November 8, 2007

Broker-Dealers Get New Rule Governing Deferred Variable Annuities Sales

Broker-dealers are getting ready to cope with a new rule governing deferred variable annuities (VAs) sales.

Rule 2821 by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. was finally approved by the Securities and Exchange Commission on September 7. The rule has been in the works since 2004. The official regulatory notice, to be issued this week, gives brokerage firms six months to comply. The rule is expected to go into effect in May or June 2008.

Rule 2821 has four provisions regarding the sale of deferred variable annuities and the exchange of variable annuities. The rule places a suitability requirement on products for sales. It also makes it mandatory for principals to look at transactions within seven business days and before a customer’s application is forwarded to an insurance carrier.

Brokerage firms also must develop and document training programs for sales teams to ensure that they understand the way deferred VAs work. Supervisory procedures for staying in compliance with the new rule must be put in place.

Some industry members have expressed concern that the seven-day deadline could be difficult to honor—especially if customers delay the submission of their application. Notifying customers of any errors or gaps on their application could also delay the process.

Because many independent broker dealers work with a decentralized compliance structure, their customer applications may have to go through different processing centers—again potentially making it difficult to meet the new 7-day timeframe.

Some larger firms are planning to implement an automated compliance system to make the process run more efficiently.

Shepherd Smith and Edwards represents individual investors who have incurred financial losses because of the inappropriate actions of brokerage firms and investment advisers.

To schedule your free consultation with one of our experienced stockbroker fraud attorneys, contact Shepherd Smith and Edwards today.

Related Web Resources:

B-Ds brace for new rule on sales of deferred VAs, Investment News, November 5, 2007

Variable Annuities, SEC.gov

Variable Annuities Knowledge Center

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July 8, 2007

Update: Do Insurance Companies Use Scam Artists to Sell Unsuitable Annuities to the Elderly?

According to the Government Accounting Office (GAO) Americans over 65 hold more than $15 trillion in assets and, with "Baby Boomers" soon reaching retirement age, that figure will likely balloon. As financial firms, including insurance companies, design products aimed at this pot of gold, scam artists lick their chops for a piece of the action. Unfortunately, their paths cross.

As we very recently reported, a federal judge in Hawaii dismissed a class action suit against Midland National Insurance saying that, because different sales pitches were used by different salespersons, the claims by elderly Hawaiians can not go forward. Meanwhile, regulators warn that scam artists are selling insurance products to the elderly. Thus, it appears that insurance companies can simply look the other way while con artists victimize the elderly using their annuities. [OUR FIRM PURSUES CLAIMS ONE AT A TIME TO AVOID THIS PROBLEM.]

A NY Times article today reports that a Massachusetts insurance agent became a "certified senior adviser" then advertised this and other credentials to retirees. Yet, he did not mention how easily he received that title: He paid $1,095 for a correspondence course, then took a multiple-choice exam with dumbed-down questions. The agent, and over 18,700 other applicants since 1997, passed the course.

The article further states that insurance companies, eager for sales representatives, embraced this agent as they have thousands of other such newly credentialed advisers. As his retiree business boomed, insurers paid the agent commissions over $720,000 the following year.

Massachusetts regulators then stepped in, filing a lawsuit claiming the agent improperly sold annuities and other products to the elderly. While the agent denies any wrongdoing, one of his clients - a 73-year-old widow caring for a son with Down syndrome - said he tricked her into buying complicated insurance contracts that left her unable to pay dental and home-repair bills. "His office was filled with things saying he was certified to help seniors," she said

According to the Times article, this salesman is one of tens of thousands of financial advisers who work hand-in-hand with insurance companies to reach "older Americans using impressive-sounding credentials like 'certified elder planning specialist,' 'registered financial gerontologist,' 'certified retirement financial adviser' and 'certified senior adviser'."

In only a few days, titles are obtained sounding similar to "certified financial planner" (CFP), and other credentials that require years of study, difficult tests and extensive background checks. "The degree isn't worth the paper it's written on," said another Massachusetts financial adviser, who took the certified senior adviser exam but does not use the credential. "It's a scam - a way to put a title on a business card that impresses gullible seniors," he said.

Advocates of the elderly complain that scam artists, many using such credentials, often give financial advice they are not qualified to offer. Yet, an overwhelming number are being paid by country's largest insurance companies - including Allianz Life, Old Mutual Financial Network and American Equity Investment Life Insurance - to sell elderly clients complicated investments that economists say most retirees should never own.

Some programs linked to insurance companies have taught agents to use abusive sales techniques, regulators say. Allianz, Old Mutual and American Equity have been listed as sponsors of seminars with names like the "Million Dollar Academy", where thousands of sales representatives were advised to scare retirees by saying, "I am all that stands between you and potential catastrophic loss." Other seminars instructed agents to "drive a wedge" between retirees and their established advisers.

"The insurers are happy to turn a blind eye to what salesmen are doing, as long as they make a sale," said Minnesota's attorney general, who is suing several companies, including Allianz, contending their products are inappropriate.

Allianz, Old Mutual and American Equity, whose revenues last year were a combined $163 billion, said they investigate the backgrounds of all agents, screen all sales to consumers to make sure they are appropriate, and have terminated representatives using improper sales methods. Those companies said they were not aware of abusive methods taught at any seminar they endorsed and otherwise distanced themselves from such tactics.

The North American Securities Administrators Association, an association of state regulators, reports that over one-third of all cases of financial exploitation of the elderly involve annuities. Hundreds of class actions have been filed against insurers over annuity sales to the elderly, including one in Minnesota against Allianz for nearly 400,000 plaintiffs. Yet, the latest ruling in Hawaii may change that.

Sales agents accused of wrongdoing say they followed the guidance of insurance companies. "I did what I was told," says the agent charged by Massachusetts regulators ..."If it was so wrong, why did everyone let me do it for so many years?"

Meanwhile, insurance companies pay commissions on annuities which are often two, three or even 10 times the amount paid on mutual funds, which have more strictly regulated cost disclosures. Such high and difficult to ascertain commissions are no doubt a factor in why annuities sales, according to the Insurance Information Institute, reached $182.8 billion last year.

Shepherd Smith and Edwards is a securities litigation firm dedicated to helping those who are victims of investment fraud to recover their losses. We have filed hundreds of claims involving improper sales of annuities to retirees and others. Contact us today to schedule a free consultation.

Related Web Resource:

Referenced New York Times Article

July 8, 2007

Judge Tosses Suit by Elderly Who Claim They were Misled into Annuity Losses

A judge in The U.S. District Court in Honolulu ruled that those who lost in annuities cannot bring a class-action suit against the annuity insurer, despite potential misleading and deceptive actions by the insurance firm. [Yokoyama et al. vs. Midland National Life Insurance Company.]

Lawyers representing the plaintiffs in the case alleged the defendant, Midland National Life Insurance Company, sold elderly Hawaiians inherently unsuitable, deceptive indexed annuity products that were designed to hide the true cost of an early contract cancellation.

The court cited two reasons it denied the class action against Midland. The first was that, whether or not Midland's actions were misleading or deceptive, different sales pitches by different insurance salespersons were made to those purchasing the annuities, therefore the investors did not have similar claims. The second, said the judge, was that the losses were not caused by the alleged misleading actions, but by changes in the securities market.

A comparison would be to say that: Although batches of tires were defective, the tire salespersons made different statements about how good the tires were and, although the tires exploded in the summertime, it was the heat not the tires that caused the explosions.

Sound Stupid? It is!

Yet, this is just another blow to investors who have been decimated court rulings over the past few years which have denied their claims against large financial firms. Once again, as the judge admitted, the court decision was based solely on procedural grounds, without any consideration of the actions which are claimed to have harmed those sold the annuities.

This is what those crying for "tort reform" and against "frivolous law suits" have been seeking all along: Change the law so insurance companies will not have to pay grandpaw when he is sold an annuity as a safe place for his pension savings, only to have the annuity lose half its value.

This may not have what you had in mind when you voted for those who said the the court system should be changed - but it is what you got. The question now is: How many legal rights will Americans have to give up before they "Get it?"

By: William S Shepherd

William Shepherd is the founder of the law firm of Shepherd Smith and Edwards a securities law firm that represents investors seeking recovery of losses in their accounts at investment firms. Cases such as these DO NOT prevent nvestors from seeking their own indivisual cliams against those who have decieved them. If you or someone you know has suffered investment losses, contact Shepherd Smith and Edwards today.

June 6, 2007

Annuity Sales Fraud of Seniors is Growing, Says the NASD

The National Association of Securities Dealers has issued an “Investor Alert” warning of a rise in deceptive sales practices in the sale of annuities to senior citizens

The NASD also states that consumer confusion about annuities has also risen. “This is due, in part, to questionable or deceptive sales practices employed by companies and agents looking to take advantage of uninformed consumers,” it adds.

An “annuity” is defined in the release as “a contract in which an insurance company makes a series of income payments at regular intervals in return for a premium or premiums you have paid.”

“There are several types of annuities, all of which carry varying levels of risk and guarantees,” the release states. It then lists Single Premium Annuity, Multiple Premium Annuity, Immediate Annuity, Deferred Annuity, Fixed Annuity, Variable Annuity and Equity-Indexed Annuity) but fails to indicate the particular risks of each.

The NASD advises investors to beware of “red flags” of possible deceptive sales practices, including high-pressure sales pitches, “limited-time” deals and tactics to move investors from one annuity to another. There is also a warning about unlicensed agents. The alert adds: “Remember, if it seems too good to be true, it probably is!”

Others warn that the use of terms such as “insurance” and “guarantee” are often misleading and can deceive seniors into believing annuities are always safe, which is not the case. Part of the deception is to mask whether one can even get out of an annuity and, if so, the downside risk and/or penalties involved.

However, none of these warnings are helpful to senior citizens and others who have already been scammed!

If you or someone you know may have been a victim of annuity fraud contact Shepherd Smith and Edwards. We have helped thousands of investors recover losses. You may contact our law firm to arrange a free confidential consultation with one of our attorneys.

The complete text of this and other NASD Investor Alerts is available at http://www.nasd.com/InvestorInformation/InvestorAlerts/index.htm