Misrepresentation/Omissions – An Introduction
It is required by The Securities Act of 1933 that the publicly traded companies disclose their financial and other various important information to investors and potential investors. It prohibits fraud and misrepresentation in the sales of securities. The risks associated with investments must be disclosed by the broker to their clients. It is dictated by The National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD) that all the members send in their account statements to the clients at least once in every financial quarter. The statements should include sales, charges or credits, purchases, interest credits or debits, dividend payments, securities receipts or deliveries, dividend payments, transfer activity, and journal entries detailing funds or securities controlled by the broker. All the information provided should be free of deception and true.
Articles
- Unauthorized Trading- An Introduction
- Client Approval Required for Securities Transactions
- Types of Internet Investment Frauds
- Securities Theft
- Internet Fraud on the Rise
- About Theft
- Selling Away of Securities
- Issues of Selling Away
- The Unsuitability of Securities
- Securities and Their Unsuitability
- Role of Over Concentration
- All you need to know about Diversification
- Misrepresentation/Omissions – An Introduction
- Margin Trading
- Know about consumer fraud
- Identity Theft- The Leader of Fraud Crimes
- An Insight into Consumer Frauds
- All that you need to know about E-Commerce and Fraud
- Full Disclosure of the Financial Markets
- Unexpected Losses due to Margin
- Failure to Supervise due to Investment Firms
- Supervision
- Issues regarding Failure to Hedge
- Best Ways to Understand Hedging
- All about Edward Jones
- What is churning?
- What are Annuities?
- The Warnings of Securities Exchange regarding Annuities
- The Complications of Variable Annuities
- An Insight into Equity Indexed Annuities
- Durable power of attorney
