Chapter 5 - Recommendations to Customers Flashcards
Investment Objectives
- Income
- Growth
- Preservation of capital
- Tax benefits
- Liquidity
- Speculation
Income investments
- Corporate bonds
- Municipal bonds
- Government bonds
- Preferred stocks
- Money market funds
- Bond funds
Growth investments
- Common stock
- Common stock funds
Preservation of capital
- Money market funds
- Government bonds
- Municipal bonds
- High-grade corporate bonds
Liquid investments
From most liquid to least liquid:
- Money market funds
- Stocks/bonds/mutual funds
- Annuities
- CMOs
- Direct participation programs
- Real estate
Speculation investments
- Penny stocks
- Small-cap stocks
- Some growth stocks
- junk bonds
Types of risk
- Capital risk
- Market risk
- Non-systematic risk
- Legislative risk
- Timing risk
- Credit risk
- Reinvestment risk
- Interest rate risk
- Call risk
- Opportunity risk
- Liquidity risk
Alpha
Projected independent rate of return or the difference between an investment’s expected (benchmark) return and its actual return.
Beta
It’s the projected rate of change relative to the market as a whole.
Developing the client profile
Recommendations are suitable, based on a review of the client’s:
- Investment objectives
- Financial status
- Income
- Investment holdings
- Retirement needs
- College and other major expenses
- Tax bracket
- Attitude toward investing
When developing the client’s profile advisor should also calculate the client’s:
- Assets
- Liabilities
- Net worth
- Monthly discretionary cash flow or income
Regulation Best Interest (Reg-BI)
Adopted by the SEC in June 2019 as an amendment to the securities exchange act of 1934. Advisers must act in the best interest of the client and provide a client relationship summary (CRS).
Known as ADV part 3.
Any changes required to be made to the CRS must be completed within 30 days and sent to existing clients within 60 days.
Churning & Reverse-churning
Churning is a practice of making transactions that are excessive in size or frequency, with the intention of generating higher commissions for the representative.
Reverse-churning is the practice of placing inactive accounts or accounts that do not treat frequently into fee-based programs that charge an annual fee based on the assets in the account. Since these inactive accounts do not trade frequently it will cause the total fees charged to the account to increase and make a fee-based account unsuitable.
Capping
A minipulative act designed to keep a stock price from rising or to keep the price down.
Pegging
Manipulative act designed to keep a stock price up or to keep the price from falling.
Front-running
The entering of an order for the account of an agent or firm prior to the entering of a large customer order.