The SEC has taken the somewhat unusual step of banning
The Securities and Exchange Commission announced Monday that it had accepted Scott Wayne Reed's offer of banishment from the advisory industry for alleged sales of unregistered securities while he was at Wells Fargo from 2016 to 2020. As part of the same deal, the Wall Street regulator permanently prohibited him from any dealings in "penny stocks," or shares in small companies typically going for less than $5 each.
The decision came after Reed,
It doesn't always follow
It might seem that an SEC-imposed ban from the advisory industry would come automatically with a bar by FINRA, the broker-dealer industry's self-regulator. But that's not always the case.
Antoine Souma, a Los Angeles broker who had once operated a highly profitable brokerage
Rather than fight regulators, Souma accepted a bar from the brokerage industry. Attempts to reach him on Tuesday were unsuccessful.
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"It's unfortunate the SEC has to spend its resources barring someone a second time," Wojciechowski said.
Wojciechowski said that letting financial professionals who've been barred as brokers continue to act as advisors is tantamount to losing the regulatory screws. In general, he said, FINRA subjects brokerage firms to greater oversight than the SEC can give to RIAs.
"There is too much regulation on all sides and not enough in the middle," Wojciechowski said.
An SEC spokesperson declined to comment.
A tangled web
The SEC's ban on Reed is just the latest of his regulatory struggles. Reed resigned his position at Wells Fargo Clearing Services's offices in Scottsdale, Arizona, in April 2020 after coming under accusations that he had gone outside the firm to encourage at least two clients to buy securities issued by a software developer.
The developer, Pasadena, California-based Pebblekick,
In March 2022, the Arizona Corporate Commission — the state's securities regulator — revoked Reed's securities salesman registration and advisor license at the state level. He was also told to pay roughly $1.8 million in restitution and a $50,000 administrative penalty.
And in September this year, a FINRA arbitration panel found Reed owed Wells Fargo nearly $1.5 million for recruitment loans he had received when joining the firm. FINRA placed another suspension on Reed on Nov. 29 after finding he had "failed to comply with an arbitration award or settlement agreement or to satisfactorily respond to a FINRA request to provide information concerning the status of compliance."
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A Wells Fargo spokesperson declined to comment.
Kirk Smith, an investor advocate and senior partner at Houston-based
"In selling away from the firm, he didn't have those recommendations approved by his firm," Smith said. "Those are clear-cut objective violations the SEC can sink their teeth into."