1)).
e. Nothing in this regulation shall limit the commission's
authority to enforce existing provisions of law;
27. Represent that securities will be listed or that
application for listing will be made on a securities exchange or the National
Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations (NASDAQ) system or other
quotation system without reasonable basis in fact for the representation;
28. Falsify or alter so as to make false or misleading any
record or document or any information provided to the commission;
29. Negotiate, facilitate, or otherwise execute a transaction
on behalf of an investor involving securities issued by a third party pursuant
to a claim for exemption under subsection B of § 13.1-514 of the Act
unless the broker-dealer intends to report the securities owned and the value
of such securities on at least a quarterly basis to the investor;
30. Offer or sell securities pursuant to a claim for exemption
under subsection B of § 13.1-514 of the Act without having first verified the
information relating to the securities offered or sold, which shall include,
but not be limited to, ascertaining the risks associated with investing in
the respective security;
31. Allow any person to represent or utilize its name as a
trading platform without conspicuously disclosing the name of the registered
broker-dealer in effecting or attempting to effect purchases and sales of
securities; or
32. Engage in any conduct that constitutes a dishonest or
unethical practice including, but not limited to, forgery, embezzlement,
nondisclosure, incomplete disclosure or material omissions or untrue statements
of material facts, manipulative or deceptive practices, or fraudulent course of
business.
B. Every agent is required to observe high standards of
commercial honor and just and equitable principles of trade in the conduct of
his business. The acts and practices described in this subsection are
considered contrary to such standards and may constitute grounds for denial,
suspension, or revocation of registration or such other action authorized by
the Act. No agent who is registered or required to be registered shall:
1. Engage in the practice of lending or borrowing money or
securities from a customer, or acting as a custodian for money, securities or
an executed stock power of a customer;
2. Effect any securities transaction not recorded on the
regular books or records of the broker-dealer which the agent represents,
unless the transaction is authorized in writing by the broker-dealer prior to
execution of the transaction;
3. Establish or maintain an account containing fictitious
information in order to execute a transaction which would otherwise be unlawful
or prohibited;
4. Share directly or indirectly in profits or losses in the
account of any customer without the written authorization of the customer and
the broker-dealer which the agent represents;
5. Divide or otherwise split the agent's commissions, profits
or other compensation from the purchase or sale of securities in this
Commonwealth with any person not also registered as an agent for the same
broker-dealer, or for a broker-dealer under direct or indirect common control;
6. Engage in conduct specified in subdivision A 2, 3, 4, 5, 6,
10, 15, 16, 17, 18, 23, 24, 25, 26, 28, 30, 31, or 32 of this section;
7. Fail to comply with the continuing education requirements
under 21VAC5-20-150 C; or
8. Hold oneself out as representing any person other than the
broker-dealer with whom the agent is registered and, in the case of an agent
whose normal place of business is not on the premises of the broker-dealer,
failing to conspicuously disclose the name of the broker-dealer for whom the
agent is registered when representing the dealer in effecting or attempting to
effect the purchases or sales of securities.
C. No person shall publish, give publicity to, or circulate
any notice, circular, advertisement, newspaper article, letter, investment
service or communication which, though not purporting to offer a security for
sale, describes the security, for a consideration received or to be received,
directly or indirectly, from an issuer, underwriter, or dealer, without fully
disclosing the receipt, whether past or prospective, of such consideration and
the amount thereof.
D. The purpose of this subsection is to identify practices in
the securities business that are generally associated with schemes to
manipulate and to identify prohibited business conduct of broker-dealers or
sales agents who are registered or required to be registered.
1. Entering into a transaction with a customer in any security
at an unreasonable price or at a price not reasonably related to the current
market price of the security or receiving an unreasonable commission or profit.
2. Contradicting or negating the importance of any information
contained in a prospectus or other offering materials with intent to deceive or
mislead or using any advertising or sales presentation in a deceptive or
misleading manner.
3. In connection with the offer, sale, or purchase of a
security, falsely leading a customer to believe that the broker-dealer or agent
is in possession of material, nonpublic information that would affect the value
of the security.
4. In connection with the solicitation of a sale or purchase
of a security, engaging in a pattern or practice of making contradictory
recommendations to different investors of similar investment objective for some
to sell and others to purchase the same security, at or about the same time,
when not justified by the particular circumstances of each investor.
5. Failing to make a bona fide public offering of all the
securities allotted to a broker-dealer for distribution by, among other things,
(i) transferring securities to a customer, another broker-dealer, or a
fictitious account with the understanding that those securities will be
returned to the broker-dealer or its nominees or (ii) parking or withholding
securities.
6. a. In addition to the application of the general anti-fraud
provisions against anyone in connection with practices similar in nature to the
practices discussed in this subdivision 6, the following subdivisions (1)
through (6) specifically apply only in connection with the solicitation of a
purchase or sale of over the counter (OTC) unlisted non-NASDAQ equity
securities except those exempt from registration under 21VAC5-40-50:
(1) Failing to advise the customer, both at the time of
solicitation and on the confirmation, of any and all compensation related to a
specific securities transaction to be paid to the agent including commissions,
sales charges, or concessions.
(2) In connection with a principal transaction, failing to
disclose, both at the time of solicitation and on the confirmation, a short
inventory position in the firm's account of more than 3.0% of the issued and
outstanding shares of that class of securities of the issuer; however, this
subdivision 6 of this subsection shall apply only if the firm is a market maker
at the time of the solicitation.
(3) Conducting sales contests in a particular security.
(4) After a solicited purchase
by a customer, failing or refusing, in connection with a principal transaction,
to promptly execute sell orders.
(5) Soliciting a secondary
market transaction when there has not been a bona fide distribution in the
primary market.
(6) Engaging in a pattern of
compensating an agent in different amounts for effecting sales and purchases in
the same security.
b. Although subdivisions D 6 a (1) through (6) of this section
do not apply to OTC unlisted non-NASDAQ equity securities exempt from
registration under 21VAC5-40-50, nothing in this subsection precludes
application of the general anti-fraud provisions against anyone in connection
with practices similar in nature to the practices discussed in subdivisions D 6
a (1) through (6) of this section.
7. Effecting any transaction in, or inducing the purchase or
sale of, any security by means of any manipulative, deceptive, or other
fraudulent device or contrivance including but not limited to the use of
boiler room tactics or use of fictitious or nominee accounts.
8. Failing to comply with any prospectus delivery requirements
promulgated under federal law or the Act.
9. In connection with the solicitation of a sale or purchase
of an OTC unlisted non-NASDAQ security, failing to promptly provide the most
current prospectus or the most recently filed periodic report filed under § 13
of the Securities Exchange Act when requested to do so by a customer.
10. Marking any order tickets or confirmations as unsolicited
when in fact the transaction was solicited.
11. For any month in which activity has occurred in a
customer's account, but in no event less than every three months, failing to
provide each customer with a statement of account with respect to all OTC
non-NASDAQ equity securities in the account, containing a value for each such
security based on the closing market bid on a date certain; however, this
subdivision shall apply only if the firm has been a market maker in the
security at any time during the month in which the monthly or quarterly
statement is issued.
12. Failing to comply with any applicable provision of the
FINRA Rules or any applicable fair practice, privacy, or ethical standard promulgated
by the SEC or by a self-regulatory organization approved by the SEC.
13. In connection with the solicitation of a purchase or sale
of a designated security:
a. Failing to disclose to the customer the bid and ask price,
at which the broker-dealer effects transactions with individual, retail
customers, of the designated security as well as its spread in both percentage
and dollar amounts at the time of solicitation and on the trade confirmation
documents; or
b. Failing to include with the confirmation, the notice
disclosure contained under 21VAC5-20-285, except the following shall be exempt
from this requirement:
(1) Transactions in which the price of the designated security
is $5.00 or more, exclusive of costs or charges; however, if the designated security
is a unit composed of one or more securities, the unit price divided by the
number of components of the unit other than warrants, options, rights, or
similar securities must be $5.00 or more, and any component of the unit that is
a warrant, option, right, or similar securities, or a convertible security must
have an exercise price or conversion price of $5.00 or more.
(2) Transactions that are not recommended by the broker-dealer
or agent.
(3) Transactions by a broker-dealer (i) whose commissions, commission
equivalents, and mark-ups from transactions in designated securities during
each of the preceding three months, and during 11 or more of the preceding 12
months, did not exceed 5.0% of its total commissions, commission-equivalents,
and mark-ups from transactions in securities during those months; and (ii) who
has not executed principal transactions in connection with the solicitation to
purchase the designated security that is the subject of the transaction in the
preceding 12 months.
(4) Any transaction or transactions that, upon prior written
request or upon its own motion, the commission conditionally or unconditionally
exempts as not encompassed within the purposes of this section.
c. For purposes of this section, the term "designated
security" means any equity security other than a security:
(1) Registered, or approved for registration upon notice of
issuance, on a national securities exchange and makes transaction reports
available pursuant to 17 CFR 11Aa3-1 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934;
(2) Authorized, or approved for authorization upon notice of
issuance, for quotation in the NASDAQ system;
(3) Issued by an investment company registered under the
Investment Company Act of 1940;
(4) That is a put option or call option issued by The Options
Clearing Corporation; or
(5) Whose issuer has net tangible assets in excess of $4
million as demonstrated by financial statements dated within no less than 15
months that the broker-dealer has reviewed and has a reasonable basis to
believe are true and complete in relation to the date of the transaction with
the person, and
(a) In the event the issuer is other than a foreign private
issuer, are the most recent financial statements for the issuer that have been
audited and reported on by an independent public accountant in accordance with
the provisions of 17 CFR 210.2-02 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; or
(b) In the event the issuer is a foreign private issuer, are
the most recent financial statements for the issuer that have been filed with
the SEC; furnished to the SEC pursuant to 17 CFR 240.12g3-2(b) under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934; or prepared in accordance with generally
accepted accounting principles in the country of incorporation, audited in
compliance with the requirements of that jurisdiction, and reported on by an
accountant duly registered and in good standing in accordance with the
regulations of that jurisdiction.
E. A broker-dealer or an agent may delay or refuse a
transaction or a disbursement of funds that may involve or result in the
financial exploitation of an individual pursuant to § 63.2-1606 L of the
Code of Virginia.
DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE (21VAC5-20)
Rule 1250 of FINRA By-Laws, Continuing Education
Requirements, amended by SR-FINRA-2011-013, eff. October 17, 2011, Financial
Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc.
Rule 345 A of the New York Stock Exchange Rules,
Continuing Education for Registered Persons, effective as existed July 1, 1995,
New York Stock Exchange.
Rule G-3(h) of the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board,
Classification of Principals and Representatives; Numerical Requirements;
Testing; Continuing Education Requirements, effective as existed July 1, 1995,
Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board.
Rule
1240 of FINRA By-Laws, Continuing Education Requirements, amended by
SR-FINRA-2017-007, eff. October 1, 2018, Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority, Inc.
Rule
345 A of the New York Stock Exchange Rules, Continuing Education for Registered
Persons, effective as existed July 1, 1995, New York Stock Exchange, superseded
by Financial Industry Regulation Authority, Inc. Rule 1200 Series - Rule, 1240,
eff. October 1, 2018
Rule
G-3(i) of the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board, Classification of
Principals and Representatives; Numerical Requirements; Testing; Continuing
Education Requirements, effective as existed July 1, 1995, Municipal Securities
Rulemaking Board
Rule 341A of the New York Stock Exchange Market Rules,
Continuing Education for Registered Persons, effective as existed May 14, 2012,
New York Stock Exchange.
Rule 9.3A of the Chicago Board Options Exchange, Continuing
Education for Registered Persons, effective as existed July 1, 1995, Chicago
Board Options Exchange.
Article VI, Rule 11 of the Rules of the Chicago Stock
Exchange, Inc., Continuing Education for Registered Persons, effective as
existed July 1, 1995, Chicago Stock Exchange, Inc.
FINRA, Rule 2264, Margin Disclosure Statement, amended by
SR-FINRA-2011-065, eff. December 5, 2011.
Article I, Paragraph u of FINRA By-Laws, amended by
SR-FINRA-2008-0026, eff. December 15, 2008.
21VAC5-30-80. Adoption of North American Securities
Administration Association, Inc. statements of policy.
The commission adopts the following North American Securities
Administration Association, Inc. (NASAA) statements of policy that shall apply
to the registration of securities in the Commonwealth. It will be considered a
basis for denial of an application if an offering fails to comply with an
applicable statement of policy. While applications not conforming to a
statement of policy shall be looked upon with disfavor, where good cause is
shown, certain provisions may be modified or waived by the commission.
1. Options and Warrants, as amended March 31, 2008.
2. Underwriting Expenses, Underwriter's Warrants, Selling
Expenses and Selling Security Holders, as amended March 31, 2008 May
6, 2018.
3. Real Estate Programs, as amended May 7, 2007.
4. Oil and Gas Programs, as amended May 6, 2012.
5. Cattle-Feeding Programs, as adopted September 17, 1980.
6. Unsound Financial Condition, as amended March 31, 2008
May 6, 2018.
7. Real Estate Investment Trusts, as amended May 7, 2007.
8. Church Bonds, as adopted April 29, 1981.
9. Small Company Offering Registrations, as adopted April 28,
1996.
10. NASAA Guidelines Regarding Viatical Investment, as adopted
October 1, 2002.
11. Corporate Securities Definitions, as amended March 31,
2008 May 6, 2018.
12. Church Extension Fund Securities, as amended April 18,
2004.
13. Promotional Shares, as amended March 31, 2008.
14. Loans and Other Material Transactions, as amended March
31, 2008 May 6, 2018.
15. Impoundment of Proceeds, as amended March 31, 2008.
16. Electronic Offering Documents and Electronic Signatures,
as adopted May 8, 2017.
DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE (21VAC5-30)
Statement of Policy Regarding Church Extension Fund
Securities, adopted April 17, 1994, amended April 18, 2004, North American
Securities Administrators Association, Inc.
Statement
of Policy Regarding Church Extension Fund Securities as amended April 18, 2004,
North American Securities Administrators Association, Inc.
Statement
of Policy Regarding Options and Warrants, as amended March 31, 2008, North
American Securities Administrators Association, Inc.
Statement
of Policy Regarding Underwriting Expenses, Underwriter's Warrants, Selling
Expenses and Selling Security Holders, as amended May 6, 2018, North American
Securities Administrators Association, Inc.
Statement
of Policy Regarding Unsound Financial Condition, as amended May 6, 2018, North
American Securities Administrators Association, Inc.
Statement
of Policy Regarding Church Bonds, as adopted April 29, 1981, North American
Securities Administrators Association, Inc.
Statement
of Policy Regarding Real Estate Programs, as amended May 7, 2007, North
American Securities Administrators Association, Inc.
Statement
of Policy Regarding Oil and Gas Programs, as amended May 6, 2012, North
American Securities Administrators Association, Inc.
Statement
of Policy Regarding Church Bonds, as adopted April 29, 1981, North American
Securities Administrators Association, Inc.
Statement
of Policy Regarding Small Company Offering Registrations, as adopted April 28,
1996, North American Securities Administrators Association, Inc.
NASAA
Guidelines Regarding Viatical Investment, as adopted October 1, 2002, North
American Securities Administrators Association, Inc.
Statement
of Policy Regarding Corporate Securities Definitions, as amended May 6, 2018,
North American Securities Administrators Association, Inc.
Statement
of Policy Regarding Promotional Shares, as amended March 31, 2008, North
American Securities Administrators Association, Inc.
Statement
of Policy Regarding Loans and Other Material Transactions, as amended May 6,
2018, North American Securities Administrators Association, Inc.
Statement
of Policy Regarding Impoundment of Proceeds, as amended March 31, 2008, North
American Securities Administrators Association, Inc.
Statement
of Policy Regarding Electronic Offering Documents and Electronic Signatures, as
adopted May 8, 2017, North American Securities Administrators Association, Inc.
Statement
of Policy Regarding Cattle-Feeding Programs, as adopted September 17, 1980,
North American Securities Administrators Association, Inc.
21VAC5-45-20. Offerings conducted pursuant to Rule 506 of
federal Regulation regulation D (17 CFR 230.506): Filing filing
requirements and issuer-agent exemption.
A. An issuer offering a security that is a covered security
under § 18 (b)(4)(D) of the Securities Act of 1933 (15 USC § 77r(b)(4)(D))
shall file with the commission no later than 15 days after the first sale of
such federal covered security in this Commonwealth:
1. A notice on SEC Form D (17 CFR 239.500), as filed with the
SEC.
2. A filing fee of $250 payable to the Treasurer of Virginia.
B. An amendment filing shall contain a copy of the amended
SEC Form D. No fee is required for an amendment.
C. For the purpose of this chapter, SEC "Form D" is
the document, as adopted by the SEC, and in effect on September 23, 2013,
entitled "Form D, Notice of Exempt Offering of Securities."
D. Pursuant to § 13.1-514 B 13 of the Act, an agent of an
issuer who effects transactions in a security exempt from registration under
the Securities Act of 1933 pursuant to rules and regulations promulgated under
§ 4(2) thereof (15 USC § 77d(2)) is exempt from the agent registration
requirements of the Act.
NOTICE: Forms used in
administering the regulation have been filed by the agency. The forms are not
being published; however, online users of this issue of the Virginia Register
of Regulations may click on the name of a form with a hyperlink to access it.
The forms are also available from the agency contact or may be viewed at the
Office of the Registrar of Regulations, 900 East Main Street, 11th Floor,
Richmond, Virginia 23219.
FORMS (21VAC5-45)
Form D, Notice of Exempt Offering of Securities, U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission, SEC1972 (rev. 2/2012)
Form
D, Notice of Exempt Offering of Securities, U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission, SEC1972 (rev. 5/2017)
Uniform Consent to Service of Process, Form U-2
(rev. 7/2017)
Uniform Notice of Regulation A - Tier 2 Offering
(undated, filed 10/2016)
Form NF - Uniform Investment Company Notice Filing
(4/1997)
Uniform Notice of Federal Crowdfunding Offering,
Form U-CF (undated, filed 9/2017)
Part I
Investment Advisor Registration, Notice Filing for Federal Covered Advisors,
Expiration, Renewal, Updates and Amendments, Terminations and Merger or
Consolidation
21VAC5-80-10. Application for registration as an investment
advisor and notice filing as a federal covered advisor.
A. Application for registration as an investment advisor
shall be filed in compliance with all requirements of IARD and in full
compliance with forms and regulations prescribed by the commission and shall
include all information required by such forms.
B. An application shall be deemed incomplete for registration
as an investment advisor unless the applicant submits the following executed
forms, fee, and information:
1. Form ADV Parts 1 and 2 submitted to IARD.
2. The statutory fee made payable to FINRA in the amount of
$200 submitted to IARD pursuant to § 13.1-505 F of the Act.
3. A copy of the client agreement.
4. A copy of the firm's supervisory and procedures manual as
required by 21VAC5-80-170.
5. Copies of all advertising materials.
6. Copies of all stationery and business cards.
7. A signed affidavit stating that an investment advisor
domiciled in Virginia has not conducted investment advisory business prior to
registration, and for investment advisors domiciled outside of Virginia an
affidavit stating that the advisor has fewer than six clients in the prior
12-month period.
8. An audited or certified balance sheet prepared in
accordance with generally accepted accounting practices reflecting the
financial condition of the investment advisor not more than 90 days prior to
the date of such filing.
9. A copy of the firm's disaster recovery plan as required by
21VAC5-80-160 F.
10. Evidence of at least one qualified individual with an
investment advisor representative registration pending on IARD on behalf of the
investment advisor.
11. A copy of the firm’s physical security and
cybersecurity policies and procedures as required by 21VAC5-80-260 A.
12. A copy of the firm’s privacy policy as required by
21VAC5-80-260 B.
13. Any other information the commission may require.
For purposes of this section, the term "net worth"
means an excess of assets over liabilities, as determined by generally accepted
accounting principles. Net worth shall not include: prepaid expenses (except as
to items properly classified as assets under generally accepted accounting
principles), deferred charges such as deferred income tax charges, goodwill,
franchise rights, organizational expenses, patents, copyrights, marketing
rights, unamortized debt discount and expense, all other assets of intangible
nature, home furnishings, automobiles, and any other personal items not readily
marketable in the case of an individual; advances or loans to stockholders and
officers in the case of a corporation; and advances or loans to partners in the
case of a partnership.
C. The commission shall either grant or deny each application
for registration within 30 days after it is filed. However, if additional time
is needed to obtain or verify information regarding the application, the
commission may extend such period as much as 90 days by giving written notice
to the applicant. No more than three such extensions may be made by the
commission on any one application. An extension of the initial 30-day period,
not to exceed 90 days, shall be granted upon written request of the applicant.
D. Every person who transacts business in this Commonwealth
as a federal covered advisor shall file a notice as prescribed in subsection E
of this section in compliance with all requirements of the IARD.
E. A notice filing for a federal covered advisor shall be
deemed incomplete unless the federal covered advisor submits the following executed
forms, fee, and information:
1. Form ADV Parts 1 and 2.
2. A fee made payable to FINRA in the amount of $200.
21VAC5-80-160. Recordkeeping requirements for investment
advisors.
A. Every investment advisor registered or required to be
registered under the Act shall make and keep true, accurate and current the
following books, ledgers and records, except an investment advisor having its
principal place of business outside this Commonwealth and registered or
licensed, and in compliance with the applicable books and records requirements,
in the state where its principal place of business is located, shall only be
required to make, keep current, maintain and preserve such of the following
required books, ledgers and records as are not in addition to those required
under the laws of the state in which it maintains its principal place of
business:
1. A journal or journals, including cash receipts and
disbursements records, and any other records of original entry forming the
basis of entries in any ledger.
2. General and auxiliary ledgers (or other comparable records)
reflecting asset, liability, reserve, capital, income and expense accounts.
3. A memorandum of each order given by the investment advisor
for the purchase or sale of any security, of any instruction received by the
investment advisor from the client concerning the purchase, sale, receipt or
delivery of a particular security, and of any modification or cancellation of
any such order or instruction. The memoranda shall show the terms and conditions
of the order, instruction, modification or cancellation; shall identify the
person connected with the investment advisor who recommended the transaction to
the client and the person who placed the order; and shall show the account for
which entered, the date of entry, and the bank, broker or dealer by or through
whom executed where appropriate. Orders entered pursuant to the exercise of
discretionary power shall be so designated.
4. All check books, bank statements, canceled checks and cash
reconciliations of the investment advisor.
5. All bills or statements (or copies of), paid or unpaid,
relating to the business as an investment advisor.
6. All trial balances, financial statements prepared in
accordance with generally accepted accounting principles which shall include a
balance sheet, income statement and such other statements as may be required
pursuant to 21VAC5-80-180, and internal audit working papers relating to the
investment advisor's business as an investment advisor.
7. Originals of all written communications received and copies
of all written communications sent by the investment advisor relating to (i)
any recommendation made or proposed to be made and any advice given or proposed
to be given; (ii) any receipt, disbursement or delivery of funds or securities;
and (iii) the placing or execution of any order to purchase or sell any
security; however, (a) the investment advisor shall not be required to keep any
unsolicited market letters and other similar communications of general public
distribution not prepared by or for the investment advisor, and (b) if the
investment advisor sends any notice, circular or other advertisement offering
any report, analysis, publication or other investment advisory service to more
than 10 persons, the investment advisor shall not be required to keep a record
of the names and addresses of the persons to whom it was sent; except that if
the notice, circular or advertisement is distributed to persons named on any
list, the investment advisor shall retain with a copy of the notice, circular
or advertisement a memorandum describing the list and the source thereof.
8. A list or other record of all accounts which list
identifies the accounts in which the investment advisor is vested with any
discretionary power with respect to the funds, securities or transactions of
any client.
9. All powers of attorney and other evidences of the granting
of any discretionary authority by any client to the investment advisor, or
copies thereof.
10. All written agreements (or copies thereof) entered into by
the investment advisor with any client, and all other written agreements
otherwise related to the investment advisor's business as an investment
advisor.
11. A file containing a copy of each notice, circular,
advertisement, newspaper article, investment letter, bulletin, or other
communication including by electronic media that the investment advisor
circulates or distributes, directly or indirectly, to two or more persons
(other than persons connected with the investment advisor), and if the notice,
circular, advertisement, newspaper article, investment letter, bulletin, or
other communication including by electronic media recommends the purchase or
sale of a specific security and does not state the reasons for the
recommendation, a memorandum of the investment adviser indicating the reasons
for the recommendation.
12. a. A record of every transaction in a security in which
the investment advisor or any investment advisory representative of the
investment advisor has, or by reason of any transaction acquires, any direct or
indirect beneficial ownership, except (i) transactions effected in any account
over which neither the investment advisor nor any investment advisory
representative of the investment advisor has any direct or indirect influence
or control; and (ii) transactions in securities which are direct obligations of
the United States. The record shall state the title and amount of the security
involved; the date and nature of the transaction (i.e., purchase, sale or other
acquisition or disposition); the price at which it was effected; and the name
of the broker, dealer or bank with or through whom the transaction was
effected. The record may also contain a statement declaring that the reporting
or recording of any such transaction shall not be construed as an admission
that the investment advisor or investment advisory representative has any
direct or indirect beneficial ownership in the security. A transaction shall be
recorded not later than 10 days after the end of the calendar quarter in which
the transaction was effected.
b. For purposes of this subdivision 12, the following
definitions will apply. The term "advisory representative" means any
partner, officer or director of the investment advisor; any employee who
participates in any way in the determination of which recommendations shall be
made; any employee who, in connection with his duties, obtains any information
concerning which securities are being recommended prior to the effective
dissemination of the recommendations; and any of the following persons who
obtain information concerning securities recommendations being made by the
investment advisor prior to the effective dissemination of the recommendations:
(1) Any person in a control relationship to the investment
adviser;
(2) Any affiliated person of a controlling person; and
(3) Any affiliated person of an affiliated person.
"Control" means the power to exercise a controlling
influence over the management or policies of a company, unless such power is
solely the result of an official position with the company. Any person who owns
beneficially, either directly or through one or more controlled companies, more
than 25% of the ownership interest of a company shall be presumed to control
the company.
c. An investment advisor shall not be deemed to have violated
the provisions of this subdivision 12 because of his failure to record
securities transactions of any investment advisor representative if the
investment advisor establishes that it instituted adequate procedures and used
reasonable diligence to obtain promptly reports of all transactions required to
be recorded.
13. a. Notwithstanding the provisions of subdivision 12 of
this subsection, where the investment advisor is primarily engaged in a
business or businesses other than advising investment advisory clients,
a record must be maintained of every transaction in a security in which the
investment advisor or any investment advisory representative of such investment
advisor has, or by reason of such transaction acquires, any direct or indirect
beneficial ownership, except (i) transactions effected in any account over
which neither the investment advisor nor any investment advisory representative
of the investment advisor has any direct or indirect influence or control; and
(ii) transactions in securities which are direct obligations of the United
States. The record shall state the title and amount of the security involved;
the date and nature of the transaction (i.e., purchase, sale or other
acquisition or disposition); the price at which it was effected; and the name
of the broker, dealer or bank with or through whom the transaction was
effected. The record may also contain a statement declaring that the reporting
or recording of any such transaction shall not be construed as an admission
that the investment advisor or investment advisory representative has any
direct or indirect beneficial ownership in the security. A transaction shall be
recorded not later than 10 days after the end of the calendar quarter in which
the transaction was effected.
b. An investment advisor is "primarily engaged in a
business or businesses other than advising investment advisory clients"
when, for each of its most recent three fiscal years or for the period of time
since organization, whichever is less, the investment advisor derived, on an
unconsolidated basis, more than 50% of (i) its total sales and revenues, and
(ii) its income (or loss) before income taxes and extraordinary items, from
such other business or businesses.
c. For purposes of this subdivision 13, the following
definitions will apply. The term "advisory representative," when used
in connection with a company primarily engaged in a business or businesses
other than advising investment advisory clients, means any partner, officer,
director or employee of the investment advisor who participates in any way in
the determination of which recommendation shall be made, or whose functions or
duties relate to the determination of which securities are being recommended
prior to the effective dissemination of the recommendations; and any of the
following persons, who obtain information concerning securities recommendations
being made by the investment advisor prior to the effective dissemination of
the recommendations or of the information concerning the recommendations:
(1) Any person in a control relationship to the investment
advisor;
(2) Any affiliated person of a controlling person; and
(3) Any affiliated person of an affiliated person.
d. An investment advisor shall not be deemed to have violated
the provisions of this subdivision 13 because of his failure to record
securities transactions of any investment advisor representative if he
establishes that he instituted adequate procedures and used reasonable
diligence to obtain promptly reports of all transactions required to be
recorded.
14. A copy of each written statement and each amendment or
revision, given or sent to any client or prospective client of such investment
advisor in accordance with the provisions of 21VAC5-80-190 and a record of the
dates that each written statement, and each amendment or revision, was given,
or offered to be given, to any client or prospective client who subsequently
becomes a client.
15. For each client that was obtained by the advisor by means
of a solicitor to whom a cash fee was paid by the advisor, the following:
a. Evidence of a written agreement to which the advisor is a
party related to the payment of such fee;
b. A signed and dated acknowledgement of receipt from the
client evidencing the client's receipt of the investment advisor's disclosure
statement and a written disclosure statement of the solicitor; and
c. A copy of the solicitor's written disclosure statement. The
written agreement, acknowledgement and solicitor disclosure statement will be
considered to be in compliance if such documents are in compliance with Rule
275.206(4)-3 of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940.
For purposes of this regulation, the term
"solicitor" means any person or entity who, for compensation, acts as
an agent of an investment advisor in referring potential clients.
16. All accounts, books, internal working papers, and any
other records or documents that are necessary to form the basis for or
demonstrate the calculation of the performance or rate of return of all managed
accounts or securities recommendations in any notice, circular, advertisement,
newspaper article, investment letter, bulletin, or other communication
including but not limited to electronic media that the investment
advisor circulates or distributes directly or indirectly, to two or more
persons (other than persons connected with the investment advisor); however,
with respect to the performance of managed accounts, the retention of all
account statements, if they reflect all debits, credits, and other transactions
in a client's account for the period of the statement, and all worksheets
necessary to demonstrate the calculation of the performance or rate of return
of all managed accounts shall be deemed to satisfy the requirements of this
subdivision.
17. A file containing a copy of all written communications
received or sent regarding any litigation involving the investment advisor or
any investment advisor representative or employee, and regarding any written
customer or client complaint.
18. Written information about each investment advisory client
that is the basis for making any recommendation or providing any investment
advice to the client.
19. Written procedures to supervise the activities of
employees and investment advisor representatives that are reasonably designed
to achieve compliance with applicable securities laws and regulations.
20. A file containing a copy of each document (other than any
notices of general dissemination) that was filed with or received from any
state or federal agency or self regulatory organization and that pertains to
the registrant or its investment advisor representatives, which file should
contain, but is not limited to, all applications, amendments, renewal filings,
and correspondence.
21. Any records documenting dates, locations and findings of
the investment advisor's annual review of these policies and procedures
conducted pursuant to subdivision F of 21VAC5-80-170.
22. Copies, with original signatures of the investment
advisor's appropriate signatory and the investment advisor representative, of
each initial Form U4 and each amendment to Disclosure Reporting Pages (DRPs U4)
must be retained by the investment advisor (filing on behalf of the investment
advisor representative) and must be made available for inspection upon
regulatory request.
23. Where the advisor inadvertently held or obtained a
client's securities or funds and returned them to the client within three
business days or has forwarded third party checks within three business days of
receipt, the advisor will be considered as not having custody but shall keep
the following record to identify all securities or funds held or obtained
relating to the inadvertent custody:
A ledger or other listing of all securities or funds held or
obtained, including the following information:
a. Issuer;
b. Type of security and series;
c. Date of issue;
d. For debt instruments, the denomination, interest rate and
maturity date;
e. Certificate number, including alphabetical prefix or
suffix;
f. Name in which registered;
g. Date given to the advisor;
h. Date sent to client or sender;
i. Form of delivery to client or sender, or copy of the form
of delivery to client or sender; and
j. Mail confirmation number, if applicable, or confirmation by
client or sender of the fund's or security's return.
24. If an investment advisor obtains possession of securities
that are acquired from the issuer in a transaction or chain of transactions not
involving any public offering that comply with the exception from custody under
subdivision C 2 of 21VAC5-80-146, the advisor shall keep the following records:
a. A record showing the issuer or current transfer agent's
name address, phone number, and other applicable contract information
pertaining to the party responsible for recording client interests in the
securities; and
b. A copy of any legend, shareholder agreement, or other
agreement showing that those securities that are transferable only with prior
consent of the issuer or holders of the outstanding securities of the issuer.
25. Any records required pursuant to 21VAC5-80-260.
B. 1. If an investment advisor subject to subsection A of
this section has custody or possession of securities or funds of any client,
the records required to be made and kept under subsection A of this section shall
also include:
a. A journal or other record showing all purchases, sales,
receipts and deliveries of securities (including certificate numbers) for such
accounts and all other debits and credits to the accounts.
b. A separate ledger account for each client showing all
purchases, sales, receipts and deliveries of securities, the date and price of
each purchase and sale, and all debits and credits.
c. Copies of confirmations of all transactions effected by or
for the account of any client.
d. A record for each security in which any client has a
position, which record shall show the name of each client having any interest
in each security, the amount or interest of each client, and the location of
each security.
e. A copy of any records required to be made and kept under
21VAC5-80-146.
f. A copy of any and all documents executed by the client
(including a limited power of attorney) under which the advisor is authorized
or permitted to withdraw a client's funds or securities maintained with a
custodian upon the advisor's instruction to the custodian.
g. A copy of each of the client's quarterly account statements
as generated and delivered by the qualified custodian. If the advisor also
generates a statement that is delivered to the client, the advisor shall also
maintain copies of such statements along with the date such statements were
sent to the clients.
h. If applicable to the advisor's situation, a copy of the
special examination report verifying the completion of the examination by an
independent certified public accountant and describing the nature and extent of
the examination.
i. A record of any finding by the independent certified public
accountant of any material discrepancies found during the examination.
j. If applicable, evidence of the client's designation of an
independent representative.
2. If an investment advisor has custody because it advises a
pooled investment vehicle, as defined in 21VAC5-80-146 A in the definition of
custody in clause subdivision 1 c, the advisor shall also keep
the following records:
a. True, accurate, and current account statements;
b. Where the advisor complies with 21VAC5-80-146 C 4, the
records required to be made and kept shall include:
(1) The date or dates of the audit;
(2) A copy of the audited financial statements; and
(3) Evidence of the mailing of the audited financial to all
limited partners, members, or other beneficial owners within 120 days of the
end of its fiscal year.
c. Where the advisor complies with 21VAC5-80-146 B 5, the
records required to be made and kept shall include:
(1) A copy of the written agreement with the independent party
reviewing all fees and expenses, indicating the responsibilities of the
independent third party.
(2) Copies of all invoices and receipts showing approval by
the independent party for payment through the qualified custodian.
C. Every investment advisor subject to subsection A of this
section who renders any investment advisory or management service to any client
shall, with respect to the portfolio being supervised or managed and to the
extent that the information is reasonably available to or obtainable by the
investment advisor, make and keep true, accurate and current:
1. Records showing separately for each client the securities
purchased and sold, and the date, amount and price of each purchase and sale.
2. For each security in which any client has a current
position, information from which the investment advisor can promptly furnish
the name of each client and the current amount or interest of the client.
D. Any books or records required by this section may be
maintained by the investment advisor in such manner that the identity of any
client to whom the investment advisor renders investment advisory services is
indicated by numerical or alphabetical code or some similar designation.
E. Every investment advisor subject to subsection A of this
section shall preserve the following records in the manner prescribed:
1. All books and records required to be made under the
provisions of subsection A through subdivision C 1, inclusive, of this section,
except for books and records required to be made under the provisions of
subdivisions A 11 and A 16 of this section, shall be maintained in an easily
accessible place for a period of not less than five years from the end of the
fiscal year during which the last entry was made on record, the first two years
of which shall be maintained in the principal office of the investment advisor.
2. Partnership articles and any amendments, articles of
incorporation, charters, minute books, and stock certificate books of the
investment advisor and of any predecessor, shall be maintained in the principal
office of the investment advisor and preserved until at least three years after
termination of the enterprise.
3. Books and records required to be made under the provisions
of subdivisions A 11 and A 16 of this section shall be maintained in an easily
accessible place for a period of not less than five years, the first two years
of which shall be maintained in the principal office of the investment advisor,
from the end of the fiscal year during which the investment advisor last
published or otherwise disseminated, directly or indirectly, the notice,
circular, advertisement, newspaper article, investment letter, bulletin, or
other communication including by electronic media.
4. Books and records required to be made under the provisions
of subdivisions A 17 through A 22, inclusive, of this section shall be
maintained and preserved in an easily accessible place for a period of not less
than five years, from the end of the fiscal year during which the last entry
was made on such record, the first two years in the principal office of the
investment advisor, or for the time period during which the investment advisor
was registered or required to be registered in the state, if less.
5. Notwithstanding other record preservation requirements of
this subsection, the following records or copies shall be required to be
maintained at the business location of the investment advisor from which the
customer or client is being provided or has been provided with investment
advisory services: (i) records required to be preserved under subdivisions A 3,
A 7 through A 10, A 14 and A 15, A 17 through A 19, subsections B and C,
and (ii) the records or copies required under the provision of subdivisions A
11 and A 16 of this section which records or related records identify the name
of the investment advisor representative providing investment advice from that
business location, or which identify the business locations' physical address,
mailing address, electronic mailing address, or telephone number. The records
will be maintained for the period described in this subsection.
F. Every investment advisor shall establish and maintain a
written disaster recovery plan that shall address at a minimum:
1. The identity of individuals that will conduct or wind down
business on behalf of the investment advisor in the event of death or
incapacity of key persons;
2. Means to provide notification to clients of the investment
advisor and to those states in which the advisor is registered of the death or
incapacity of key persons;
a. Notification shall be provided to the Division of
Securities and Retail Franchising via IARD/CRD within 24 hours of the
death or incapacity of key persons.
b. Notification shall be given to clients within five business
days from the death or incapacity of key persons.
3. Means for clients' accounts to continue to be monitored
until an orderly liquidation, distribution or transfer of the clients'
portfolio to another advisor can be achieved or until an actual notice to the
client of investment advisor death or incapacity and client control of their
assets occurs;
4. Means for the credit demands of the investment advisor to
be met; and
5. Data backups sufficient to allow rapid resumption of the
investment advisor's activities.
G. An investment advisor subject to subsection A of this
section, before ceasing to conduct or discontinuing business as an investment
advisor, shall arrange for and be responsible for the preservation of the books
and records required to be maintained and preserved under this section for the
remainder of the period specified in this section, and shall notify the
commission in writing of the exact address where the books and records will be
maintained during such period.
H. 1. The records required to be maintained pursuant to this
section may be immediately produced or reproduced by photograph on film or, as
provided in subdivision 2 of this subsection, on magnetic disk, tape or other
computer storage medium, and be maintained for the required time in that form.
If records are preserved or reproduced by photographic film or computer storage
medium, the investment advisor shall:
a. Arrange the records and index the films or computer storage
medium so as to permit the immediate location of any particular record;
b. Be ready at all times to promptly provide any facsimile
enlargement of film or computer printout or copy of the computer storage medium
which the commission by its examiners or other representatives may request;
c. Store separately from the original one other copy of the
film or computer storage medium for the time required;
d. With respect to records stored on computer storage medium,
maintain procedures for maintenance of, and access to, records so as to
reasonably safeguard records from loss, alteration, or destruction; and
e. With respect to records stored on photographic film, at all
times have available, for the commission's examination of its records,
facilities for immediate, easily readable projection of the film and for
producing easily readable facsimile enlargements.
2. Pursuant to subdivision 1 of this subsection, an advisor
may maintain and preserve on computer tape or disk or other computer storage
medium records which, in the ordinary course of the advisor's business, are
created by the advisor on electronic media or are received by the advisor
solely on electronic media or by electronic transmission.
I. Any book or record made, kept, maintained, and preserved
in compliance with SEC Rules 17a-3 (17 CFR 240.17a-3) and 17a-4 (17 CFR
240.17a-4) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, which is substantially
the same as the book, or other record required to be made, kept, maintained,
and preserved under this section shall be deemed to be made, kept, maintained,
and preserved in compliance with this section.
J. For purposes of this section, "investment supervisory
services" means the giving of continuous advice as to the investment of
funds on the basis of the individual needs of each client; and
"discretionary power" shall not include discretion as to the price at
which or the time when a transaction is or is to be effected if, before the
order is given by the investment advisor, the client has directed or approved the
purchase or sale of a definite amount of the particular security.
K. For purposes of this section, "principal place of
business" and "principal office" mean the executive office of
the investment advisor from which the officers, partners, or managers of the
investment advisor direct, control, and coordinate the activities of the
investment advisor.
L. Every investment advisor registered or required to be
registered in this Commonwealth and has its principal place of business in a
state other than the Commonwealth shall be exempt from the requirements of this
section to the extent provided by the National Securities Markets Improvement
Act of 1996 (Pub. L. No. 104-290), provided the investment advisor is licensed
in such state and is in compliance with such state's recordkeeping
requirements.
21VAC5-80-200. Dishonest or unethical practices.
A. An investment advisor or federal covered advisor is a
fiduciary and has a duty to act primarily for the benefit of his clients. While
the extent and nature of this duty varies according to the nature of the
relationship between an investment advisor or federal covered advisor and his
clients and the circumstances of each case, an investment advisor or federal
covered advisor who is registered or required to be registered shall not engage
in unethical practices, including the following:
1. Recommending to a client to whom investment supervisory,
management or consulting services are provided the purchase, sale or exchange
of any security without reasonable grounds to believe that the recommendation
is suitable for the client on the basis of information furnished by the client
after reasonable inquiry concerning the client's investment objectives,
financial situation, risk tolerance and needs, and any other information known
or acquired by the investment advisor or federal covered advisor after
reasonable examination of the client's financial records.
2. Placing an order to purchase or sell a security for the
account of a client without written authority to do so.
3. Placing an order to purchase or sell a security for the
account of a client upon instruction of a third party without first having
obtained a written third-party authorization from the client.
4. Exercising any discretionary power in placing an order for
the purchase or sale of securities for a client without obtaining written
discretionary authority from the client within 10 business days after the date
of the first transaction placed pursuant to oral discretionary authority,
unless the discretionary power relates solely to the price at which, or the
time when, an order involving a definite amount of a specified security shall
be executed, or both.
5. Inducing trading in a client's account that is excessive in
size or frequency in view of the financial resources, investment objectives and
character of the account.
6. Borrowing money or securities from a client unless the
client is a broker-dealer, an affiliate of the investment advisor or federal
covered advisor, or a financial institution engaged in the business of loaning funds
or securities.
7. Loaning money to a client unless the investment advisor or
federal covered advisor is a financial institution engaged in the business of
loaning funds or the client is an affiliate of the investment advisor or
federal covered advisor.
8. Misrepresenting to any advisory client, or prospective
advisory client, the qualifications of the investment advisor or federal
covered advisor, or misrepresenting the nature of the advisory services being
offered or fees to be charged for the services, or omission to state a material
fact necessary to make the statements made regarding qualifications services or
fees, in light of the circumstances under which they are made, not misleading.
9. Providing a report or recommendation to any advisory client
prepared by someone other than the investment advisor or federal covered
advisor without disclosing that fact. This prohibition does not apply to a
situation where the advisor uses published research reports or statistical
analyses to render advice or where an advisor orders such a report in the
normal course of providing service.
10. Charging a client an unreasonable advisory fee in light of
the fees charged by other investment advisors or federal covered advisors
providing essentially the same services.
11. Failing to disclose to clients in writing before any
advice is rendered any material conflict of interest relating to the investment
advisor or federal covered advisor or any of his employees which could
reasonably be expected to impair the rendering of unbiased and objective advice
including:
a. Compensation arrangements connected with advisory services
to clients which are in addition to compensation from such clients for such
services; or
b. Charging a client an advisory fee for rendering advice when
a commission for executing securities transactions pursuant to such advice will
be received by the advisor or his employees.
12. Guaranteeing a client that a specific result will be
achieved as a result of the advice which will be rendered.
13. Directly or indirectly using any advertisement that does
any one of the following:
a. Refers to any testimonial of any kind concerning the
investment advisor or investment advisor representative or concerning any
advice, analysis, report, or other service rendered by the investment advisor
or investment advisor representative;
b. Refers to past specific recommendations of the investment
advisor or investment advisor representative that were or would have been
profitable to any person; except that an investment advisor or investment
advisor representative may furnish or offer to furnish a list of all
recommendations made by the investment advisor or investment advisor
representative within the immediately preceding period of not less than one
year if the advertisement or list also includes both of the following:
(1) The name of each security recommended, the date and nature
of each recommendation, the market price at that time, the price at which the
recommendation was to be acted upon, and the most recently available market
price of each security; and
(2) A legend on the first page in prominent print or type that
states that the reader should not assume that recommendations made in the
future will be profitable or will equal the performance of the securities in
the list;
c. Represents that any graph, chart, formula, or other device
being offered can be used to determine which securities to buy or sell, or when
to buy or sell them; or which represents, directly or indirectly, that any
graph, chart, formula, or other device being offered will assist any person in
making that person's own decisions as to which securities to buy or sell, or
when to buy or sell them, without prominently disclosing in the advertisement
the limitations thereof and the risks associated to its use;
d. Represents that any report, analysis, or other service will
be furnished for free or without charge, unless the report, analysis, or other
service actually is or will be furnished entirely free and without any direct
or indirect condition or obligation;
e. Represents that the commission has approved any
advertisement; or
f. Contains any untrue statement of a material fact, or that
is otherwise false or misleading.
For the purposes of this section, the term
"advertisement" includes any notice, circular, letter, or other
written communication addressed to more than one person, or any notice or other
announcement in any electronic or paper publication, by radio or television, or
by any medium, that offers any one of the following:
(i) Any analysis, report, or publication concerning
securities;
(ii) Any analysis, report, or publication that is to be used
in making any determination as to when to buy or sell any security or which
security to buy or sell;
(iii) Any graph, chart, formula, or other device to be used in
making any determination as to when to buy or sell any security, or which
security to buy or sell; or
(iv) Any other investment advisory service with regard to
securities.
14. Disclosing the identity, affairs, or investments of any
client to any third party unless required by law or an order of a court or a
regulatory agency to do so, or unless consented to by the client, or failing
to comply with any applicable privacy provision or standard promulgated by the
SEC or by a self-regulatory organization approved by the SEC.
15. Taking any action, directly or indirectly, with respect to
those securities or funds in which any client has any beneficial interest,
where the investment advisor has custody or possession of such securities or
funds, when the investment advisor's action is subject to and does not comply
with the safekeeping requirements of 21VAC5-80-146.
16. Entering into, extending or renewing any investment
advisory contract unless the contract is in writing and discloses, in
substance, the services to be provided, the term of the contract, the advisory
fee, the formula for computing the fee, the amount of prepaid fee to be
returned in the event of contract termination or nonperformance, whether the
contract grants discretionary power to the investment advisor or federal
covered advisor and that no assignment of such contract shall be made by the
investment advisor or federal covered advisor without the consent of the other
party to the contract.
17. Failing to clearly and separately disclose to its
customer, prior to any security transaction, providing investment advice for
compensation or any materially related transaction that the customer's funds or
securities will be in the custody of an investment advisor or contracted
custodian in a manner that does not provide Securities Investor Protection
Corporation protection, or equivalent third-party coverage over the customer's
assets.
18. Using a certification or professional designation in
connection with the provision of advice as to the value of or the advisability
of investing in, purchasing, or selling securities, either directly or
indirectly or through publications or writings, or by issuing or promulgating
analyses or reports relating to securities that indicates or implies that the
user has special certification or training in advising or servicing senior
citizens or retirees in such a way as to mislead any person.
a. The use of such certification or professional designation
includes, but is not limited to, the following:
(1) Use of a certification or designation by a person who has
not actually earned or is otherwise ineligible to use such certification or
designation;
(2) Use of a nonexistent or self-conferred certification or
professional designation;
(3) Use of a certification or professional designation that
indicates or implies a level of occupational qualifications obtained through
education, training, or experience that the person using the certification or
professional designation does not have; or
(4) Use of a certification or professional designation that
was obtained from a designating or certifying organization that:
(a) Is primarily engaged in the business of instruction in
sales or marketing;
(b) Does not have reasonable standards or procedures for
assuring the competency of its designees or certificants;
(c) Does not have reasonable standards or procedures for
monitoring and disciplining its designees or certificants for improper or
unethical conduct; or
(d) Does not have reasonable continuing education requirements
for its designees or certificants in order to maintain the designation or
certificate.
b. There is a rebuttable presumption that a designating or
certifying organization is not disqualified solely for purposes of subdivision
18 a (4) of this subsection, when the organization has been accredited by:
(1) The American National Standards Institute;
(2) The Institute for Credentialing Excellence (formerly the
National Commission for Certifying Agencies); or
(3) An organization that is on the United States Department of
Education's list entitled "Accrediting Agencies Recognized for Title IV
Purposes" and the designation or credential issued therefrom does not
primarily apply to sales or marketing.
c. In determining whether a combination of words (or an
acronym standing for a combination of words) constitutes a certification or
professional designation indicating or implying that a person has special
certification or training in advising or servicing senior citizens or retirees,
factors to be considered shall include:
(1) Use of one or more words such as "senior,"
"retirement," "elder," or like words, combined with one or
more words such as "certified," "chartered,"
"adviser," "specialist," "consultant,"
"planner," or like words, in the name of the certification or professional
designation; and
(2) The manner in which those words are combined.
d. For purposes of this section, a certification or
professional designation does not include a job title within an organization
that is licensed or registered by a state or federal financial services
regulatory agency, when that job title:
(1) Indicates seniority within the organization; or
(2) Specifies an individual's area of specialization within
the organization.
For purposes of this subdivision d, "financial services regulatory
agency" includes, but is not limited to, an agency that regulates
broker-dealers, investment advisers, or investment companies as defined under § 3
(a)(1) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (15 USC § 80a-3(a)(1)).
e. Nothing in this regulation shall limit the commission's
authority to enforce existing provisions of the law.
B. An investment advisor representative is a fiduciary and
has a duty to act primarily for the benefit of his clients. While the extent
and nature of this duty varies according to the nature of the relationship
between an investment advisor representative and his clients and the
circumstances of each case, an investment advisor representative who is
registered or required to be registered shall not engage in unethical practices,
including the following:
1. Recommending to a client to whom investment supervisory,
management or consulting services are provided the purchase, sale or exchange
of any security without reasonable grounds to believe that the recommendation
is suitable for the client on the basis of information furnished by the client
after reasonable inquiry concerning the client's investment objectives,
financial situation and needs, and any other information known or acquired by
the investment advisor representative after reasonable examination of the
client's financial records.
2. Placing an order to purchase or sell a security for the
account of a client without written authority to do so.
3. Placing an order to purchase or sell a security for the
account of a client upon instruction of a third party without first having
obtained a written third-party authorization from the client.
4. Exercising any discretionary power in placing an order for
the purchase or sale of securities for a client without obtaining written
discretionary authority from the client within 10 business days after the date
of the first transaction placed pursuant to oral discretionary authority,
unless the discretionary power relates solely to the price at which, or the
time when, an order involving a definite amount of a specified security shall
be executed, or both.
5. Inducing trading in a client's account that is excessive in
size or frequency in view of the financial resources, investment objectives and
character of the account.
6. Borrowing money or securities from a client unless the
client is a broker-dealer, an affiliate of the investment advisor
representative, or a financial institution engaged in the business of loaning
funds or securities.
7. Loaning money to a client unless the investment advisor
representative is engaged in the business of loaning funds or the client is an
affiliate of the investment advisor representative.
8. Misrepresenting to any advisory client, or prospective
advisory client, the qualifications of the investment advisor representative,
or misrepresenting the nature of the advisory services being offered or fees to
be charged for the services, or omission to state a material fact necessary to
make the statements made regarding qualifications, services or fees, in light
of the circumstances under which they are made, not misleading.
9. Providing a report or recommendation to any advisory client
prepared by someone other than the investment advisor or federal covered
advisor who the investment advisor representative is employed by or associated
with without disclosing that fact. This prohibition does not apply to a
situation where the investment advisor or federal covered advisor uses
published research reports or statistical analyses to render advice or where an
investment advisor or federal covered advisor orders such a report in the
normal course of providing service.
10. Charging a client an unreasonable advisory fee in light of
the fees charged by other investment advisor representatives providing
essentially the same services.
11. Failing to disclose to clients in writing before any
advice is rendered any material conflict of interest relating to the investment
advisor representative which could reasonably be expected to impair the
rendering of unbiased and objective advice including:
a. Compensation arrangements connected with advisory services
to clients which are in addition to compensation from such clients for such
services; or
b. Charging a client an advisory fee for rendering advice when
a commission for executing securities transactions pursuant to such advice will
be received by the investment advisor representative.
12. Guaranteeing a client that a specific result will be
achieved as a result of the advice which will be rendered.
13. Directly or indirectly using any advertisement that does
any one of the following:
a. Refers to any testimonial of any kind concerning the
investment advisor or investment advisor representative or concerning any
advice, analysis, report, or other service rendered by the investment advisor
or investment advisor representative;
b. Refers to past specific recommendations of the investment
advisor or investment advisor representative that were or would have been
profitable to any person; except that an investment advisor or investment
advisor representative may furnish or offer to furnish a list of all
recommendations made by the investment advisor or investment advisor
representative within the immediately preceding period of not less than one
year if the advertisement or list also includes both of the following:
(1) The name of each security recommended, the date and nature
of each recommendation, the market price at that time, the price at which the
recommendation was to be acted upon, and the most recently available market
price of each security; and
(2) A legend on the first page in prominent print or type that
states that the reader should not assume that recommendations made in the
future will be profitable or will equal the performance of the securities in
the list;
c. Represents that any graph, chart, formula, or other device
being offered can be used to determine which securities to buy or sell, or when
to buy or sell them; or which represents, directly or indirectly, that any
graph, chart, formula, or other device being offered will assist any person in
making that person's own decisions as to which securities to buy or sell, or
when to buy or sell them, without prominently disclosing in the advertisement
the limitations thereof and the risks associated with its use;
d. Represents that any report, analysis, or other service will
be furnished for free or without charge, unless the report, analysis, or other
service actually is or will be furnished entirely free and without any direct
or indirect condition or obligation;
e. Represents that the commission has approved any
advertisement; or
f. Contains any untrue statement of a material fact, or that
is otherwise false or misleading.
For the purposes of this section, the term
"advertisement" includes any notice, circular, letter, or other
written communication addressed to more than one person, or any notice or other
announcement in any electronic or paper publication, by radio or television, or
by any medium, that offers any one of the following:
(i) Any analysis, report, or publication concerning
securities;
(ii) Any analysis, report, or publication that is to be used
in making any determination as to when to buy or sell any security or which
security to buy or sell;
(iii) Any graph, chart, formula, or other device to be used in
making any determination as to when to buy or sell any security, or which
security to buy or sell; or
(iv) Any other investment advisory service with regard to
securities.
14. Disclosing the identity, affairs, or investments of any
client to any third party unless required by law or an order of a court or a
regulatory agency to do so, or unless consented to by the client.
15. Taking any action, directly or indirectly, with respect to
those securities or funds in which any client has any beneficial interest, where
the investment advisor representative other than a person associated with a
federal covered advisor has custody or possession of such securities or funds,
when the investment advisor representative's action is subject to and does not
comply with the safekeeping requirements of 21VAC5-80-146.
16. Entering into, extending or renewing any investment
advisory or federal covered advisory contract unless such contract is in
writing and discloses, in substance, the services to be provided, the term of
the contract, the advisory fee, the formula for computing the fee, the amount
of prepaid fee to be returned in the event of contract termination or
nonperformance, whether the contract grants discretionary power to the
investment advisor representative and that no assignment of such contract shall
be made by the investment advisor representative without the consent of the
other party to the contract.
17. Failing to clearly and separately disclose to its
customer, prior to any security transaction, providing investment advice for
compensation or any materially related transaction that the customer's funds or
securities will be in the custody of an investment advisor or contracted
custodian in a manner that does not provide Securities Investor Protection
Corporation protection, or equivalent third-party coverage over the customer's
assets.
18. Using a certification or professional designation in
connection with the provision of advice as to the value of or the advisability
of investing in, purchasing, or selling securities, either directly or
indirectly or through publications or writings, or by issuing or promulgating
analyses or reports relating to securities that indicates or implies that the
user has special certification or training in advising or servicing senior
citizens or retirees in such a way as to mislead any person.
a. The use of such certification or professional designation
includes, but is not limited to, the following:
(1) Use of a certification or designation by a person who has
not actually earned or is otherwise ineligible to use such certification or
designation;
(2) Use of a nonexistent or self-conferred certification or
professional designation;
(3) Use of a certification or professional designation that
indicates or implies a level of occupational qualifications obtained through
education, training, or experience that the person using the certification or
professional designation does not have; or
(4) Use of a certification or professional designation that
was obtained from a designating or certifying organization that:
(a) Is primarily engaged in the business of instruction in
sales or marketing;
(b) Does not have reasonable standards or procedures for
assuring the competency of its designees or certificants;
(c) Does not have reasonable standards or procedures for
monitoring and disciplining its designees or certificants for improper or
unethical conduct; or
(d) Does not have reasonable continuing education requirements
for its designees or certificants in order to maintain the designation or
certificate.
b. There is a rebuttable presumption that a designating or
certifying organization is not disqualified solely for purposes of subdivision
18 a (4) of this subsection, when the organization has been accredited by:
(1) The American National Standards Institute;
(2) The Institute for Credentialing Excellence (formerly the
National Commission for Certifying Agencies); or
(3) An organization that is on the United States Department of
Education's list entitled "Accrediting Agencies Recognized for Title IV
Purposes" and the designation or credential issued therefrom does not
primarily apply to sales or marketing.
c. In determining whether a combination of words (or an
acronym standing for a combination of words) constitutes a certification or
professional designation indicating or implying that a person has special
certification or training in advising or servicing senior citizens or retirees,
factors to be considered shall include:
(1) Use of one or more words such as "senior,"
"retirement," "elder," or like words, combined with one or
more words such as "certified," "chartered,"
"adviser," "specialist," "consultant,"
"planner," or like words, in the name of the certification or professional
designation; and
(2) The manner in which those words are combined.
d. For purposes of this section, a certification or
professional designation does not include a job title within an organization
that is licensed or registered by a state or federal financial services
regulatory agency, when that job title:
(1) Indicates seniority within the organization; or
(2) Specifies an individual's area of specialization within
the organization.
For purposes of this subdivision d, "financial services
regulatory agency" includes, but is not limited to, an agency that
regulates broker-dealers, investment advisers, or investment companies as
defined under § 3(a)(1) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (15 USC
§ 80a-3(a)(1).
e. Nothing in this regulation shall limit the commission's
authority to enforce existing provisions of law.
C. The conduct set forth in subsections A and B of this
section is not all inclusive. Engaging in other conduct such as nondisclosure,
incomplete disclosure, or deceptive practices may be deemed an unethical
business practice except to the extent permitted by the National Securities
Markets Improvement Act of 1996 (Pub. L. No. 104-290 (96)).
D. The provisions of this section shall apply to federal
covered advisors to the extent that fraud or deceit is involved, or as
otherwise permitted by the National Securities Markets Improvement Act of 1996
(Pub. L. No. 104-290 (96)).
E. An investment advisor or investment advisor
representative may delay or refuse to place an order or to disburse funds that
may involve or result in the financial exploitation of an individual pursuant
to § 63.2-1606 L of the Code of Virginia.
F. For purposes of the section, any mandatory arbitration
provision in an advisory contract shall be prohibited.
G. The investment advisor and investment advisor
representative shall notify the Division of Securities and Retail Franchising,
State Corporation Commission and the client of an unauthorized access to
records that may expose a client's identity or investments to a third party
within three business days of the discovery of the unauthorized access.
21VAC5-80-260. Information security and privacy.
A. Every investment advisor registered or required to be
registered shall establish, implement, update, and enforce written physical
security and cybersecurity policies and procedures reasonably designed to
ensure the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of physical and
electronic records and information. The policies and procedures shall be
tailored to the investment advisor's business model, taking into account the
size of the firm, type of services provided, and the number of locations of the
investment advisor.
1. The physical security and cybersecurity policies and
procedures shall:
a. Protect against reasonably anticipated threats or
hazards to the security or integrity of client records and information;
b. Ensure that the investment advisor safeguards
confidential client records and information; and
c. Protect any records and information the release of which
could result in harm or inconvenience to any client.
2. The physical security and cybersecurity policies and
procedures shall cover at least five functions:
a. The organizational understanding to manage information
security risk to systems, assets, data, and capabilities;
b. The appropriate safeguards to ensure delivery of critical
infrastructure services;
c. The appropriate activities to identify the occurrence of
an information security event;
d. The appropriate activities to take action regarding a
detected information security event; and
e. The appropriate activities to maintain plans for
resilience and to restore any capabilities or services that were impaired due
to an information security event.
3. The investment advisor shall review, no less frequently
than annually, and modify, as needed, these policies and procedures to ensure
the adequacy of the security measures and the effectiveness of their
implementation.
B. The investment advisor shall deliver upon the
investment advisor's engagement by a client, and on an annual basis thereafter,
a privacy policy to each client that is reasonably designed to aid in the
client's understanding of how the investment advisor collects and shares, to
the extent permitted by state and federal law, nonpublic personal information.
The investment advisor shall promptly update and deliver to each client an
amended privacy policy if any of the information in the policy becomes
inaccurate.
VA.R. Doc. No. R19-5907; Filed June 28, 2019, 12:01 p.m.