Charles Schwab to pay $187 million to settle SEC charges that it misled robo-advisor clients on fees

Charles Schwab to pay 7 million to settle SEC charges that it misled robo-advisor clients on fees


The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission headquarters in Washington on Feb. 23, 2022.

Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Charles Schwab agreed to pay $187 million to settle an SEC investigation into alleged hidden fees charged by the firm’s robo-advisor, Schwab Intelligent Portfolios, according to an agency announcement on Monday.

“Robo-advisor” is shorthand for a digital investment service that uses algorithms to judge how to allocate individuals’ money among asset classes such as stocks, bonds and cash.  

From March 2015 through November 2018, Schwab didn’t disclose to clients that its robo-advisor allocated funds “in a manner that their own internal analyses showed would be less profitable for their clients under most market conditions,” the SEC claimed.

More from Personal Finance:
401(k) savers will see a ‘wake-up call’ in their next statement
What to know before you start investing
This rule of thumb shows how inflation impacts your savings

As part of the settlement, three Schwab subsidiaries — Charles Schwab & Co., Charles Schwab Investment Advisory and Schwab Wealth Investment Advisory — agreed to pay a $135 million civil penalty and an additional $52 million in disgorgement and interest to affected clients.

In a statement issued Monday, Schwab neither admitted nor denied the allegations and said the firm is “pleased to put this behind us.”

“We believe resolving the matter in this way is in the best interests of our clients, company and stockholders as it allows us to remain focused on helping our clients invest for the future,” according to the statement. “As always, we are committed to earning our clients’ trust every day and work diligently to maintain the highest standards for professional conduct throughout our organization.”

Cash drag

Robo-advisors are getting more popular. They began appearing around 2008, during the advent of the iPhone and an ascendant digital culture. They may soon hold more than $1 trillion of Americans’ wealth.

The dynamic outlined by the SEC was due to an undisclosed “cash drag” on Schwab client portfolios, the agency said.

Cash generally yields lower returns than stocks, for example, during periods of low interest rates and a rising stock market, as was the directional trend over 2015-2018.

Schwab advertised that clients’ cash allocations were determined by strict portfolio methodology that sought optimal returns, according to the SEC. But the firm’s data showed that the cash allocations would lead clients to make less money for the same amount of risk in most circumstances, the SEC said.

The firm profited by sweeping cash to an affiliate bank, loaning the money and pocketing the difference between the loan interest it received and the cash interest it paid to robo-adviser clients, according to the SEC.

“Schwab’s conduct was egregious, and today’s action sends a clear message to advisers that they need to be transparent with clients about hidden fees and how such fees affect clients’ returns,” Gurbir S. Grewal, director of the SEC’s enforcement division, said Monday.

However, Schwab highlighted that its Schwab Intelligent Portfolios Service lets investors elect not to pay an advisory fee in exchange for allowing the firm to hold some proceeds in cash.

The firm said it “[does] not hide the fact that our firm generates revenue for the services we provide” and thinks cash is a “key component of any sound investment strategy through different market cycles.”



Source

Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Lamb Weston, KB Home, Carnival, Oracle, CoreWeave & more
Finance

Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Lamb Weston, KB Home, Carnival, Oracle, CoreWeave & more

Check out some of the stocks making the biggest moves in midday trading. Lamb Weston – The producer of fries and frozen potato products saw shares tank 25%. Though Lamb Weston posted beats on the top and bottom lines in the second quarter, the company reaffirmed its full-year revenue guidance of $6.35 billion to $6.55 […]

Read More
Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: Oracle, CoreWeave, Nike, Coinbase & more
Finance

Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: Oracle, CoreWeave, Nike, Coinbase & more

Check out the companies making headlines before the bell. Oracle — Shares were up more than 5% in the premarket after TikTok agreed to sell its U.S. operations to a new joint venture that includes the software giant and private equity investor Silver Lake. Coinbase — The crypto exchange rose nearly 3%. On Thursday, the […]

Read More
Friday could be a wild day of trading on Wall Street. Here’s why
Finance

Friday could be a wild day of trading on Wall Street. Here’s why

Key Points More than $7.1 trillion in notional options exposure is set to expire this Friday, according to Goldman. December options expirations are typically the biggest of the year, but this one eclipses all prior records. Source

Read More