According to BrokerCheck records kept by The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) broker Ted Oliver (Oliver), previously associated with Davenport & Company LLC, has been subject to at least one disclosable event. These events include one customer complaint. Several of those complaints against Oliver concern allegations of high frequency trading activity also referred to as churning or excessive trading among other securities laws violations.
FINRA BrokerCheck shows a settled customer complaint with a damage request of $120,000.00 on August 02, 2023.
Reverse churning and over concentration. Beginning in October 2021.
When brokers indulge in excessive trading, often called churning, they typically buy and sell securities, sometimes even the same stock, repeatedly over a short span of time. Every month, part of the account are replaced by different securities. The only purpose of this investment trading activity in any client’s account is to generate commissions that benefit the broker, not the investor. Churning is considered a species of securities fraud. The elements of the claim are excessive transactions of securities, broker control over the account, and intent to defraud the investor by obtaining unlawful commissions. A similar claim, excessive trading, under FINRA’s suitability rule involves just the first two elements. Certain commonly used measures and ratios used to determine churning help evaluate a churning claim. These ratios look at how frequently the account is turned over plus whether or not the expenses incurred in the account made it unreasonable that the investor could reasonably profit from the activity.
According to newsources, a study revealed that 7.3% of financial advisors had a customer complaint on their record when records from 2005 to 2015 were examined. Brokers must publicly disclose reportable events on their BrokerCheck reports that include customer complaints, IRS tax liens, judgments, investigations, terminations, and criminal cases. In addition, research has shown a disturbing pattern with troublesome brokers where brokers with high numbers of customer complaints are not kicked out of the industry but instead these brokers are sifted to lower quality brokerage firms with loose hiring practices and higher rates of customer complaints. These lower quality firms may average brokers with five times as many complaints as the industry average.
Oliver has been in the securities industry for more than 38 years. Oliver has been registered as a Broker with Davenport & Company LLC since 2009.
Investors who have suffered losses are encouraged to contact us at (800) 810-4262 for consultation. At Gana Weinstein LLP, our attorneys are experienced representing investors who have suffered securities losses due to the mishandling of their accounts. Claims may be brought in securities arbitration before FINRA. Our consultations are free of charge and the firm is only compensated if you recover.