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Cold
Calling Alert
The telephone
rings . . .
It happens to all of us. The telephone rings as you’re sitting down to dinner,
relaxing with family or friends, or putting the kids to bed. A stranger is
selling something.
. . . is there help or trouble on the line?
It’s known as “cold calling.” For many businesses, including securities firms,
cold calling serves as a legitimate way to reach potential customers. But
sometimes serious trouble and financial losses await you at the other end of the
line. Dishonest brokers may pressure you to buy a bad investment. Or the
investment might be a scam. Whether the calls are annoying, abusive, or
downright crooked, you can stop cold callers. The law protects you by requiring
cold callers to follow several rules. But you need to take steps to take
advantage of these rules and to protect yourself.
This brochure tells you about your legal rights, how to deal with cold calls,
how to stop them, and how to evaluate any investment opportunity that comes your
way over the telephone.
Cold
Callers Must Follow These Rules
When people from the securities industry call to sell you something, they must:
Call Only
Between 8:00 a.m. and 9:00 p.m.
These time restrictions do not apply if you are already a customer of the
firm or you’ve given them permission to call you at other times. Cold callers
may call you at work at any time.
Say Who’s Calling and Why
Cold callers must promptly tell you:
-
their
name,
-
their
firm’s name, address, and telephone number, and
-
that the
purpose of the call is to sell you an investment.
Put You on
Their “Do Not Call” List, If You Ask
Every securities firm must keep a “do not call” list. If you want to stop
sales calls from that firm, tell the caller to put your name and telephone
number on the firm’s “do not call” list. If anyone from that firm calls you
again, get the caller’s name and telephone number, note the date and time of the
call, and complain to the firm’s compliance officer, the SEC, and your state’s
securities regulator. Further below, you’ll find information on how to make a
complaint.
Treat You With Respect
Cold callers can’t threaten, intimidate, or use obscene or profane language.
They can’t call you repeatedly to annoy, abuse, or harass you.
Get Your Written Approval Before Taking Money Directly From Your Bank
Accounts
Before investing, you should always get answers to the questions below and
written information about the investment. If you do decide to buy from a cold
caller, do not give your checking or savings account numbers to the broker over
the phone. Brokers must get your written permission – such as your
signature on a check or an authorization form – before they can take
money from your checking or savings account.
Tell You the Truth
People selling securities must tell you the truth. Brokers who lie to you
about any important aspect of an investment opportunity violate federal and
state securities laws.
What Are
Signs Of Trouble?
Honest brokers use cold calling to find clients for the long term. They ask
questions to understand your financial situation and investment goals before
recommending that you buy anything. While you may find their cold calls
annoying, honest brokers who follow the cold calling rules are acting within
their rights.
Dishonest brokers use cold calling to find “quick hits.” Some set up “boiler
rooms” where high-pressure salespeople use banks of telephones to call as many
potential investors as possible. These strangers will hound you to buy stocks in
small, unknown companies that are highly risky, or sometimes, part of a scam.
Watch for
these signs of trouble...
High-Pressure
Sales Tactics
Aggressive cold callers speak from persuasive scripts that include retorts for
your every objection. As long as you stay on the phone, they’ll keep trying to
sell. And they won’t let you get a word in edgewise.
“You’d hammer
them. I always remember this one guy, I mean, I just stayed on the phone for
almost an hour, and he finally bought.”
-A “boiler room” broker
Beware of brokers who pressure you to buy before you have a chance to think
about – or investigate – the “opportunity.”
“Stop right
there! You’re a businessman and you make decisions every day. You didn’t get
where you are by being stupid . . . Let’s confirm the order now. OK?”
–A “cold calling” script
Watch out for dishonest brokers who tell you about a “once-in-a-lifetime”
opportunity, especially when the caller bases the recommendation on “inside” or
“confidential” information.
“My broker
said the company was in the process of buying this 100,000 watt radio station .
. . The information wasn’t on the street yet, but once the information did go
out, the stock was going to double or triple.”
–An investor in Virginia
Don’t fall for brokers who promise spectacular profits or “guaranteed” returns.
If the deal sounds too good to be true, then it probably is.
“My broker was
speaking of the AIDS epidemic and how much work was going into it with the
laboratories and so on. And this particular company, working so close with it .
. . he said the stock would go through the roof. And he said it was absolutely a
sure thing . . . It would just continue to rise. Maybe as high as $20 or $30 per
share.”
–An investor in Virginia, who lost $70,000 while his broker made over $15,000 in
commissions.
Don’t deal with brokers who refuse to send you written information about the
investment.
“I asked the
broker not once but three times to send me some information. Ed McMahon’s been
sending you information for years; he hasn’t made you any money, ` was his
reply.”
– A reporter for the Washington Post
The “Three-Call” Technique
Some cold callers wait before turning up the heat. In their first call – the
“warm-up” – they’ll try to build your trust by describing their firm’s past
successes and the high quality of its research. The callers might ask permission
to call again if an “exciting” deal comes along, but won’t pressure you to buy.
“I am
invariably told these are not sales calls!! They assure me that all they want to
do is pass along some information concerning their firm and track record, and
will get back to me if and when something hot` comes along. When asked about
such esoteric things as appropriateness, risk levels, risk tolerance, asset
allocation and/or diversification, the topic is immediately changed back to
their history of high returns for clients.”
-An investor in Illinois
In their
second call – the “set-up” – they’ll whet your appetite, telling you about a
fabulous deal they “think” they can get you into. In their third call – the
“close” – they’ll urge you to “buy now” or miss out.
Bait and Switch
Dishonest brokers lure new customers by encouraging them to purchase well
known, widely traded “blue chip” stocks. After you take the bait, they may
pressure you to invest in small, unknown companies with little or no earnings.
These stocks tend to be very risky and thinly traded, leaving more investors
with losses than profits.
Paying Too Much
Although they may not say so, dishonest brokers who push you to invest in a
small, unknown company often work for firms that own large amounts of the stock.
Their firm may have been involved in the company’s initial public offering. Or
the firm may “make a market” in the stock, which means it buys and sells the
stock – sometimes called a “house stock”– for its own account. If only one firm
or a small group of firms makes a market in the stock, the price can be
manipulated and may not reflect the true value of the company. Dishonest brokers
often pump up the prices of their house stocks until they get rid of their own
holdings at high prices. But when they stop promoting the stock, the price
falls, and investors lose their money.
If you’re not careful, you may pay too much for “house stocks.” Some dishonest
brokers overcharge their customers by adding an undisclosed “mark-up” to the
price the firm paid for the stock. Although it’s illegal for brokers to charge
excessive mark-ups, some dishonest brokers mark up the prices of the stocks they
sell by as much as 100% or more.
Finding It Hard to Sell
Many investors find that once they buy a “house stock,” they can’t get what
they paid for it, even if they decide to sell right away. Or they find that
their brokers simply won’t sell the stock at all. Some firms follow “no net
sales” policies where brokers can’t execute orders to sell “house stocks” unless
they find a customer to buy an equal number of shares. Other firms discourage
brokers from selling “house stocks” for their customers by offering low–or no –
commissions on those sales.
Dishonest brokers often refuse to take – or return – phone calls from customers
who want to sell.
“Whenever I
call my broker, I am told that he is in a meeting or out of the office.”
–A common investor complaint
These brokers will use high-pressure tactics to persuade you to keep the stock.
Or they will simply refuse to sell it.
“When I told
my broker to sell my portfolio, he said I can’t do it . . . I can’t explain why,
but what I’ll do is send you the stock and you sell it through another broker.“
–An investor in New York
Portrait of a “Boiler Room“
The SEC and state securities regulators have investigated – and taken action
against – numerous firms and brokers who use high-pressure tactics to sell
securities. In a recent case, “boiler rooms” were described this way:
The firm was
operating a classic boiler room. The brokers sat “cheek by jowl” in a room the
size of a basketball court. All of their desks were lined up side by side in
rows. The firm held mandatory sales meetings every morning at 8:30 a.m. at which
time sales techniques were demonstrated and scripts for the firm’s “house stock”
. . . were distributed. Brokers were expected to follow the scripts and only
give customers the information they contained. Brokers were discouraged from
doing any outside research, and were told to rely on the firm’s research and
representations.
. . .
After the morning sales meeting, brokers were expected to spend the entire day
(except for a lunch break) on the telephone. The firm expected a high volume of
sales, and if brokers did not stay on the phone, they were fired. . .
One broker conceded that he falsely identified another salesman . . . as the
firm’s research analyst, and gave a fictitious description of the purported
analyst as “fat, bald, and badly dressed.” He stated that the reason for the
firm’s policy of discouraging customer sales was its desire to avoid negative
price pressure on house stocks, a circumstance that he did not disclose to
customers.
– From an opinion in a recent SEC enforcement case
Brokers in one boiler room defrauded investors by:
-
lying
about the firm’s reputation and expertise, claiming it had a “research
department” that analyzed stocks when it didn`t,
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refusing
to say anything negative about the stocks they pushed, including the “risk
factors” discussed in the prospectus,
-
making
baseless price predictions, promising that certain stocks would double in
price within a short time period, impersonating other salespeople at the
firm, and
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discouraging customers from selling the stocks they recommended without
regard to the customers` best interests.
Knowing how
boiler rooms operate, you should be extremely skeptical when considering any
investment opportunity a stranger tries to sell over the phone.
What Can
I Do?
Register for the Georgia
Do Not Call List
By registering with the
“Free” Federal No Call Registry, your telephone number will
automatically be included on the Georgia Do Not Call List and will be
included in the list of telephone numbers telemarketers are required to
download prior to telemarketing in Georgia .
If you are a residential
consumer attempting to register for the no call list, you may do so
online at
www.donotcall.gov , or by calling toll-free, 1-888-382-1222 or TTY
1-866-290-4236, to reach the Federal Registry. You must call from the
telephone number you wish to register.
Report Abusive Cold Callers
When cold callers use harassing, abusive sales tactics and lie to you about
investment opportunities, they violate the cold calling rules and break federal
and state securities laws. Don’t let them off the hook! To complain about
abusive cold callers, write down the name of the caller, the name of the firm,
the date and time of the call or calls, what the caller said to you, and what
you said to the caller. You can send your complaint to either the SEC or your
state’s securities regulator.
U. S. Securities and Exchange Commission
Office of Investor Education and Assistance
Mail Stop 11-2
450 Fifth Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20549
Phone: (202) 942-7040
Fax: (202) 942-9634
E-mail: help@sec.gov
Your State’s Securities Regulator
In Georgia, call (888) 733-7427 or (404) 656-3920. Or contact The North American
Securities Administrators Association (NASAA).
Toll: (202) 737-0900
Website: http://www.nasaa.org
Tell Bad Cold Callers Not to Call Again
Some
salespeople just don’t get it. No matter how many times you’ve told them “no
thanks,” they keep calling. If you’re annoyed by cold callers, stop them before
they start their sales pitch. Tell the caller to put you on the firm’s “do not
call” list. If anyone from that firm calls you again, complain to the firm’s
compliance officer, the SEC, and your state’s securities regulator.
Don’t Warm Up To Bad Cold Callers
What If I Want
To Invest?
Never buy an
investment based simply on a telephone sales pitch. A wise investor will always
slow down, ask questions, get written information about the investment, and
investigate the background of the firm and broker. Take notes so you have a
record of what the broker told you, in case you have a dispute later. Before
making a final decision and handing over your hard-earned money, take the time
to investigate. Follow these steps:
Call Your State’s Securities Regulator, and Ask
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Is the
investment registered?
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Is the
broker licensed to do business in my state?
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Have you
received any complaints about the broker pushing the investment or the
broker’s firm? Does either have a disciplinary history? Your state’s
securities regulator is the best source for this information because they
give investors more information than other organizations about the brokers
who do business in your state. States pull this disciplinary information
from a national computer system, the CRD, the Central Registration
Depository.
-
Have you
received any complaints about the stock, the company, or the company’s
managers
You can obtain
a partial disciplinary history of the broker pushing the stock and the broker’s
firm by contacting the National Association of Securities Dealers` toll-free
public disclosure hot-line at (800) 289-9999 or visiting their website at http:/www.nasdr.com.
Ask Your Broker These Questions
1. Is the
investment registered with the SEC and the state securities agency where I live?
2. How long has the company been in business? Is it making money? If so, how?
What is its product or service? Have the people who are managing this company
ever made money for investors in the past? Will you send me the latest reports
that have been filed on this company? How can I get more information about this
investment?
3. Where does the stock trade? How can I get information about the stock’s
trading price? How easily can I sell? What price would I get if I decide to sell
immediately?
4. How does this match my investment objectives? What is the risk that I could
lose the money I invest?
5. What are the costs to buy, hold, and sell this investment?
Do Your Own Research
Get as much
written information about the investment as you can. Ask for a prospectus,
annual report, offering circular and financial statements. Your local library
may have resources that provide additional information about the company, such
as lawsuits, liens, or recent credit reports. Compare the written information to
what you’ve been told over the phone. Watch out if you’re told that no written
information about the company is available. If that happens, call your state’s
securities regulator immediately.
Get a Second Opinion
Talk to a
trusted financial advisor or your attorney. Consider calling another firm for a
second opinion on the opportunity.
Monitor Your Investment
After you’ve
invested, watch your investment closely. Make sure your broker sends you account
statements and written confirmation of all trades. Read these documents
carefully to make sure they are correct. Be alert for any transactions you did
not authorize.
Complain Promptly
If you have
any problems, complain promptly. Contact your broker’s supervisor or the firm’s
compliance officer. If that does not resolve the problem, complain to the SEC or
your state’s securities regulator. We welcome your letters. Often complaints
from investors alert us to wrongdoing in the industry and are the first step in
stopping a bad broker or firm. By complaining early, you will have a better
chance of getting your money back and protecting your legal rights.
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