A recent fraud charge levied by the Securities and Exchange Commission against an advisor shows that the dual hat senior executive/chief compliance officer role "doesn't work," opines Cipperman Compliance Services.
The SEC charged Stephen Brandon Anderson with defrauding clients by overcharging advisory fees of at least $367,000.
According to the SEC's order, Anderson owned and operated River Source Wealth Management, LLC, a now-defunct registered investment advisor in North Carolina. During the relevant time period, Anderson owned and operated River Source and served as its chief compliance officer.
River Source's primary revenue stream was customer advisory fees, with customer agreements stating those fees would be based on each customer's assets under management. The company was formally dissolved in February 2018.
In 2015 and 2016, however, Anderson overcharged a majority of his clients, with the amount and percentages varying, but in the aggregate, amounting to approximately 40% more than the agreed-upon maximum customer advisory fees, the SEC states.
In total, River Source received approximately $650,000 in advisory fees for 2015, of which at least $185,816 were overcharges, the order states. River Source received approximately $640,000 in advisory fees for 2016, of which at least $181,360 were overcharges.