A Texas-based RIA just defeated an
SEC (Securities and Exchange Commission) attack over revenue sharing disclosures. Yet the case might not be over yet.
| Mark L. Robare Robare & Jones Asset Managers Principal, Founder | |
Yesterday Administrative Law Judge James Grimes
dismissed the regulatory agency's case (technically an administrative proceeding) against the Houston-based
Robare Group (dba Robare & Jones Asset Managers),
Mark L. Robare, and
Jack J. Jones Jr.. The SEC staffers could
appeal the decision to the Commission itself, and any decision there could be appealed up through a U.S. Court of Appeals.
"We are reviewing the decision," an SEC spokesperson tells
MFWire.
| Jack L. Jones Jr. Robare & Jones Asset Managers Partner, Owner | |
MFWire could not immediately reach Robare himself (principal and founder of the firm) or Robare's attorney,
Alan Wolper of Chicago-based Ulmer & Berne, for comment on the judge's decision.
"In listening to Mr. Robare and Mr. Jones testify and observing their demeanor under cross-examination, it is difficult to imagine them trying to defraud anyone, let alone their investment clients," the judge writes, adding that the duo "credibly testified that they did not know which funds paid fees under the Program" and "relied in good faith on the advice of its compliance firms."
In September the
SEC accused the Robare Group of failing to adequately disclose (via its form ADV) revenue sharing payments, in the form of "servicing fee" and "custodial support services" agreements, that came to Robare through an unnamed broker-dealer thanks to using certain funds on an NTF (no transaction fee) mutual fund platform, also unnamed.
The judge's order from yesterday reveals the NFT platform to be from
Fidelity's National Financial Services and reveals
Triad Advisors as the B-D in question.
MFWire could not immediately reach spokespeople for Fidelity and Triad for comment on the judge's decision. Neither Fidelity nor Triad were accused of any wrongdoing in the proceeding.
Robare & Jones
works with more than $350 million in client assets. Robare is the principal and founder of the firm, and Jones, his son-in-law, is a partner and owner. 
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