Compliance
Compliance Corner: Securities & Exchange Commission Acts In Fiduciary Duty Case

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The Securities
and Exchange Commission last week said that American
Infrastructure Funds LLC, a California-based RIA to private
funds, agreed to pay more than $1.6 million to settle
charges.
The charges stemmed from the firm’s “acceleration of portfolio
company monitoring fees, for transferring a private fund asset
from funds nearing the end of their term to a new fund, and for
loaning money from one private fund to another private fund
advised by an affiliate,” the SEC said in a statement.
AIM “breached its fiduciary duty” to private funds that it
advised by failing to adequately disclose its conflict of
interest in receiving accelerated monitoring fees paid by a
portfolio company when that portfolio company was sold, the
regulator said. The SEC said AIM violated its duty of care
by failing to consider whether the fee acceleration was in its
clients’ best interests.
“This case highlights our continued focus on holding private fund
advisors responsible when they fail to act in their clients’ best
interests, including with respect to continuation funds,” Corey
Schuster, co-chief of the Enforcement Division’s Asset Management
Unit, said. “Among other breaches, AIM failed to disclose its
conflicts of interest when it transferred a client’s asset to a
new fund."
The SEC’s order finds that AIM violated antifraud and compliance
provisions of the Advisers Act.
Without admitting or denying the SEC’s findings, AIM agreed to a
cease-and-desist order and censure, and to pay a $1.2 million
penalty as well as $445,460 in disgorgement and prejudgment
interest to investors.