Both JPMorgan's and Wells Fargo's advisory units have come under federal regulators' microscopes for issues ranging from advisory fees to cash sweeps, the megabanks disclosed this week.
JPMorgan added in the disclosure that it's also responding to SEC questions about "the timing of the Firm's liquidation of shares distributed in-kind to certain investment vehicles that invest in third-party managed private funds."
"The Firm is cooperating with the SEC in regard to both inquiries," according to the quarterly filing.
A JPMorgan spokesperson declined to elaborate further on the regulatory filing. An SEC spokesman said the agency does not comment on "the existence or nonexistence of a possible investigation."
JPMorgan's disclosure came a day after its
Broker-dealers justify sweeps by arguing that they provide clients with liquid assets held at banking institutions where they enjoy the guarantee of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. But there is a conflict.
Skeptics often note that many clients would be getting a better return if their money were put in high-yielding money markets or certificates of deposit — even if those options aren't ultimately as lucrative to their brokerage firm. Tim Welsh, the CEO of the
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Welsh said that after most brokerages were pressured by competition and industry trends to offer commission-free trading, they began to look elsewhere for revenue. One source they turned to, he said, was cash sweeps.
Welsh said there's nothing necessarily wrong with brokerages helping to pay for commission-free trading with clients' uninvested money swept into bank accounts. He just wishes they were more upfront about the practice.
"'We are using your cash to subsidize our other banking and brokerage products at no cost or low cost,'" Welsh said. "They should just say that and be transparent about it."
Wells Fargo offers customers
The second option is called Standard Bank Deposit, which offers as much as $500,000 FDIC coverage (or $1 million for joint accounts) for money held at two or more banks. Generally, the more money that clients hold with Wells Fargo advisors, the more interest they'll receive.
Wells' final option is itself a money market fund. But this fund, which was paying a 4.92% yield on Wednesday, is generally reserved for clients who aren't eligible for the bank sweeps, such as insurance and mutual fund companies and government agencies.
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Peter Crane, the president of
"Certainly that gap has never been wider," Crane said. "And that's drawing some intention on the regulatory front."
In the past, Crane said, firms have been able to stay on the right side of the law with their cash sweeps practices by making sure they disclose any conflicts of interest. If they've done that, then they can always say customers were told what they were getting into.
"And, of course, you're welcome to leave any time," Crane said. "It's not restricting you from taking the money and taking it elsewhere to a higher-yielding option. This is just taking advantage of smaller balances and really lazy customers who don't want to click to move the money."
Wells alerts investors on page 3 of an
The disclosure goes on to state that Wells Fargo is under no obligation "to seek or negotiate interest rates" that are greater than what banks are willing to pay.
Wells acknowledges that its advisory unit receives payments from the banks it sweeps investors' cash into. Once it deducts the interest it owes to clients from those payments, it keeps the rest for itself.
"Accordingly," states the disclosure, "Wells Fargo Advisors has an incentive to pay lower interest rates to participating accounts."
Wells further advises clients that if they want the "highest yields currently available in the market for your cash balances, please contact your investment professional … to discuss investment options that may be available outside of the Cash Sweep Program to help maximize your return potential consistent with your investment objectives, liquidity needs, and risk tolerance."
A Wells Fargo spokesperson declined to elaborate on the firm's latest regulatory disclosure. Responding last spring to a
The SEC has gone after other firms recently for alleged failures to properly disclose conflicts of interest in their sweeps practices. In September, for instance, it reached