This course equips advisors with the knowledge, tools, and frameworks needed to navigate the intricate ethical dilemmas that arise in the profession. Designed to promote ethical excellence, this course explores the principles of fiduciary duty, advanced reasoning techniques, and the nuances of maintaining trust in client relationships. Participants will be presented with real-world scenarios, case studies, and emerging challenges, such as navigating gray areas in regulatory guidance, managing conflicts of interest, and balancing personalized financial planning with fiduciary responsibilities. The course also emphasizes the importance of ethical leadership, organizational culture, and continuous professional growth, providing actionable strategies for fostering a client-first approach and addressing unconscious bias.
This course prepares Investment Adviser Representatives (IARs) to meet regulatory expectations for business continuity planning (BCP). Learners will explore key BCP components - data protection, communication protocols, office relocation, succession, and third-party risk management - with a focus on practical application and fiduciary responsibility. The course emphasizes real-world scenarios, compliance best practices, and the adviser's role in supporting plan execution. By course end, learners will be equipped to contribute to firm-wide continuity strategies that protect clients and ensure regulatory readiness.
This course examines how artificial intelligence is becoming part of financial services, creating new efficiencies but also new potential risks for investment adviser representatives. It explains how AI fits within the existing regulatory framework, including fiduciary duties, the Marketing Rule, the Books and Records Rule, and Regulation S-P - framed through the lens of ethical responsibilities. Through examples, enforcement cases, and professional guidance, you will see that while technology may evolve, your ethical duties do not: the standards of care, honest and transparent disclosure, and protection of client data remain constant and must guide your judgment in practice.
In a rapidly evolving market, understanding the unique characteristics and compliance challenges of alternative investments is critical for fiduciary excellence. Alternative Investments: Fiduciary Focus equips advisers with a practical framework for integrating private equity, hedge funds, real estate, and other non-traditional assets while upholding fiduciary duties of care and loyalty. Through concise, real-world case studies and interactive exercises, learners will deepen their understanding of SEC guidance on disclosure requirements and conflict mitigation, apply ethical principles to fee analysis and liquidity assessments, and adopt best practices for thorough due diligence and documentation. By the end of the course, participants will be able to navigate compliance pitfalls and tailor alternative investment recommendations to client needs, aligning each proposal with fiduciary standards and sound due diligence practices.
This course introduces Investment Adviser Representatives (IARs) to Anti-Money Laundering (AML) requirements under the Bank Secrecy Act. Participants will explore the rule's background, coverage, and how it ties into a new IA AML Rule which was recently postponed until 2028. The course helps investment advisers prepare for what's to come by covering the five pillars of AML programs, reporting and recordkeeping obligations, and practical steps for identifying and escalating red flags. Through examples and case studies, advisers will gain the knowledge needed to protect clients, safeguard their firms, and meet evolving regulatory expectations.
This course will review recent Anti-Money Laundering developments including regulatory guidance from the securities and banking industries, FATF cryptocurrency guidance, enforcement actions, and several case studies. By the end of the course, students will have a better understanding of the front-end of the regulatory environment and how money laundering is detected and prosecuted in modern cases.
This course is intended for any financial advisors who already work with, or have plans to attract more business from, the youngest of the US working population - Millennials. They are a new breed of investors that require new methods of investing their money, different than the strategies used with their parents. Learning to understand millennials helps to understand their financial goals. This course prepares financial advisors to recognize and work with millennial clients the way they want to be worked with. It also discusses regulations surrounding social media and other off-channel communication platforms that millennials tend to navigate towards. Finally, the course walks through two important components that tend to come up frequently among millennial investors: cryptocurrency and ESG investing.
This course is designed to equip investment advisors with the knowledge and tools necessary to align their marketing practices with the SEC's modernized IA Marketing Rule while fostering a strong commitment to ethics. Participants will explore the regulatory framework governing marketing communications, focusing on the rule's provisions for transparency, fairness, and accountability in advertising. The course delves into ethical considerations that underpin compliant marketing, such as balancing business goals with fiduciary responsibilities, mitigating conflicts of interest, and ensuring truthful representations of performance data. Advisers will learn to navigate complex challenges in marketing, including the use of testimonials, hypothetical performance, and AI-driven financial tools. The course also provide actionable strategies for developing robust compliance programs, leveraging technology to streamline processes, and responding effectively to SEC inquiries. Emphasis is placed on cultivating a culture of compliance and ethical leadership, empowering advisers to act with integrity while maintaining competitive marketing practices.