Legal
Investment Advisory Firm Charged With Conflict Of Interest Disclosure Failure

Charges have been brought against a Houston, TX-based investment advisory firm and its co-owners who failed to disclose conflict of interest to its clients, the Securities and Exchange Commission announced yesterday.
Charges have been brought against a Houston, TX-based investment
advisory firm and its co-owners who failed to disclose conflict
of interest to its clients, the Securities and Exchange
Commission announced yesterday.
According to the SEC, the Robare Group and its
owners elicited $440,000 in eight years through an undisclosed
compensation agreement with a brokerage firm, by which it
received a percentage of every dollar that it clients invested in
certain mutual funds.
The SEC claims that owners
Mark Robare and Jack Jones had an incentive to recommend these
funds over other potential investments to clients with the goal
of generating additional revenue, neglecting the fiduciary
standard in place.
Robare Group and Robare have been charged with wilfully violating
sections 206(1) and 206(2) of the Investment Advisors Act of
1940, and Jones has been charged with aiding and abetting these
violations. In addition to this, it has been alleged that Robare
Group and its owners also wilfully violated section 207 of the
Act.
In December 2011, the Robare Group disclosed the compensation
agreement on its Form ADV, yet it stated that the firm “did not
receive and economic benefit from a non-client for providing
investment advice”, the SEC said.
This appeared in following Form ADV disclosures, which stated
that Robare Group “may” receive compensation from the broker,
when the case was that compensation was definitely received.
The SEC also claims the Robare Group and its broker entered into
a similar agreement in late 2012, and in June 2013 it finally
disclosed conflict of interest with regards to this arrangement.
However, in this the Robare Group did not disclose the incentive
to recommend buying and holding certain mutual funds through the
broker’s platform. According to the SEC, Robare reviewed and
approved the Forms ADV, and Jones reviewed and signed all but one
of the filings.
“By failing to fully disclose its agreements with the brokerage
firm, Robare Group deprived its clients of important information
they were entitled to receive,” said Marshall S. Sprung, co-chief
of the SEC Enforcement Division’s Asset Management Unit.
The SEC’s investigation was conducted by Catherine Floyd and
Barbara Gunn of the Fort Worth regional office along with John
Farinacci.