In the early 2000s, FINRA investigators discovered a disturbing pattern: brokers were selling variable annuities with 15-year surrender periods to customers in their mid-80s. The math didn't work—these customers would likely need access to their money for healthcare costs long before the surrender period ended, or wouldn't be alive to benefit from the product's features. But the commissions were excellent.
One reason for collecting all that new account information is to ensure that future recommendations will be suitable for a particular customer. All regulators—including FINRA, the MSRB, and the SEC—have established suitability standards. And Regulation Best Interest (Reg BI) is now the ultimate standard for client suitability.
FINRA and MSRB Suitability Requirements
Suitability isn't a vague concept—it has three specific, testable components.
The Three Components of Suitability
| Component | What It Means | Key Question |
|---|---|---|
| Reasonable-Basis Suitability | The recommendation must be suitable for at least SOME investors | "Would this product make sense for anyone?" |
| Customer-Specific Suitability | The recommendation must be suitable for THIS specific customer based on their profile | "Is this right for THIS customer?" |
| Quantitative Suitability | A series of recommendations must be suitable in total, considering frequency and cost | "Is this level of trading appropriate?" |
Quantitative suitability exists because of churning scandals. A single trade might be perfectly suitable, but executing 300 trades per year in a conservative investor's account is not—regardless of whether each individual trade was reasonable. The pattern matters.
Matching Investments to Investor Types
| Investor Type | Objective | Suitable Investments |
|---|---|---|
| Conservative | Capital preservation, income | Government bonds, money markets, blue-chip dividend stocks |
| Moderate | Balance of growth and income | Balanced funds, investment-grade bonds, large-cap stocks |
| Aggressive | Capital appreciation | Growth stocks, sector funds, emerging markets |
| Speculative | Maximum returns, accepts high risk | Options, penny stocks, leveraged products, DPPs |
When Suitability Applies
Suitability obligations apply when a representative makes a recommendation. They do NOT apply to:
- Unsolicited orders (customer initiates without recommendation)
- Self-directed accounts where the customer makes all decisions
- Institutional investors who affirmatively indicate they're exercising independent judgment
Test Tip: If an exam question describes a customer who places an order without any recommendation from the rep, suitability rules don't apply to that transaction. The key word is "recommendation."
Regulation Best Interest (Reg BI)
Regulation Best Interest is an SEC rule that establishes a higher standard of conduct for broker-dealers when making recommendations to retail customers. It went into effect in June 2020.
Reg BI rose from the ashes of a regulatory battle. In 2016, the Department of Labor finalized a "fiduciary rule" requiring brokers to act as fiduciaries when advising retirement accounts. The securities industry challenged it in court—and won. In 2018, the Fifth Circuit struck down the DOL rule as overreach. But the underlying problem remained: brokers could legally recommend products that paid them higher commissions even when better alternatives existed. The SEC stepped in with Reg BI as a middle ground—stronger than the old "suitability" standard, but not a full fiduciary duty. Critics called it a compromise; the SEC called it workable. Either way, it's now the law.
The Four Obligations
| Obligation | Requirement |
|---|---|
| 1. Disclosure | Disclose all material facts about the relationship, including fees, conflicts of interest, and limitations on services |
| 2. Care | Exercise reasonable diligence, care, and skill when making recommendations |
| 3. Conflict of Interest | Establish policies to identify, disclose, and mitigate conflicts of interest |
| 4. Compliance | Establish written policies and procedures to achieve compliance with Reg BI |
The Care Obligation in Detail
The Care Obligation requires representatives to:
- Understand the potential risks, rewards, and costs of a recommendation
- Have a reasonable basis to believe the recommendation is in the customer's best interest
- Consider reasonably available alternatives
- Have a reasonable basis for any series of recommended transactions
Reg BI requires acting in the customer's "best interest"—but it doesn't impose a full fiduciary duty like investment advisers have. Broker-dealers can still receive transaction-based compensation (commissions), but they must mitigate the conflicts this creates.
Form CRS: Customer Relationship Summary
Form CRS (Customer Relationship Summary) is a disclosure document that broker-dealers and investment advisers must provide to retail investors.
Form CRS exists because investors couldn't tell the difference between a broker and an investment adviser—and the industry wasn't eager to explain. A 2006 RAND study commissioned by the SEC found that retail investors were deeply confused about who they were working with, what services they were getting, and what legal duties applied. Investors thought their "financial advisor" (a marketing term, not a legal one) was looking out for them—when that person might be a broker with no fiduciary duty at all. Form CRS, adopted alongside Reg BI in 2019, forces firms to explain the relationship in plain English. Four pages maximum, prescribed format, no fine print evasion.
Purpose
Form CRS helps investors understand:
- The types of services offered
- Fees and costs
- Conflicts of interest
- Legal standard of conduct
- Disciplinary history
Delivery Requirements
- Must be provided at or before the earliest of: a recommendation, placing an order, or opening an account
- Maximum 4 pages for broker-dealers
- Must use plain English and a prescribed format
Test Tip: Form CRS must be delivered before or at the time of a recommendation—not after. This ensures the customer has information about the relationship before making decisions based on recommendations.
Continuing Maintenance of Accounts
Once an account is open, firms have ongoing obligations to keep customers informed about their accounts and transactions.
Before the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the secondary market was the Wild West. Major companies like Westinghouse and Singer didn't even publish income statements or balance sheets. Brokers could execute trades and customers might never know what they paid in commissions—or even what price they got. After the 1929 crash revealed how much manipulation and fraud had flourished in this opacity, Congress mandated transparency. Trade confirmations, account statements, and disclosure requirements all flow from this principle: investors have a right to know what's happening in their accounts. Every piece of paper your firm sends is a descendant of Depression-era reforms.
Trade Confirmations
A trade confirmation must be sent to customers for each transaction.
Timing:
- Sent at or before the completion of the transaction (settlement)
- In practice, confirmations are typically sent promptly after execution
Required Information:
- Security traded (name, quantity)
- Price and total amount
- Trade date and settlement date
- Commission or markup/markdown
- Whether the firm acted as agent or principal
Account Statements
| Account Type | Statement Frequency |
|---|---|
| Standard accounts | Quarterly (at minimum) |
| Accounts with penny stocks | Monthly |
| Accounts with no balance/activity | No statement required for that quarter |
Statements must include a legend telling customers to promptly report any inaccuracies or discrepancies to the firm. The phone number given cannot be that of the representative.
Customer Mail
Firms cannot generally hold customer mail. Statements and confirmations must be sent to the address on the new account form or a P.O. Box designated by the customer. Customer mail cannot be directed to the registered representative's office.
The mail hold restrictions exist because fraudsters discovered a simple trick: if you control the mail, you control what the customer knows. Dishonest brokers would have statements sent to their own offices, intercept them, and hide unauthorized trading, churning, or outright theft—sometimes for years. By the time the customer discovered the problem, the money was long gone. FINRA's strict limits on holding mail ensure that statements reach customers directly, making fraud much harder to conceal. The three-month exception exists for legitimate reasons (like customers traveling abroad), but "convenience" explicitly doesn't qualify.
Exception: If the customer requests in writing, mail can be held for up to 3 months. If the customer wants mail held longer, their written instruction must include an acceptable reason (e.g., safety or security concerns). FINRA states that convenience is NOT an acceptable reason for holding mail longer than 3 months.
Business Continuity Plans
FINRA requires firms to create and maintain a Business Continuity Plan (BCP) that identifies procedures to follow if there is an emergency or significant business disruption.
The BCP requirement emerged directly from September 11, 2001. When the towers fell, they took out critical financial infrastructure—backup generators, communication systems, and trading floors. The securities industry showed impressive resilience in recovering, but regulators saw vulnerabilities. What if the next disruption was worse? In 2004, FINRA (then NASD) adopted rules requiring every member firm to have a written business continuity plan. The goal: ensure that customer accounts remain accessible even when buildings don't.
The BCP disclosure must be:
- Provided to customers in writing at account opening
- Posted on the firm's website
- Mailed to customers on request
Account Ownership and Transfers
If a registered representative leaves a broker-dealer for any reason, all accounts are considered to be the property of the firm. The broker-dealer will allocate the departing representative's accounts among existing representatives.
If a customer wishes to transfer to another broker at the same firm, the branch manager must approve. No new account form is required. However, discretionary power cannot be transferred—the client must provide new written authorization.
Proxy Materials
Securities held in street name (registered in the broker-dealer's name) require the firm to forward all issuer communications to the beneficial owner. The SEC requires companies to send shareholders a proxy statement prior to every stockholders' meeting, covering:
- Election of board directors
- Election or ratification of accountants
- Authorization of new securities issues
- Modification or exchange of securities
- Other shareholder resolutions
Senior Citizen Rules
FINRA has stated that a customer's age and life stage are important factors when determining suitability. As investors age, their investment time horizons, goals, risk tolerance, and tax status often change, and liquidity takes on added importance.
Red Flags for Senior Investors
FINRA does not prohibit any particular recommendation to a senior citizen if it is suitable. However, certain recommendations are red flags:
- Purchase of variable annuities, equity-indexed annuities, and real estate limited partnerships
- Purchase of variable life settlements
- Purchase of complex structured products such as collateralized debt obligations (CDOs)
- A recommendation to mortgage their residence to obtain funds for investment purposes
- A recommendation to use retirement savings, including early IRA withdrawals, to invest in high-risk investments
Senior Certifications
FINRA is concerned about representatives using bogus certifications when making presentations to senior citizens. Claiming to be a:
- Certified Senior Adviser
- Certified Financial Gerontologist
- Senior Specialist
- Retirement Specialist
...is prohibited since these are not true professional designations.
Legitimate designations like CFP (Certified Financial Planner) or CPA (Certified Public Accountant) that require rigorous training can be used.
Trusted Contact Person
FINRA requires members to make reasonable efforts to obtain the name and contact information of a trusted contact person when opening an account.
The trusted contact requirement (FINRA Rule 4512, effective February 2018) addresses a frustrating gap that brokers faced for years. A representative would notice signs that an elderly client was being exploited—perhaps by a caregiver or family member—but had no one to call. Privacy rules prevented sharing account information with anyone except the customer. Meanwhile, the exploitation continued. The trusted contact person gives firms a lifeline: someone they can call to verify the customer's wellbeing without violating privacy rules. It's not a power of attorney. It's more like an emergency contact for your money.
The firm is authorized to contact this person to:
- Disclose information about the client's account to address possible financial exploitation
- Confirm the client's current contact information or health status
- Obtain the identity of any legal guardian, executor, trustee, or holder of a power of attorney
Diminished Mental Capacity
Firms must train employees to identify diminished mental capacity. When suspected:
- Document suspicions and escalate immediately to a designated individual
- Stop trading in the account until the concern no longer exists
- Communicate with the customer's emergency contact or power of attorney
- Maintain frequent contact with the investor and notify legal/compliance
- Consult state statutes to determine next steps, which may include alerting government protective services
Financial Exploitation Holds
FINRA allows firms to place temporary holds on disbursements when fraud is suspected. Specified adults are individuals particularly susceptible to exploitation:
- Individuals aged 65 or older; or
- Individuals aged 18 or older with a mental or physical impairment affecting their ability to protect their own interests
FINRA Rule 2165 (effective February 2018) solved a legal catch-22. Before this rule, if a broker suspected a customer was being exploited and refused to process a suspicious disbursement, the broker could be sued for breach of contract. But if they processed it and the money disappeared to a scammer, they'd face regulatory scrutiny for failing to protect a vulnerable customer. Rule 2165 created a "safe harbor"—firms can now place temporary holds on suspicious disbursements without legal liability, giving them time to investigate. Every year, millions of seniors lose billions of dollars to financial exploitation. This rule gives firms a tool to fight back.
| Situation | Hold Duration |
|---|---|
| Initial hold for suspected fraud | 15 business days |
| Extension if review supports exploitation belief | Additional 10 business days (25 total) |
| If state or federal investigation begins | Additional 30 days (55 total) |
Note: This hold only applies to suspicious disbursements, not routine ones. If a hold is placed, the firm must document why and notify the trusted contact person (assuming they're not the exploiter).
Summary & Key Points
Suitability Requirements
- Three components: Reasonable-basis, customer-specific, quantitative
- Applies to: Recommendations only—not unsolicited orders
- Match investments to: Investor objectives, risk tolerance, time horizon
Regulation Best Interest
- Four obligations: Disclosure, Care, Conflict of Interest, Compliance
- Form CRS: 4 pages max, delivered before or at recommendation
- Standard: Higher than suitability, but not fiduciary
Account Maintenance
- Confirmations: Sent at or before settlement
- Statements: Quarterly (monthly for penny stocks)
- Mail hold: 3 months with written request; longer requires acceptable reason
- Accounts: Property of the firm, not the representative
Senior Investor Protections
- Trusted contact: Required effort to obtain at account opening
- Red flags: Variable annuities, complex products, mortgaging home, using retirement for high-risk
- Bogus certifications: Prohibited ("Certified Senior Adviser," etc.)
- Temporary holds: 15 business days initial, extendable to 55 days total
- Specified adults: Age 65+ or 18+ with impairment
Key Terms
- Reasonable-Basis Suitability: Investment suitable for at least some investors
- Customer-Specific Suitability: Investment suitable for this particular customer
- Quantitative Suitability: Series of transactions suitable in aggregate
- Regulation Best Interest: SEC standard requiring acting in customer's best interest
- Form CRS: Customer Relationship Summary disclosure document
- Street Name: Securities registered in broker-dealer's name, customer is beneficial owner
- Trusted Contact Person: Individual firm can contact regarding possible exploitation
- Specified Adults: Individuals 65+ or 18+ with impairment affecting ability to protect interests