Skip to content
International Adviser
  • Contact
  • Login
  • Subscribe
  • Regions
    • United Kingdom
    • Middle East
    • Europe
    • Asia
    • Africa
    • North America
    • Latin America
  • Industry
    • Tax & Regulation
    • Products
    • Life
    • Health & Protection
    • People Moves
    • Companies
    • Offshore Bonds
    • Retirement
    • Technology
    • Platforms
  • Investment
    • Equities
    • Fixed Income
    • Alternatives
    • Multi Asset
    • Property
    • Macro Views
    • Structured Products
    • Emerging Markets
    • Commodities
  • IA 100
  • Best Practice
    • Best Practice News
    • Best Practice Awards
  • Media
    • Video
    • Podcast
  • Directory
  • My IA
    • Events
    • IA Tax Panel
    • IA Intermediary Panel
    • About IA

ANNOUNCEMENT: Read more financial articles on our partner site, click here to read more.

SIGN IN INTERNATIONAL ADVISER

Access full content on the International Adviser site, access your saved articles, control email preferences and amend your account details

[login-with-ajax]
Not Registered?

Scale of US financial adviser misconduct revealed

By Sam Shaw, 8 Mar 16

Around 7% of financial advisers in the US have misconduct records, according to a report by a US-based research group called The National Bureau of Economic Research

Around 7% of financial advisers in the US have misconduct records, according to a report by a US-based research group called The National Bureau of Economic Research

The report, entitled ‘The Market for Financial Adviser Misconduct’ authored by economists Mark Egan, Gregor Matvos and Amit Seru, draws on a database of the universe of financial advisers from 2005 to 2015, which represents around 10% of those working in the total US finance and insurance sector.

The report suggests prior offenders are five times as likely to engage in new misconduct as the average financial adviser.

It also points out conflicting attitudes to discipline by financial services firms, pointing out that roughly half of financial advisers lose their job following misconduct, only for 44% to be reemployed elsewhere in the financial services industry within one year.

Following cases of misconduct, advisers face longer unemployment spells and take positions at less reputable firms, often taking a 10% pay cut.

The report also found the firms hiring these advisers also had higher rates of prior conduct.

Two camps

The study also revealed firms fell broadly into two camps: those with persistent cases of misconduct and those with clean records, which the authors suggested might be due in part to differing levels of consumer sophistication.

“Misconduct is concentrated in firms with retail customers and in counties with low education, elderly populations, and high incomes.

“Our findings suggest that some firms “specialise” in misconduct and cater to unsophisticated consumers, while others use their reputation to attract sophisticated consumers,” it said

Share this article
Follow by Email
Facebook
fb-share-icon
X (Twitter)
Post on X
LinkedIn
Share

Related Stories

  • Latest news

    UK government confirms pre-1997 indexation for PPF members

    Asia

    Why AES International is attracting the next generation of financial advisers  

  • Latest news

    Blacktower’s John Westwood: Will Budget reform prove counterproductive?

    Event News

    Lionesses to star as 2,000 set to attend UK pension conference


NEWSLETTER

Sign Up for International
Adviser Daily Newsletter

subscribe

  • View site map
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact

Published by Money Map Media – part of G&M Media Ltd Copyright (c) 2024.

International Adviser covers the global intermediary market that uses cross-border insurance, investments, banking and pension products on behalf of their high-net-worth clients. No news, articles or content may be reproduced in part or in full without express permission of International Adviser.