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UBS executives estimate their plan to raise rates on certain accounts will cost the firm $50 million. A new suit cites that as evidence that the firm "violated its obligations to its clients."
August 23 -
The decision hinging on the definition of "inventory" in the sale of a highly valuable position in a U.S. partnership resolved a saga that began 16 years ago.
August 23 -
Analysts say that firms that are forced to start paying clients higher rates may have to raise their advisory fees and cut costs to make up for the revenue losses.
August 22 -
The Federal Trade Commission says it's weighing a likely appeal of the ruling.
August 21 -
Industry experts say they can't recall another time when an advisory firm has used a lawsuit for a wholesale indictment of a rival's recruiting practices.
August 16 -
An LPL independent contractor accuses the firm of not doing enough to stop salacious remarks directed at him that started after a top Bank of Springfield executive learned he was gay.
August 15 -
The litigation comes amid heated debate over a Department of Labor rule meant to prevent excessive fees on sales of insurance products.
August 8 -
The wealth management giant questions if there has ever been so large a civil sanction handed down in response to "negligent mistakes" made in an attempt to comply with "unwritten rules."
August 7 -
Prosecutors accused firm founder David Gentile and his partner of putting at risk more than $1.8 billion raised from thousands of investors.
August 1 -
Firms' practice of offering low returns on clients' uninvested cash is becoming the latest hot legal target.
August 1 -
Decisions granting a stay during industry lawsuits challenging the regulation point to a high bar of judicial scrutiny.
July 31 -
Wells Fargo joins Morgan Stanley, Merrill and Ameriprise in facing questions over its handling of clients' uninvested cash.
July 31 -
The latest court dispute between the two wealth management giants issues a widespread indictment against LPL's recruiting practices.
July 30 -
The latest legal action over the industry's handling of clients' uninvested cash suggests sweeps are a bigger profit generator than most firms let on.
July 19 -
The Wall Street powerhouse is now the subject of two class action suits questioning whether it has been providing unreasonably low returns on clients' uninvested cash.
July 16 -
A broker argues the Supreme Court's recent decision in the Jarkesy case means he should get to defend himself against fraud allegations before a jury.
July 15 -
The decisions indicated that justices will use far stricter scrutiny of government regulations moving forward, and some cases dealt a direct impact right away.
July 10 -
The arbitration award comes amid the industry's aggressive push to make sure departing wealth managers pay back money owed on recruiting loans.
July 9 -
Huntington Investment Company is accusing a former advisor of resigning with no advance notice and then using confidential information to drum business from ex-clients.
July 2 -
The broker-dealer self-regulator argues that the enforcement decline is a result of its success in driving bad actors from the industry.
June 28



















