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Question 1 of 10
1. Question
You have recently joined a listed company as compliance officer. Your first major assignment involves Disclosure of Donor-Advised Funds during third-party risk, and a board risk appetite review pack indicates that several executive agents have been utilizing these funds for significant charitable giving. During a review of the firm’s internal controls, you identify a $50,000 grant from an executive’s donor-advised fund to a foundation chaired by a state official who oversees the selection of investment providers for the state’s retirement system. Which of the following best describes the regulatory risk associated with this disclosure under the Uniform Securities Act’s standards for unethical business practices?
Correct
Correct: Under the Uniform Securities Act and related ethical standards, contributions to charities at the request of an official, or grants from Donor-Advised Funds (DAFs) where the donor retains advisory privileges, are scrutinized to prevent the circumvention of pay-to-play rules. If a donor uses a DAF to direct money to a cause associated with a government official who can influence the awarding of investment advisory business, it may be treated as an indirect contribution intended to influence the selection process.
Incorrect: Option B is incorrect because, while the DAF sponsor has legal title, the donor’s ‘advisory privileges’ to direct grants mean the donor still exerts control, which regulators view as a potential conflict of interest. Option C is incorrect because regulatory disclosure requirements for securities professionals are based on potential conflicts of interest and pay-to-play rules, not personal tax thresholds. Option D is incorrect because soft dollar arrangements refer to the use of commission dollars to pay for research or brokerage services, not charitable contributions or DAF grants.
Takeaway: Contributions to Donor-Advised Funds must be monitored for potential pay-to-play violations, as maintaining advisory privileges over the fund’s grants can constitute an indirect attempt to influence government officials.
Incorrect
Correct: Under the Uniform Securities Act and related ethical standards, contributions to charities at the request of an official, or grants from Donor-Advised Funds (DAFs) where the donor retains advisory privileges, are scrutinized to prevent the circumvention of pay-to-play rules. If a donor uses a DAF to direct money to a cause associated with a government official who can influence the awarding of investment advisory business, it may be treated as an indirect contribution intended to influence the selection process.
Incorrect: Option B is incorrect because, while the DAF sponsor has legal title, the donor’s ‘advisory privileges’ to direct grants mean the donor still exerts control, which regulators view as a potential conflict of interest. Option C is incorrect because regulatory disclosure requirements for securities professionals are based on potential conflicts of interest and pay-to-play rules, not personal tax thresholds. Option D is incorrect because soft dollar arrangements refer to the use of commission dollars to pay for research or brokerage services, not charitable contributions or DAF grants.
Takeaway: Contributions to Donor-Advised Funds must be monitored for potential pay-to-play violations, as maintaining advisory privileges over the fund’s grants can constitute an indirect attempt to influence government officials.
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Question 2 of 10
2. Question
During your tenure as portfolio manager at a broker-dealer, a matter arises concerning Regulation of Mutual Fund Sales Practices during incident response. The a policy exception request suggests that an agent be permitted to execute a $49,500 purchase of Class A mutual fund shares for a retail client without disclosing that a significant sales charge reduction occurs at a $50,000 breakpoint. The agent argues that the client’s primary objective is immediate execution to capitalize on a specific market event and that the $500 difference is negligible to the client’s overall strategy. Under the Uniform Securities Act and NASAA guidelines, which of the following best describes the regulatory standing of this request?
Correct
Correct: Under the Uniform Securities Act and NASAA Statement of Policy, ‘breakpoint selling’ is a prohibited practice. It involves selling investment company shares in dollar amounts just below the point at which the sales charge is reduced. Agents have a duty to disclose the availability of these discounts to ensure the client receives the most advantageous pricing. Failing to do so to maximize a commission is a violation of the ethical standards and fair dealing requirements expected of a registered agent.
Incorrect: Providing a prospectus at a later date does not excuse the failure to disclose a material fact regarding costs at the time of the transaction. Discretionary authority does not permit an agent to ignore or bypass breakpoint discounts that would benefit the client. While institutional investors may have different registration exemptions, they are still protected by anti-fraud provisions and fair dealing rules regarding the disclosure of material costs in mutual fund transactions.
Takeaway: Intentionally selling mutual fund shares just below a breakpoint to increase commission is a prohibited practice and a violation of the agent’s ethical duties to the client.
Incorrect
Correct: Under the Uniform Securities Act and NASAA Statement of Policy, ‘breakpoint selling’ is a prohibited practice. It involves selling investment company shares in dollar amounts just below the point at which the sales charge is reduced. Agents have a duty to disclose the availability of these discounts to ensure the client receives the most advantageous pricing. Failing to do so to maximize a commission is a violation of the ethical standards and fair dealing requirements expected of a registered agent.
Incorrect: Providing a prospectus at a later date does not excuse the failure to disclose a material fact regarding costs at the time of the transaction. Discretionary authority does not permit an agent to ignore or bypass breakpoint discounts that would benefit the client. While institutional investors may have different registration exemptions, they are still protected by anti-fraud provisions and fair dealing rules regarding the disclosure of material costs in mutual fund transactions.
Takeaway: Intentionally selling mutual fund shares just below a breakpoint to increase commission is a prohibited practice and a violation of the agent’s ethical duties to the client.
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Question 3 of 10
3. Question
An incident ticket at a fund administrator is raised about Disclosure of Philanthropic Legacy Planning during onboarding. The report states that an investment adviser representative (IAR) recommended a specific donor-advised fund (DAF) to a client during the initial $2.5 million account setup. While the IAR highlighted the tax benefits of the DAF, the firm’s compliance review discovered that the IAR failed to disclose that the investment adviser’s parent company serves as the paid investment manager for the DAF’s underlying assets. Which of the following best describes the regulatory violation under the Uniform Securities Act?
Correct
Correct: Under the Uniform Securities Act and NASAA Model Rules, investment advisers and their representatives act as fiduciaries. This status requires the disclosure of all material facts, including any conflicts of interest that could bias a recommendation. Recommending a philanthropic vehicle where an affiliate of the adviser earns management fees is a clear conflict of interest that must be disclosed to the client in writing to ensure informed consent.
Incorrect: The requirement for a prospectus is not the primary issue here, as donor-advised funds are typically structured as charitable vehicles rather than standard retail securities requiring state registration. Recommending philanthropic strategies is a legitimate and ethical part of comprehensive financial planning, regardless of whether a security is purchased. There is no regulatory ’90-day’ waiting period for making suitability determinations or legacy recommendations; suitability is based on the client’s financial situation and objectives at the time of the advice.
Takeaway: Fiduciary duty mandates the full disclosure of any financial incentives or affiliate relationships associated with recommended charitable or legacy planning instruments.
Incorrect
Correct: Under the Uniform Securities Act and NASAA Model Rules, investment advisers and their representatives act as fiduciaries. This status requires the disclosure of all material facts, including any conflicts of interest that could bias a recommendation. Recommending a philanthropic vehicle where an affiliate of the adviser earns management fees is a clear conflict of interest that must be disclosed to the client in writing to ensure informed consent.
Incorrect: The requirement for a prospectus is not the primary issue here, as donor-advised funds are typically structured as charitable vehicles rather than standard retail securities requiring state registration. Recommending philanthropic strategies is a legitimate and ethical part of comprehensive financial planning, regardless of whether a security is purchased. There is no regulatory ’90-day’ waiting period for making suitability determinations or legacy recommendations; suitability is based on the client’s financial situation and objectives at the time of the advice.
Takeaway: Fiduciary duty mandates the full disclosure of any financial incentives or affiliate relationships associated with recommended charitable or legacy planning instruments.
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Question 4 of 10
4. Question
Following a thematic review of Disclosure of Third-Party Vendor Due Diligence as part of third-party risk, a broker-dealer received feedback indicating that its current client-facing documentation failed to adequately describe the oversight of external technology providers. Specifically, the firm utilizes a third-party execution platform for 40% of its retail order flow but does not disclose the qualitative factors used in its 180-day vendor review cycle. To align with the Uniform Securities Act’s emphasis on full and fair disclosure of material facts, which of the following actions should the firm prioritize?
Correct
Correct: Under the Uniform Securities Act and related NASAA guidelines, broker-dealers and investment advisers have an obligation to disclose material facts to clients. The reliance on a third-party vendor for a significant portion of trade execution is a material operational fact. Providing a summary of the due diligence and monitoring process ensures that clients are informed of how the firm mitigates risks associated with outsourcing critical functions, thereby fulfilling the requirement for transparency.
Incorrect: Providing technical specifications is unnecessary and does not address the regulatory requirement to disclose the ‘due diligence’ or oversight process. Keeping the information only in an internal compliance manual fails the requirement to provide material disclosures to the clients themselves. Assuming liability does not waive the regulatory requirement to disclose material facts about how a firm operates and manages its third-party risks.
Takeaway: Firms must proactively disclose the processes used to vet and monitor third-party vendors that perform material functions to ensure clients are aware of operational risks.
Incorrect
Correct: Under the Uniform Securities Act and related NASAA guidelines, broker-dealers and investment advisers have an obligation to disclose material facts to clients. The reliance on a third-party vendor for a significant portion of trade execution is a material operational fact. Providing a summary of the due diligence and monitoring process ensures that clients are informed of how the firm mitigates risks associated with outsourcing critical functions, thereby fulfilling the requirement for transparency.
Incorrect: Providing technical specifications is unnecessary and does not address the regulatory requirement to disclose the ‘due diligence’ or oversight process. Keeping the information only in an internal compliance manual fails the requirement to provide material disclosures to the clients themselves. Assuming liability does not waive the regulatory requirement to disclose material facts about how a firm operates and manages its third-party risks.
Takeaway: Firms must proactively disclose the processes used to vet and monitor third-party vendors that perform material functions to ensure clients are aware of operational risks.
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Question 5 of 10
5. Question
Excerpt from a regulator information request: In work related to Documentation of Suitability Determinations as part of change management at a broker-dealer, it was noted that several agents were relying on verbal risk disclosures for aggressive growth strategies without updating the electronic client profile (ECP) system. In one specific instance, an agent recommended a private placement to a client whose existing profile listed a conservative risk tolerance, citing a recent unrecorded conversation where the client expressed a desire for higher returns. Which of the following actions is required to maintain compliance with the Uniform Securities Act regarding suitability documentation?
Correct
Correct: Under the Uniform Securities Act and NASAA Model Rules, broker-dealers and agents have a duty to ensure that any recommendation made to a client is suitable based on the client’s financial situation, investment objectives, and needs. If a client’s objectives change, the agent must update the firm’s records to reflect this change before making a recommendation based on the new criteria. Relying on verbal updates without updating the official documentation fails to provide a reasonable basis for the suitability of the recommendation and violates recordkeeping requirements.
Incorrect: The use of a general waiver is insufficient because suitability is a regulatory obligation that cannot be waived by the client. A look-back review is a supervisory procedure but does not correct the underlying failure to document suitability at the time of the recommendation. There is no specific percentage threshold for net worth changes that triggers a suitability update; rather, any material change in the client’s investment objectives or financial situation that affects the suitability of recommendations must be documented.
Takeaway: Agents must ensure that a client’s official suitability profile is updated to reflect current objectives and risk tolerance before making recommendations that deviate from previously recorded information.
Incorrect
Correct: Under the Uniform Securities Act and NASAA Model Rules, broker-dealers and agents have a duty to ensure that any recommendation made to a client is suitable based on the client’s financial situation, investment objectives, and needs. If a client’s objectives change, the agent must update the firm’s records to reflect this change before making a recommendation based on the new criteria. Relying on verbal updates without updating the official documentation fails to provide a reasonable basis for the suitability of the recommendation and violates recordkeeping requirements.
Incorrect: The use of a general waiver is insufficient because suitability is a regulatory obligation that cannot be waived by the client. A look-back review is a supervisory procedure but does not correct the underlying failure to document suitability at the time of the recommendation. There is no specific percentage threshold for net worth changes that triggers a suitability update; rather, any material change in the client’s investment objectives or financial situation that affects the suitability of recommendations must be documented.
Takeaway: Agents must ensure that a client’s official suitability profile is updated to reflect current objectives and risk tolerance before making recommendations that deviate from previously recorded information.
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Question 6 of 10
6. Question
The internal auditor at a broker-dealer is tasked with addressing Disclosure of SRI (Socially Responsible Investing) during risk appetite review. After reviewing a policy exception request, the key concern is that a newly launched “Green Growth Fund” marketed to retail clients in three states lacks specific documentation regarding the proprietary screening process used to exclude fossil fuel companies. The marketing materials emphasize “strict adherence to environmental standards,” but the prospectus only provides a general disclaimer that the fund manager has “broad discretion” in security selection. Which of the following actions or disclosures is most critical to ensure compliance with the Uniform Securities Act regarding the promotion of this SRI product?
Correct
Correct: Under the Uniform Securities Act and related anti-fraud provisions, any material fact regarding the investment strategy must be disclosed to prevent misleading investors. If a fund is marketed as SRI or ESG-focused, the specific criteria and methodology used to select or exclude securities are considered material facts. Failure to provide this detail while making broad claims about ‘strict adherence’ to environmental standards constitutes a misleading statement or an omission of a material fact.
Incorrect: Relying on a general disclaimer is insufficient when specific marketing claims are made that contradict or go beyond the disclaimer’s scope, as this creates a risk of ‘greenwashing.’ Registering a methodology as a security is a misunderstanding of the definition of a security under the Uniform Securities Act; methodologies are part of the investment strategy, not the security itself. Disclosure requirements for investment strategies are based on the nature of the claims made to investors and the materiality of the information, not on the subsequent performance of the fund relative to benchmarks.
Takeaway: To comply with anti-fraud provisions, firms must provide specific and transparent disclosures regarding the methodologies and criteria used in SRI products to avoid making misleading material statements.
Incorrect
Correct: Under the Uniform Securities Act and related anti-fraud provisions, any material fact regarding the investment strategy must be disclosed to prevent misleading investors. If a fund is marketed as SRI or ESG-focused, the specific criteria and methodology used to select or exclude securities are considered material facts. Failure to provide this detail while making broad claims about ‘strict adherence’ to environmental standards constitutes a misleading statement or an omission of a material fact.
Incorrect: Relying on a general disclaimer is insufficient when specific marketing claims are made that contradict or go beyond the disclaimer’s scope, as this creates a risk of ‘greenwashing.’ Registering a methodology as a security is a misunderstanding of the definition of a security under the Uniform Securities Act; methodologies are part of the investment strategy, not the security itself. Disclosure requirements for investment strategies are based on the nature of the claims made to investors and the materiality of the information, not on the subsequent performance of the fund relative to benchmarks.
Takeaway: To comply with anti-fraud provisions, firms must provide specific and transparent disclosures regarding the methodologies and criteria used in SRI products to avoid making misleading material statements.
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Question 7 of 10
7. Question
Senior management at a fund administrator requests your input on Disclosure of Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation Plans as part of model risk. Their briefing note explains that a mid-cap issuer is preparing for a secondary offering and has recently implemented a supplemental executive retirement plan (SERP) for its top five officers. This plan allows for the deferral of up to 50% of base salary and 100% of bonuses, creating a substantial unfunded liability on the balance sheet. Under the Uniform Securities Act and related disclosure standards, how should this information be handled in the registration statement to ensure compliance with anti-fraud provisions?
Correct
Correct: Under the Uniform Securities Act, it is unlawful to omit a material fact necessary to make statements made, in light of the circumstances under which they are made, not misleading. A Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation (NQDC) plan, particularly an unfunded one like a SERP, represents a significant unsecured liability for the issuer. Because these obligations can affect the company’s cash flow and financial stability, a reasonable investor would consider this information important when deciding whether to purchase the issuer’s securities.
Incorrect: The 10% equity threshold is an arbitrary numerical limit; materiality is based on whether a reasonable investor would find the information significant, regardless of a specific percentage. While personnel matters are often private, executive compensation that creates a material financial obligation for a public issuer loses its status as purely private and must be disclosed. NQDC plans are generally contractual arrangements between an employer and employee and do not typically require separate registration as a security, but the financial impact of the plan on the issuer must be disclosed in the registration statement of the issuer’s other securities.
Takeaway: Material liabilities, including unfunded executive compensation obligations, must be disclosed in registration documents to ensure the financial presentation of the issuer is not misleading to potential investors.
Incorrect
Correct: Under the Uniform Securities Act, it is unlawful to omit a material fact necessary to make statements made, in light of the circumstances under which they are made, not misleading. A Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation (NQDC) plan, particularly an unfunded one like a SERP, represents a significant unsecured liability for the issuer. Because these obligations can affect the company’s cash flow and financial stability, a reasonable investor would consider this information important when deciding whether to purchase the issuer’s securities.
Incorrect: The 10% equity threshold is an arbitrary numerical limit; materiality is based on whether a reasonable investor would find the information significant, regardless of a specific percentage. While personnel matters are often private, executive compensation that creates a material financial obligation for a public issuer loses its status as purely private and must be disclosed. NQDC plans are generally contractual arrangements between an employer and employee and do not typically require separate registration as a security, but the financial impact of the plan on the issuer must be disclosed in the registration statement of the issuer’s other securities.
Takeaway: Material liabilities, including unfunded executive compensation obligations, must be disclosed in registration documents to ensure the financial presentation of the issuer is not misleading to potential investors.
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Question 8 of 10
8. Question
When a problem arises concerning Disclosure of Initial Public Offering (IPO) Process, what should be the immediate priority? An agent of a broker-dealer is participating in the distribution of a new issue for a technology startup. During the cooling-off period, the agent receives an inquiry from a long-term client who is interested in purchasing shares. The agent realizes that a significant pending patent litigation against the issuer was not clearly detailed in the preliminary prospectus provided to the state administrator. In accordance with the Uniform Securities Act and the Securities Act of 1933, what is the most appropriate action for the agent to take to ensure regulatory compliance?
Correct
Correct: Under both the Securities Act of 1933 and the Uniform Securities Act, the primary objective is full and fair disclosure of all material facts. If a preliminary prospectus contains a material omission, such as significant pending litigation, the error must be corrected. The agent and the firm must ensure that the final prospectus, which is required to be delivered to all purchasers no later than the confirmation of the sale, contains the corrected information. Sales cannot be legally consummated until the registration statement is effective and the material facts are disclosed in writing.
Incorrect: Providing a verbal summary is insufficient because the prospectus is the legally mandated disclosure document; oral statements cannot substitute for required written disclosures. Withdrawing the registration statement is an extreme measure that is typically the decision of the issuer’s board, not the agent, and disclosure of the litigation is the required remedy rather than cancellation of the offering. Signed affidavits or waivers are generally unenforceable under securities laws, as the obligation to provide full disclosure cannot be waived by the investor.
Takeaway: Material omissions in IPO documentation must be corrected through updated written disclosures to ensure all investors are fully informed before a sale is finalized.
Incorrect
Correct: Under both the Securities Act of 1933 and the Uniform Securities Act, the primary objective is full and fair disclosure of all material facts. If a preliminary prospectus contains a material omission, such as significant pending litigation, the error must be corrected. The agent and the firm must ensure that the final prospectus, which is required to be delivered to all purchasers no later than the confirmation of the sale, contains the corrected information. Sales cannot be legally consummated until the registration statement is effective and the material facts are disclosed in writing.
Incorrect: Providing a verbal summary is insufficient because the prospectus is the legally mandated disclosure document; oral statements cannot substitute for required written disclosures. Withdrawing the registration statement is an extreme measure that is typically the decision of the issuer’s board, not the agent, and disclosure of the litigation is the required remedy rather than cancellation of the offering. Signed affidavits or waivers are generally unenforceable under securities laws, as the obligation to provide full disclosure cannot be waived by the investor.
Takeaway: Material omissions in IPO documentation must be corrected through updated written disclosures to ensure all investors are fully informed before a sale is finalized.
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Question 9 of 10
9. Question
An internal review at an audit firm examining Disclosure of Hedge Fund Investments as part of complaints handling has uncovered that an investment adviser representative (IAR) recommended a private hedge fund to several high-net-worth clients without explicitly disclosing that the IAR’s spouse serves as the Chief Compliance Officer for the fund’s general partner. Although the fund’s offering memorandum was provided to all investors and contained the names of the fund’s executive officers, it did not specify the marital relationship. Several clients have now alleged that this omission influenced their decision-making process. Under the Uniform Securities Act, which of the following best describes the regulatory standing of the IAR’s actions?
Correct
Correct: Under the Uniform Securities Act and related North American Securities Administrators Association (NASAA) model rules, investment advisers and their representatives have a fiduciary duty to act in the best interests of their clients. This duty includes the mandatory disclosure of all material conflicts of interest. A familial relationship with a key officer of a recommended investment vehicle is considered a material fact because it could reasonably be expected to influence the IAR’s objectivity. Simply providing a document with the officer’s name is insufficient if the specific nature of the conflict (the marriage) is not clearly communicated to the client.
Incorrect: The delivery of an offering memorandum does not relieve an IAR of the duty to highlight specific material conflicts that are not readily apparent to the client. Disclosure requirements are not limited to direct financial compensation; any relationship that might bias the advice given is considered material. Furthermore, while a security may be exempt from registration requirements, no security or transaction is ever exempt from the anti-fraud and disclosure provisions of the Uniform Securities Act.
Takeaway: Investment professionals must explicitly disclose all material conflicts of interest, including familial relationships with fund management, regardless of whether the security itself is exempt from registration.
Incorrect
Correct: Under the Uniform Securities Act and related North American Securities Administrators Association (NASAA) model rules, investment advisers and their representatives have a fiduciary duty to act in the best interests of their clients. This duty includes the mandatory disclosure of all material conflicts of interest. A familial relationship with a key officer of a recommended investment vehicle is considered a material fact because it could reasonably be expected to influence the IAR’s objectivity. Simply providing a document with the officer’s name is insufficient if the specific nature of the conflict (the marriage) is not clearly communicated to the client.
Incorrect: The delivery of an offering memorandum does not relieve an IAR of the duty to highlight specific material conflicts that are not readily apparent to the client. Disclosure requirements are not limited to direct financial compensation; any relationship that might bias the advice given is considered material. Furthermore, while a security may be exempt from registration requirements, no security or transaction is ever exempt from the anti-fraud and disclosure provisions of the Uniform Securities Act.
Takeaway: Investment professionals must explicitly disclose all material conflicts of interest, including familial relationships with fund management, regardless of whether the security itself is exempt from registration.
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Question 10 of 10
10. Question
During a routine supervisory engagement with a fund administrator, the authority asks about Best Execution Obligations in the context of complaints handling. They observe that a broker-dealer has consistently routed retail equity orders to a single market maker that provides payment for order flow, despite internal reports showing that a competing electronic communication network (ECN) frequently offers a narrower spread for the same securities. The firm’s compliance manual states that price is the primary factor in execution, but the firm has not conducted a formal review of its execution quality in over 18 months. Which of the following actions would most likely constitute a violation of the firm’s best execution obligations under the Uniform Securities Act?
Correct
Correct: Under the Uniform Securities Act and related FINRA/SEC guidance, broker-dealers have a duty to seek the best execution for customer orders. This requires firms to perform regular and rigorous evaluations of the execution quality they receive from various market centers. A firm that fails to conduct these reviews—especially when evidence suggests better pricing is available elsewhere—is not meeting its obligation to ensure customers receive the most favorable terms reasonably available.
Incorrect: Accepting payment for order flow is generally permitted as long as the practice is disclosed to customers and the firm still seeks best execution. Prioritizing speed or certainty of execution over price is a valid exercise of professional judgment, particularly in volatile markets where price slippage is a risk. Using a single market maker is not a violation if that entity is the only one providing liquidity for a specific, thinly traded security, provided the firm still monitors the quality of those executions.
Takeaway: Broker-dealers must systematically and periodically evaluate execution quality across available venues to fulfill their duty of seeking the most favorable terms for client transactions.
Incorrect
Correct: Under the Uniform Securities Act and related FINRA/SEC guidance, broker-dealers have a duty to seek the best execution for customer orders. This requires firms to perform regular and rigorous evaluations of the execution quality they receive from various market centers. A firm that fails to conduct these reviews—especially when evidence suggests better pricing is available elsewhere—is not meeting its obligation to ensure customers receive the most favorable terms reasonably available.
Incorrect: Accepting payment for order flow is generally permitted as long as the practice is disclosed to customers and the firm still seeks best execution. Prioritizing speed or certainty of execution over price is a valid exercise of professional judgment, particularly in volatile markets where price slippage is a risk. Using a single market maker is not a violation if that entity is the only one providing liquidity for a specific, thinly traded security, provided the firm still monitors the quality of those executions.
Takeaway: Broker-dealers must systematically and periodically evaluate execution quality across available venues to fulfill their duty of seeking the most favorable terms for client transactions.