UBS agrees to pay $850,000 to resolve allegations of failing to supervise a registered representative accused of channeling $7.2 million of clients’ money to unapproved private securities investments.
UBS settled the matter with Finra without admitting or denying misconduct and has since updated its system to screen for unauthorized activity.
“UBS is pleased to have resolved this matter dating back to 2021, which involved an automated surveillance system that has since been updated to be more precise and fit for purpose,” a spokesperson says.
Finra doesn’t name the advisor, but the settlement details suggest it was Robert Turner, a longtime UBS advisor later sued by the brokerage for allegedly orchestrating unauthorized transactions costing clients more than $7.2 million.
Turner allegedly told clients he would invest their money in fixed annuities with healthy returns but directed their funds to an entity controlled by a college friend and executed private securities transactions on their behalf. Clients allegedly received bogus account statements detailing their purported annuity balances.
Turner couldn’t be reached for comment, and his lawyer didn’t respond to a request for comment.
UBS reimbursed Turner’s clients $17 million to reflect the principal they lost and the earnings listed on the bogus statements.
The firm is now settling charges that it should have had a supervisory system in place to raise red flags about the dozens of transfers Turner allegedly initiated to a third party.
Finra alleged that Turner sold unauthorized products from 1997 through 2021, despite UBS’ policy prohibiting “registered representatives from recommending, referring, soliciting, or directing clients to purchase any product not approved or offered by UBS,” according to the settlement letter.
UBS discovered the alleged scheme in fall 2021 when one of Turner’s clients attempted to withdraw her entire account balance held with the third party.
Finra says Turner orchestrated the transfers by bundling multiple unrelated accounts to send money to his friend’s entity, described as “many-to-one” transfers.
Finra alleges UBS’ system wasn’t set up to monitor those transactions, even though they are often involved in fraudulent activity.
“Given the hundreds of thousands of outgoing third-party wire transfers that UBS processed each year, the firm’s failure to establish any system to surveil for many-to-one transfers was unreasonable,” Finra says.
More Articles
The Case for Bitcoin, Deregulated Banks, and a Reset U.S. Market Cycle: Insights from Wellington-Altus
Wellington-Altus’s Jim Thorne outlines why advisors should rethink digital assets, regional banks, and the current market cycle, arguing that a structural shift in credit, policy, and purchasing power is already well underway. He views Bitcoin as legitimate portfolio protection against 8% annual money supply growth, sees deregulated regional banks driving localized lending and economic growth, and believes April’s correction reset the typical four-year market cycle, potentially setting up significant gains ahead.
Private Markets with Purpose: How Fiduciary Trust International Approaches Alternatives with Clarity and Discipline
Amid the flood of alternative investment products, Fiduciary Trust International cuts through marketing noise with methodical discipline. Erick Rawlings and his team treat private equity, hedge funds, and real assets as essential portfolio building blocks—not side bets. With manager selection dispersion reaching 60% in venture capital, rigorous due diligence becomes critical. Rawlings emphasizes aligning client intentions with long-term commitments, viewing alternatives as strategic tools rather than magic bullets for targeted outcomes.