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Firm to Pay $1.8M for selling Unsuitable Investments Page 1 of 1<br />

The Official Website of the Attorney General of Massachusetts<br />

Attorney General<br />

Maura Healey<br />

Home > News and Updates > Press Releases > 2015 > Firm to Pay $1.8M for selling Unsuitable Investments<br />

MAURA HEALEY<br />

ATTORNEY GENERAL<br />

Media Contact<br />

Jillian Fennimore<br />

(617) 727-2543<br />

For Immediate Release - September 23, 2015<br />

Boston Firm to Pay $1.8 Million for Selling Unsuitable<br />

Investments to Consumers<br />

BOSTON - An investment firm located in Boston has agreed to pay $1.8 million for placing approximately 200<br />

Massachusetts clients into unsuitable investments, Attorney General Maura Healey announced today.<br />

The assurance of discontinuance, filed Tuesday in Suffolk Superior Court against LPL Financial LLC, a major broker-dealer<br />

and investment adviser, alleges violations arising from LPL's sales, marketing, training, and oversight relating to risky<br />

leveraged Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs).<br />

"Massachusetts families shouldn't have their hard-earned savings put at risk by unsuitable investments," AG Healey said.<br />

"Consumers must be able to place their trust in their financial advisors and feel confident that their money will be invested<br />

appropriately."<br />

The leveraged ETFs at issue are complex investment funds that try to perform at a multiple of the daily returns of an index<br />

like the Standard & Poor's (S&P) 500. For reasons normally not known to casual investors, holding investments in these<br />

funds for long periods of time can produce unexpected outcomes. Even an investor who bets correctly on the direction of<br />

the index can lose money when holding a leveraged ETF.<br />

Leveraged ETFs are risky investments that have become notorious for their instability, and are unsuitable for retail<br />

investors in most cases. The AG's Office alleges certain LPL clients in Massachusetts experienced losses as a result of<br />

holding Leveraged ETFs for long periods of time.<br />

According to the AG's investigation, LPL also failed to supervise its financial advisors who caused clients to hold these<br />

investments for extended periods of time, and did not consistently adhere to its policy of imposing fines on financial<br />

advisors who exceeded concentration limits.<br />

Under the terms of the settlement, reached jointly with the Delaware Department of Justice, the $1.8 million LPL will pay<br />

covers a $200,000 penalty, as well as $1.6 million to compensate investors and for investor education. The state of<br />

Delaware will also receive a total of $200,000 under a parallel agreement with the Delaware Department of Justice.<br />

Consumers with questions can call AG Coakley's Insurance & Financial Services Division hotline at 1-888-830-<br />

6277.<br />

This case was handled by Assistant Attorney General Aaron Lamb, Division Chief Glenn Kaplan, Legal Analyst Brook<br />

Kellerman, and Mathematician Burt Feinberg, all of AG Healey's Insurance and Financial Services Division.<br />

©2016 Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Site Policies Contact the Attorney General's Office<br />

Mass.Gov® is a registered service mark of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.<br />

App. 425<br />

http://www.mass.gov/ago/news-and-updates/press-releases/2015/2015-09-23-lpl-fmancial-a... 8/5/2016

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