SEC Fines RIA for Paying Social Media Influencers to Solicit Clients

News August 23, 2023 at 02:51 PM
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The Securities and Exchange Commission has charged Fundrise Advisors with paying more than $8 million to over 200 social media influencers and online publishers to solicit Fundrise advisory clients, which violated the SEC's former cash solicitation rule.

According to the SEC's order, between February 2016 and December 2021 Fundrise paid the social media influencers and online publishers to solicit Fundrise advisory clients "without the disclosure and documentation required under the former Advisers Act Rule 206(4)-3," the cash solicitation rule, which was then in place.

The SEC ordered Fundrise — an RIA based in Washington, D.C., that operates an online real estate investment platform and has $3.3 billion in assets under management — to pay a $250,000 civil money penalty within 14 days.

In December 2020, the SEC combined its marketing and cash solicitation rules into a single rule.

The SEC brought its first enforcement action related to the new Marketing Rule on Monday.

Amy Lynch, founder and president of FrontLine Compliance, told ThinkAdvisor Wednesday that cases like the one against Fundrise "are still in the pipeline at the SEC [and] will be quick to be resolved and released since Rule 206(4)-3 no longer exists."

The old cash solicitation rule "was weaved into the new Marketing Rule and rephrased as promoter arrangements," Lynch explained in an email. "The new Rule puts the direct disclosure obligation on the promoter itself, but the adviser must ensure via its written agreement with the promoter that the promoter is making the required disclosures to the prospect."

Fundrise Case

The SEC order states that "Fundrise clients were not fully informed of the content creators' financial interests in promoting Fundrise's investment advisory services and real estate investment platform and therefore lacked the information necessary to evaluate the content creators' recommendation of Fundrise. "

Since February 2016, the SEC states, Fundrise has contracted with content creators to promote Fundrise's online real estate investment platform on their blogs, websites, newsletters and social media channels.

As part of the contractual arrangements, the content creators agreed to include hyperlinks to Fundrise's platform in their online promotions, the SEC explains.

" Fundrise paid the content creators based on the number of individuals who clicked on the hyperlinks and entered their email addresses," the order states. "Some of these individuals ultimately entered into advisory relationships with Fundrise."

In total, Fundrise paid more than $8 million to over 200 content creators, who referred more than 66,000 new clients to the firm, according to the SEC.

"To date, those clients have accounted for more than $300 million of Fundrise's AUM, yielding over $655,000 in advisory fees for the firm," the SEC said.

Further, Fundrise "did not adopt and implement written policies and procedures concerning the use of solicitors that were reasonably designed to prevent violations of the Cash Solicitation Rule."

"We are pleased to have resolved this matter. Fundrise fully cooperated with the SEC staff in reaching this settlement, which addresses past conduct concerning the firm's management of content creators," Alison Staloch, CFO of Fundrise, said in a statement shared with ThinkAdvisor. "I have a deep appreciation for the importance of compliance in our industry. This settlement reinforces the significance of adhering to regulatory requirements and upholding the trust our clients place in us. Fundrise remains committed to the highest standards of compliance and integrity."

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