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Miami Homebuyers’ Workshop offers Downpayment Help

Wells Fargo & Co. will host a workshop 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Friday and Saturday, June 1 and 2, to help people who otherwise qualify for a mortgage to buy a home in the city of Miami but are short on a down payment, according to the Miami Herald.

“The workshop will be at the Doubletree Miami Airport Convention Center at 711 NW 72 Avenue, Miami. Details and pre-registration are available at neighborhoodlift.com or by calling 866-858-2151. Click on the link for full details.

The San Francisco mortgage giant said it will provide $9 million in aid to homebuyers in the City of Miami, or up to $15,000 in downpayment assistance per qualified applicant.

To participate, homebuyers must meet various criteria, including falling within 120 percent of the median income, or about $78,700 for a family of four. The mortgages can be obtained from any lender, not only Wells Fargo.

The program will be administered by Neighborhood Housing Services of South Florida, a nonprofit that works to help people to acquire and stay in their homes.”

Click on the link to learn what to bring to discuss mortgage loan options.

Fort Lauderdale Foreclosure Defense Attorney

If you are at risk of losing your home to foreclosure, there is action you can take. Contact Fort Lauderdale mortgage foreclosure attorney Marcy Resnik to discuss how you can defend your legal rights in a foreclosure. You can contact Ms. Resnik online or call her at 954-321-0176.

FINRA Sanctions Wells Fargo, Citigroup, Morgan Stanley & UBS

Sales tactics for leveraged and inverse exchange-traded funds draw fines and client restitution requirements from FINRA.

The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) announced that it has sanctioned Citigroup Global Markets, Inc; Morgan Stanley & Co., LLC; UBS Financial Services; and Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC a total of more than $9.1 million for selling leveraged and inverse exchange-traded funds (ETFs) without reasonable supervision and for not having a reasonable basis for recommending the securities. The firms were fined more than $7.3 million and are required to pay a total of $1.8 million in restitution to certain customers who made unsuitable leveraged and inverse ETF purchases.

FINRA sanctioned the following firms:

  • Wells Fargo – $2.1 million fine and $641,489 in restitution
  • Citigroup – $2 million fine and $146,431 in restitution
  • Morgan Stanley – $1.75 million fine and $604,584 in restitution
  • UBS – $1.5 million fine and $431,488 in restitution

Brad Bennett, FINRA Executive Vice President and Chief of Enforcement, said, “The added complexity of leveraged and inverse exchange-traded products makes it essential that brokerage firms have an adequate understanding of the products and sufficiently train their sales force before the products are offered to retail customers. Firms must conduct reasonable due diligence and ensure that their representatives have an understanding of these products.”

ETFs are typically registered unit investment trusts (UITs) or open-end investment companies whose shares represent an interest in a portfolio of securities that track an underlying benchmark or index. Leveraged ETFs seek to deliver multiples of the performance of the index or benchmark they track. Inverse ETFs seek to deliver the opposite of the performance of the index or benchmark they track, profiting from short positions in derivatives in a falling market.

FINRA found that from January 2008 through June 2009, the firms did not have adequate supervisory systems in place to monitor the sale of leveraged and inverse ETFs, and failed to conduct adequate due diligence regarding the risks and features of the ETFs. As a result, the firms did not have a reasonable basis to recommend the ETFs to their retail customers. The firms’ registered representatives also made unsuitable recommendations of leveraged and inverse ETFs to some customers with conservative investment objectives and/or risk profiles. Each of the four firms sold billions of dollars of these ETFs to customers, some of whom held them for extended periods when the markets were volatile.

Leveraged and inverse ETFs have certain risks not found in traditional ETFs, such as the risks associated with a daily reset, leverage and compounding. Accordingly, investors were subjected to the risk that the performance of their investments in leveraged and inverse ETFs could differ significantly from the performance of the underlying index or benchmark when held for longer periods of time, particularly in the volatile markets that existed during January 2008 through June 2009. Despite the risks associated with holding leveraged and inverse ETFs for longer periods in volatile markets, certain customers of these firms held leveraged and inverse ETFs for extended time periods during January 2008 through June 2009.

In settling these matters, the firms neither admitted nor denied the charges, but consented to the entry of FINRA’s findings.

Florida Securities Litigation and FINRA Arbitration

Contact Fort Lauderdale securities litigation attorney Howard N. Kahn, Esq. if you or someone you know has a securities dispute. In addition to being an experienced securities litigation attorney, Mr. Kahn also serves as a FINRA arbitrator for individual investors, brokers, and brokerage firms. You can reach him at 954-321-0176 or online.