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1/25/2006
Brokerages Top SEC Complaint List for '05
Biggest cause of consumer complaint...problems moving an account from broker to broker:
US SEC's Glassman says brokers top '05 complaints

January 25, 2006
Reuters.com

Brokerages were the focus of more investor complaints to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in fiscal 2005 than any other type of business, said SEC Commissioner Cynthia Glassman on Wednesday.

For the year ended Sept. 30, about 31 percent of all complaints lodged with the SEC concerned brokerages. There were fewer complaints about corporations, mutual fund companies, investment advisers and transfer agents, she said.

"Unfortunately, it is not an anomaly but rather is consistent with complaint data from earlier years," she added in prepared remarks to be given at a conference in California. In most cases, she said, brokerages could avoid complaints by spending more time and effort educating investors.

The most frequent complaint, tallied 622 times, involved "transfer of account problems," such as an investor who has switched brokerages being unable to transfer a proprietary fund from the old brokerage into a new account, she said.

Second most common, at 533, were complaints about unauthorized transactions, such as an investor telling the SEC that a broker traded in an account without permission. Often these complaints involve permissible margin calls, she said.

"The real issue here is that the customer doesn't understand the practical ramifications of a margin account," said Glassman, who has championed investor education in her nearly four years as an SEC commissioner.

There were also complaints from investors about problems with closing accounts, unsuitable investment recommendations and errors and omissions in account statements. "What I hear is that often it is extremely difficult for customers to decode their statements," she said.

"The statements themselves might not have any errors or omissions, but if the customers do not understand the information in the statements, they conclude that the statements are somehow deficient," she added.
The original article appears here.

-- MDT
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