In this article we are going to examine the use of social media and its impact on investment advisors and their representatives. Additionally, we will explore best practices for investment advisors to disclose potential conflicts of interest and to manage their fiduciary duty to the client.
LinkedIn, this feature is almost impossible to ignore. Why should investment adviser representatives be concerned about LinkedIn endorsements? Similar to a Facebook “like,” this nifty LinkedIn feature prompts clients to endorse your experience and services, which may inadvertently create a client testimonial.
The Advisers Act and most state regulations prohibit the use or publication of client testimonials, which generally include a statement by a former or present advisory client that endorses the adviser or refers to a favorable investment experience with the adviser.
Unlike LinkedIn recommendations — written statements of recommendation typically not proactively requested or proactively given — skill endorsements do not require the endorser to write or type anything. With just one click a user can send a positive message about another user without leaving a comment.
Assessing 1st Connections
What should you do? The best advice is to ensure that you are not linked or do not have a “1st connection” to your clients. This will prevent unintended endorsements or recommendations by clients. If you do elect to allow or retain 1st connection clients, you must remember that you are in control of the content on your LinkedIn page, and you are responsible for the publication of the endorsements you receive on your Linked In page. LinkedIn allows users to selectively “hide” endorsements received, and functionality recently introduced allows users to hide all endorsements.
How to Hide LinkedIn Endorsements
To hide ALL endorsements:
To hide SELECTED endorsements:
Note: You may check or uncheck the box next to Show/Hide All Endorsements to take action on all endorsements under one skill at once.
If you don’t want a specific person to endorse you, you can remove the connection between the two of you. They will not be notified if you break the connection.
Adjusting LinkedIn Recommendations
A recommendation can be hidden but not deleted. To change the visibility of a recommendation on your profile:
If you choose not to show a recommendation on your profile, it can still be viewed from a recommendations module on the right side of the recommender’s profile.
If you’re considering scrapping your LinkedIn, Facebook and other social media sites, this may be a good idea from a compliance perspective, but it may not be practical in the real world. Social media is becoming a prominent form of communication. Here are a few ways to help keep you and your web postings off the regulatory radar:
1 ) Check to see if your firm allows the use of social media for business purposes. If your firm does not have written policies and procedures governing the use of social media, your firm should develop such a written policy promptly, even if your firm, in practice, prohibits the use of social media. While some firms turn to existing policies and procedures — such as those that cover marketing, advertising, and/or electronic communications — to govern the use of social media by the firm’s advisory representatives, the SEC’s Office of Compliance Inspections and Examinations (OCIE) noted in National Examination Risk Alert that these firms often have overlapping procedures that lack specificity and cause confusion when attempting to apply their policies to the use of social media.
2) Your firm has a regulatory obligation to maintain required books and records for electronic and client communications. The recordkeeping obligations of an investment adviser, regardless of whether the adviser is SEC or state registered, apply to postings made on social media sites. As the OCIE Risk Alert specifies, registered investment advisers that communicate through social media must retain records of these communications if they contain information that satisfies an investment adviser’s recordkeeping obligations under the Advisers Act.
3) Monitor your LinkedIn and other social media sites regularly. Remember that you are responsible for the content that appears on your personal and professional social media sites. Take control of this content to the best of your ability to avoid unintended consequences.
Conflicts of interest and fiduciary duty
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s stepped up pursuit of advisers who have conflicts of interest, investment advisers need to carefully scrutinize their practices. In a regulatory first, last fall the SEC obtained a $1.1 million settlement with a planner and two of his companies for failing to disclose to their clients a revenue sharing arrangement that gave the adviser a percentage of management fees received from a brokerage firm that managed the clients’ assets.
The advisory business is rife with conflicts of interest. First is the ongoing debate about “fiduciary duty,” which tends to focus on the assumed inability of registered brokers to put their clients’ interests ahead of a commission check. Next in line are registered advisers and adviser representatives. Because these advisers are connected in some way — by ownership, dual registration or otherwise— with a broker–dealer, there is the reverse observation that the advisers get to profit, both from adviser fees and from commissions on client trades
Intricacies of fiduciary duty
Registered investment advisers are in a “fiduciary” relationship with their clients and must never place their interests ahead of a client’s interests. Collecting fees on top of commissions creates a conflict of interest. Many advisers simply don’t charge commissions or net them out or reduce them against the fees. They also don’t obtain a third-party evaluation that the fees and commissions are fair and reasonable for the services rendered.
As advisers are learning in the post Dodd-Frank era of heightened scrutiny, to behave fairly and in accordance with legal fiduciary principles is not enough. In the Hicks case, the focus was not on economics or “double dipping,” but was on non-disclosure. In the SEC’s version of “fiduciary duty,” disclosure is as important (or possibly more important) than fair dealing. Advisers now must:
Behaving as a reasonable fiduciary is simply not enough. One must now go further and disclose each conflict.
Common conflicts of interest
The list below outlines common areas of “conflict” that the SEC now wants advisers to disclose to their clients in a timely manner. The list is largely drawn from the requirements of Form ADV Part 2A:
Advisers should think carefully about all their advisory relationships, considering not only whether they are fair to their clients but also how their actions might appear to an under-trained regulator.
Content Delivery by Investment Advisors
Delivering information electronically to advisory clients can be a competitive advantage for investment advisers. This practice, which the SEC has determined is allowable under federal securities laws, can streamline communication with clients and reduce paper use, resulting in savings. If you do decide to use electronic delivery, you need to follow specific practices to meet regulatory requirements.
Content presentation and delivery
Information delivered electronically should convey the same information as the paper documents, including the order of information. If a client who elects to receive information electronically requests a paper document, the client has a right to receive the information in paper form.
Access to information
Advisory clients who choose to receive information electronically from investment advisers should have easy access to the information and be able to retain the information or have ongoing access to the information for personal retention, no matter the electronic medium used. A client being able to download or print information delivered electronically allows the client to retain a personal record.
Adequate notice
Advisory clients must have adequate notice that electronic information is available. If information is made available electronically through a passive delivery system, such as on an Internet website, separate notice of the information’s availability may be needed to satisfy delivery requirements.
Evidence of delivery
Investment advisers may be able to satisfy having evidence of delivery by:
Informed consent
Informed consent should specify the electronic medium through which the information will be delivered, the period covered, and the information to be delivered. Advisory client consent may be made by manual signature or electronically. The investment adviser should inform the client of potential costs associated with electronic delivery, such as online charges.
Privacy and security
Investment advisers delivering information electronically should take reasonable precautions and establish policies and procedures to ensure the integrity, confidentiality and security of the information from tampering or alteration. To help maintain the confidentiality and security of personal financial information, the advisory client should be notified that the information will be delivered electronically.
Oversight
Investment advisers should establish procedures to ensure delivery obligations are satisfied and must supervise firm personnel to prevent violations. Systems and procedures should be established to deter or detect misconduct in the delivery of information, electronically or in hard copy.
We hope that this article has helped you to understand the potential conflicts of interest social media man have on the investment advisor and the representatives.
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