Compliance
Compliance Corner: SEC, UBS

The latest compliance news: regulatory developments, punishments, guidance, permissions and new product and service offerings.
Securities and Exchange Commission, UBS
The Securities
and Exchange Commission has settled a case with UBS Financial
Services Inc for compliance failures relating to sales of a
volatility-linked exchange-traded product.
Without admitting or denying the SEC’s findings, UBS agreed to
cease and desist from violations of Rule 206(4)-7 of the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940, a censure, and disgorgement and
prejudgment interest of $112,274 and a civil penalty of $8
million, which will be distributed to investors harmed by the
conduct at issue.
The ETP in this case is designed to track short-term volatility
expectations in the market as measured against derivatives of a
volatility index.
The SEC said in a statement that the issuer of the product warned
UBS that it was not appropriate to hold the product for extended
periods, and the product’s offering documents made clear that the
product was more likely to decline in value when held over a
longer period. UBS banned brokerage representatives from
soliciting sales of the product and placed other restrictions on
sales of the product to brokerage customers. However, UBS did not
put similar restrictions on certain financial advisors’ use of
the product in discretionary managed client accounts, the SEC
said.
The SEC said UBS adopted a concentration limit on
volatility-linked ETPs, but failed to implement a system for
monitoring and enforcing that limit for five years. UBS
prohibited the financial advisors from making additional
recommendations of this ETP prior to being contacted by the
Commission staff.
Between January 2016 and January 2018, certain financial advisors
had a “flawed understanding” of the appropriate use of the
volatility-linked ETP and failed to take sufficient steps to
understand risks associated with holding the product for extended
periods. The advisors bought and held the product in client
accounts for “lengthy periods.”