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Author: rafferty

ThinkAdvisor

The Small, Generalist Broker-Dealer: R.I.P.?

16:29 10 April in Articles Written by Jon Henschen

by Jon Henschen

April 10, 2014, as featured on ThinkAdvisor

On July 18,  the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform held a hearing regarding “Regulatory Burdens: The Impact of Dodd Frank on Community Banks.” In her testimony, Wake Forest University Professor Tanya Marsh discussed how “Dodd-Frank builds on decades of ‘one-size-fits-all’ regulation of financial institutions, an ill-conceived regulatory framework that puts community banks at a competitive disadvantage to their larger, more complex competitors.”

In her testimony, Marsh argued that “The imposition of regulatory burdens on community banks without attendant benefits ultimately harms both consumers and the economy by: 1) forcing community banks to consolidate or go out of business, furthering the concentration of assets in a small number of mega-financial institutions,

Berthel Fisher has new lease on life

15:45 07 April in In the News

by Bruce Kelly

April 4, 2014,  Investment News

Legal settlement means it might be clear of DBSI-related claims

Since the credit crisis, the financial advice industry has been littered with the dead shells of independent broker-dealers that sold fraudulent private placements before the crash.

DeWaay Financial Network Inc., GunnAllen Financial Inc., QA3 Financial Corp. and dozens of others all ran short of capital in the wake of a cascade of investor litigation, stemming from the sale of the phony or suspect deals.

Indeed, 43 of the 92 broker-dealers that sold tenant-in-common exchanges – real estate deals known as TICs – sponsored by the defunct DBSI Inc. are no longer in business, according to an InvestmentNews analysis.

A staggering amount,

ThinkAdvisor

IBD Regulation: Broken Windows, Broken System

21:37 11 March in Articles Written by Jon Henschen

by Jon Henschen

March 11, 2014, as featured on ThinkAdvisor

At the Financial Services Institute OneVoice conference in late January,  FSI President and CEO Dale Brown set the stage for things to come by commenting on the intentions of SEC Chairwoman Mary Jo White. White is the first to assume the SEC chair with a background as a federal prosecutor and securities lawyer, and her priorities reflect this litigation bent. She intends to usher in a period of rigorous enforcement, with a key component to that enforcement being the application of the “Broken Window Theory.”

The thinking behind “broken windows” is that no crime is too small to garner the attention of the cop on the beat, including acts such as vandals throwing rocks through windows.