Results tagged “safety” from Thomas F. Shine Law Commentary

Thomas D. Mauriello, California co-counsel with the Shine-Vernon legal team, recently filed three new arbitration claims on behalf of California investors who collectively lost more than $500,000 in the Schwab YieldPlus Fund (SWYPX, SWYSX, SCHW) and the Schwab California Tax Free YieldPlus Fund (SWYCX).

Schwab marketed its Schwab YieldPlus Fund and Schwab California Tax Free YieldPlus Fund to retirees and other conservative investors as safe ultra short-term bond funds and alternatives to cash.  However, the Funds' managers over-concentrated the Funds with risky mortgage- and asset-backed securities in the case of the YieldPlus Fund and, in addition, with auction rate securities in the case of the California Tax Free YieldPlus Fund, exposing the Funds to huge undisclosed liquidity risk and other risks and ultimately causing investors steep losses of their principal, the new claims assert.

"With each new claim we investigate and file, we are expanding our understanding of the scope of Schwab's recklessness and misrepresentations with respect to these particular funds," Mr. Mauriello stated.  "We are putting a great deal of effort into these investigations and the resulting claims to obtain recovery for the individual investor."  

The Shine-Vernon legal team, headed by former SEC enforcement attorney Thomas Shine and longtime investor rights' attorney Chris Vernon, has interviewed more than 100 investors as part of its Schwab YieldPlus investigation.  The team consists of six law firms throughout the United States.  The team has filed arbitration claims on behalf of investors in Florida, California, Texas, New York, Missouri, Minnesota, Illinois and Hawaii.  While the attorneys on the team have high-level, nationwide experience in securities arbitrations, the firms are small enough to offer personalized attention and care to each client throughout the arbitration process.

These latest claims were filed on behalf of baby boomers and retirees, including an engineer, a journalist, a judge, and two real estate professionals.  Two of the claims will be heard in San Francisco while the third will be heard in San Diego.  These claims come on the heels of $1 million in investor claims filed by the Shine-Vernon legal team in July.

The new claims assert that the reckless actions of the fund managers of the Schwab YieldPlus Fund and Schwab California Tax Free YieldPlus Fund compromised the Funds' liquidity and exposed investors to substantial risk of losses, while Schwab was marketing these funds as a safe alternative to cash.  This set the stage for the catastrophic free-fall of the Schwab YieldPlus Fund, as net assets plunged from a high of $13.5 billion in July 2007 to just $679 million on May 31, 2008.   Schwab reports that as of May 31, 2009, the YieldPlus Fund's assets were at $161.72 million.  The Schwab California Tax-Free YieldPlus Fund experienced a similar decline in total managed assets, decreasing from $1.201 billion as of July 31, 2007 to $156.68 million (down 86.96%) on August 31, 2008.
The claims include the following allegations:

-- In SEC filings and direct communications with shareholders and prospective investors, Schwab misrepresented the Schwab YieldPlus Fund as an ultra short-term bond fund.  In reality, the fund was heavily weighted with floating and variable rate bonds with long-term maturities, which gave the fund a weighted average maturity equivalent to an intermediate term bond fund.  During the second half of 2007 and in 2008, when the fund was declining in value, these misrepresentations created the false illusion that if investors held on to their positions for the next six months to a year, the bonds held in the fund's portfolio would mature at face or par value and the fund and its shareholders would recover most of their unrealized losses.

-- Unlike its peers in the Morningstar ultra short bond fund category, the Schwab YieldPlus Fund failed to maintain adequate cash on hand to meet investor redemptions.  Schwab YieldPlus Fund had only 6.5 percent of its portfolio in cash, while its peers in the ultra short-term bond fund category averaged 27 percent of their positions in cash.  As more and more investors sought to sell their shares, Schwab had to sell illiquid securities held in the portfolio at distressed prices;

-- Schwab's senior management changed the Schwab YieldPlus Fund's investment policy in September 2006 to allow for a higher concentration in riskier mortgage-backed securities and asset-backed securities, without obtaining shareholder approval or clearly disclosing this major shift to investors;    

-- Schwab's management failed to adequately disclose that investors had withdrawn $2.8 billion from the YieldPlus Fund in August 2007. Full and explicit disclosure didn't come until November 30, 2007 -- by which time the Fund's net assets had dropped to $8 billion, down from $13.5 billion as of July 31, 2007;

-- Schwab ignored the warnings of securities and banking regulators about the risky nature of mortgage-backed securities and collateralized mortgage obligations, including warnings to refrain from deceptive advertising of such securities including comparisons to certificates of deposits;

-- Schwab embarked on a self-dealing marketing campaign to avert redemptions of Schwab YieldPlus by Charles Schwab retail clients, quietly selling 2.9 million Schwab YieldPlus Fund shares from other Schwab proprietary mutual funds during the period January 31, 2008 to April 1, 2008, while indicating in marketing materials, newsletters, talking points, and other investor communications that unwitting Schwab retail clients should hold their shares.

URL:

For information, contact:
- Thomas F. Shine, a former Securities and Exchange Commission Division of Enforcement attorney (Florida, 800-838-8320, www.thomasfshinelaw.com)

- Christopher T. Vernon, an investor rights attorney who represents investors throughout the United States (Florida, 239-649-5390, www.vernonhealy.com)
 
- Thomas D. Mauriello, an investor rights attorney who represents investors throughout the United States (California, 888-612-1961, www.maurlaw.com)

- Timothy J. Dennin, a former Securities and Exchange Commission Division of Enforcement attorney and former assistant district attorney (New York, 212-826-1500, www.denninlaw.com)

 


 

JULY 16, 2009

Melbourne, Florida -- The Shine-Vernon legal team filed claims today on behalf of three Florida investors with principal losses totaling more than $1 million asserting that Charles Schwab & Co. and its former high-profile fund manager committed fraud when they deceptively marketed the Schwab YieldPlus Fund as a safe cash alternative.      

Schwab marketed its Schwab YieldPlus Fund (SWYPX, SWYSX) to investors as a safe, ultra short-term bond fund, but actually the bond mutual fund managers loaded the fund with high concentrations of risky mortgage- and asset-backed securities that exposed fund investors to the danger of substantial losses of their principal, the claims assert.

The Shine-Vernon legal team, headed by former SEC enforcement attorney Thomas Shine and longtime investor rights' attorney Chris Vernon, has interviewed more than 100 investors as part of its Schwab YieldPlus investigation and filed arbitration claims on behalf of investors in Florida, California, Texas, New York, Missouri, Minnesota, Illinois and Hawaii.

The three claims filed today are on behalf of three Florida investors, two of whom are in their 70s, with the third in his early 60s and nearing retirement age.

Many Schwab YieldPlus investors are conservative investors and retirees who've suffered steep losses of principal even though Charles Schwab compared its Schwab YieldPlus Fund to the safety of 1 and 2-year certificates of deposit and described it as "portfolio cash" on its website.

The claims filed today assert that the Schwab YieldPlus Fund managers' reckless actions and negligence set the stage for the catastrophic freefall of Schwab YieldPlus in which the bond mutual fund saw net assets plunge from a high of $13.5 billion on the eve of the subprime credit crisis in July 2007 to $507 million as of May 31, 2008. Schwab reports that as of May 31, 2009, the YieldPlus Fund's current assets were at $161.72 million.

The claims filed today include the following allegations:

-- This risky investment composition of the Schwab YieldPlus Fund by fund managers compromised the fund's liquidity and forced it to sell off asset-backed and mortgage-backed securities at distressed prices as more and more investors sought redemptions beginning in August 2007. As of July 31, 2007, the Schwab YieldPlus fund held an astonishing 56 percent of its assets in risky mortgage-backed securities and asset-backed obligations (38 percent of all assets held in collateralized mortgage obligations) at a time when it was holding itself out as a safe haven for conservative investors and retirees, the claims assert;

-- Schwab's management opened the door to the fund's high concentration of risky mortgage and asset-backed securities by unilaterally determining that the mortgage industry didn't constitute a single industry for purposes of analyzing diversification of risks in the portfolio, the claims assert;   

--  On the eve of the credit crisis in May 2007, the Schwab YieldPlus Fund had 6.5 percent of its holdings in cash, compared to its peers in the Ultrashort Bond Fund category who held, on average, 26.8 percent of their positions in cash. The meager cash holdings of the Schwab YieldPlus Fund set the stage for the fund's meltdown when investors sought approximately $2.8 billion in redemptions during August 2007 in the wake of concerns following the collapse of two Bear Sterns hedge funds, the claims assert;

-- Schwab's management on Nov.  2, 2007 filed with the SEC the Schwab YieldPlus Fund annual report for the period ending Aug. 31, 2007.  The annual report disclosed the fund's total net assets  ($10.696 billion) but failed to disclose the approximately $2.8 billion in investor redemptions that took place in August 2007.  The redemptions were also not disclosed in the revised prospectus for the YieldPlus Fund filed Nov. 14, 2007. By Nov. 30, 2007, the Schwab YieldPlus Fund's total net assets had dropped further to  $8.027 billion, a $5.464 billion or 40.5 percent decline from the fund's total net assets of $13.5 billion on July 31, 2007, the claims assert;   

-- Schwab ignored the warnings of securities and banking regulators about the risky nature of mortgage backed securities and collateralized mortgage obligations that date back to the early 1990s. Securities regulators, including FINRA (formerly known as NASD) warned member firms as early as 1992 to refrain from deceptive advertising of CMOs including comparisons to certificates of deposits. Banking regulators warned of the liquidity risks of CMOs, the claims assert; and

-- Charles Schwab executives and former high profile fund manager Kimon Daifotis committed misconduct when they embarked on a "damage control" campaign to avert liquidations of Schwab YieldPlus by Charles Schwab retail clients. Behind the scenes, Schwab dumped 2.9 million YieldPlus shares from the portfolios of its other proprietary mutual funds from Jan. 31, 2008 to April 1, 2008 while unwitting Schwab clients simultaneously held on to their shares, the claims assert. 

 "By comparing YieldPlus to the average losses suffered by other ultra-short term bond funds as a whole, it becomes clear that it was Schwab's reckless fund management and not the 'market' that caused the damages in these cases," investor attorney Chris Vernon said.

"The tragedy is that these cases involve people who were attempting to avoid the risks of the 'market' and willingly gave up the potential reward that goes with higher risk. They suffered significant losses to their principal because the fund was dramatically riskier than Charles Schwab portrayed it," Vernon said.

 

Contact:

-- Thomas F. Shine, a former Securities and Exchange Commission Division of Enforcement attorney (Florida, 800-838-8320, www.thomasfshinelaw.com);

-- Christopher T. Vernon, an investor rights attorney who represents investors throughout the United States (Florida, 239-649-5390, www.vernonhealy.com);

-- Thomas D. Mauriello, an investor rights attorney who represents investors throughout the United States (California, 888-612-1961, www.maurlaw.com);

-- Timothy J. Dennin, a former Securities and Exchange Commission Division of Enforcement attorney and former assistant district attorney, (New York, 212-826-1500, www.denninlaw.com)

March 5, 2009, San Francisco, California -- Three California retirees with principal losses totaling over $200,000 filed claims today against Charles Schwab & Co. and its former high-profile fund manager, Kimon Daifotis, asserting that Schwab deceptively marketed its Schwab YieldPlus Fund as a "cash alternative" with safety comparable to that of 1 and 2-year certificates of deposits.  

The Schwab YieldPlus Fund, (SWYSX), which was marketed to investors as a safe, ultra short-term bond fund, actually contained high concentrations of mortgage- and asset-backed securities that exposed fund investors to the risk of substantial losses of principal, the claim asserts.

"The Schwab YieldPlus Fund was significantly riskier than Charles Schwab represented," said Thomas D. Mauriello, a California investor rights attorney who filed today's claim along with former SEC enforcement attorney Thomas Shine and investor rights attorney Christopher Vernon.

Mauriello noted that shares of other ultra short-term bond funds lost less than 2 percent of their value, on average, from June 30, 2007 to June 30, 2008.  During that same time, Schwab YieldPlus Fund shares dropped 31.62 percent -- a loss that was more than double the decline of the S&P 500 Index for the relevant period.

"The Schwab YieldPlus Fund is virtually alone among its peers in exposing conservative investors to these kinds of steep losses of principal," Mauriello said.

Moreover, Schwab profited handsomely from its deceptive marketing of the Schwab YieldPlus Fund to conservative investors as the fund experienced tremendous growth, according to the claim.

From 2003 to 2007, Charles Schwab Investment Management, a wholly-owned subsidiary of parent Charles Schwab Corp., saw its annual management fees of the Schwab YieldPlus Fund grow by 600 percent, the claim states. Schwab earned management fees of $76 million during that time, as the fund grew to peak net assets of $13.5 billion on July 31, 2007.    

By May 31, 2008, the fund's net assets had plunged by more than 96 percent to $507 million.  

This risky investment composition of the Schwab YieldPlus Fund by fund managers compromised the fund's liquidity and forced it to sell off asset-backed and mortgage-backed securities at distressed prices as more and more investors sought redemptions beginning in August 2007, the claim asserts.     

One of the retirees who filed a claim today, a 69-year-old widow from Rio Vista, California, thought her investment in the Schwab YieldPlus Fund was virtually the same as a money market fund investment based on the representations of her Schwab investment advisor, the claim states.

Also filing a claim today was a retired couple from Solvang, California who lost approximately $166,000 of their principal investment in the Schwab YieldPlus Fund.

Securities fraud litigators in the Shine-Vernon legal team have now filed claims on behalf of both corporate and individual Schwab YieldPlus Fund investor clients in California, New York, Texas, Florida, Missouri, Minnesota, Illinois and Hawaii, and they are currently investigating claims on behalf of investors in multiple other states. The team includes former SEC enforcement attorneys, former federal and state prosecutors, and investor rights attorneys from California, New York, Florida, Texas and Illinois.

Contact:
-- Thomas D. Mauriello, an investor rights attorney who represents investors throughout the United States (California, 888-612-1961, www.maurlaw.com);

-- Thomas F. Shine, a former Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") Division of Enforcement attorney (Florida, 800-838-8320, www.thomasfshinelaw.com);

-- Christopher T. Vernon, an investor rights attorney who represents investors throughout the United States (Florida, 239-649-5390, www.vernonhealy.com)




San Francisco, California -- Charles Schwab & Co. and its former high-profile fund manager engaged in deception and dishonest conduct when they misrepresented  the Schwab YieldPlus Fund and the Schwab California Tax Free YieldPlus Fund as safe investments for investors seeking to protect their principal.  In fact, the funds' high concentrations in risky and mostly illiquid securities exposed investors to the risk of substantial losses of principal, according to an arbitration claim filed today on behalf of a retired California couple.

The couple, a retired corporate executive and his wife, lost more than $300,000 in the funds (SWYSX and SWYCX), which were marketed by Charles Schwab as "cash alternatives" with safety akin to money market funds and certificates of deposit.  The couple, a retired corporate executive and his wife, lost more than $300,000 in the funds (SWYSX and SWYCX), which were marketed by Charles Schwab as "cash alternatives" with safety akin to money market funds and certificates of deposit. 

"It is particularly disturbing that many of the investors in SWYSX and SWYCX are elderly investors and retirees," said Thomas D. Mauriello, a California investor rights attorney who filed today's claim along with former SEC enforcement attorney Thomas Shine and investor rights attorney Christopher Vernon. "These investors were not interested in risk.  With respect to the Schwab California Tax-Free YieldPlus Fund, they expected a low-risk fund to generate modest tax free income.  Instead, they suffered significant losses to their principal because the fund was dramatically riskier than  Charles Schwab represented it to be."

The claim accuses Charles Schwab of failing to disclose or misrepresenting the risks associated with the concentration of the Schwab YieldPlus Fund in high-risk mortgage and asset-backed securities. This concentration compromised the liquidity of the fund and forced it to sell off asset-backed and mortgage-backed securities at distressed prices as more and more investors sought redemptions beginning in August 2007, the claim asserts.

Illiquidity coupled with investor redemptions plunged the Schwab YieldPlus Fund into a catastrophic free-fall: The fund saw net assets peak at $13.5 billion on July 31, 2007 and by May 31, 2008, the fund's assets had plunged by more than 96 percent to $507 million.    

In the Schwab California Tax Free YieldPlus Fund, Schwab fund managers put increasing portions of the fund's portfolio assets into auction rate securities and floating rate bonds. These investments compromised the liquidity of the Schwab California Tax Free YieldPlus Fund and contributed to the funds' decline in the face of large investor redemptions, the claim asserts. The SWYCX fund's total managed assets plummeted from $1.2 billion as of July 31, 2007 to $157 million just 13 months later.


The claim filed today effectively alleges that Schwab and former fund manager Kimon Daifotis engaged in misconduct when they embarked on a damage control campaign to avoid liquidations of the Schwab Yield Plus Fund by  Schwab clients while, behind the scenes,   Schwab dumped 2.9 million Schwab YieldPlus Fund shares from the portfolios of other Schwab proprietary mutual funds.

These deceptive tactics effectively encouraged customers to hold on to their shares allowed Schwab's broker-dealer arm and fund manager Daifotis to liquidate Schwab YieldPlus Fund shares from other Schwab mutual funds and obtain better selling prices ahead of their own retail customers, according to the claim.

Securities fraud litigators in the Shine-Vernon legal team have now filed claims on behalf of both corporate and individual Schwab YieldPlus Fund investor clients in California, New York, Texas, Florida, Missouri, Minnesota, Illinois and Hawaii, and they are currently investigating claims on behalf of investors in multiple other states. The team includes former SEC enforcement attorneys, former federal and state prosecutors, and investor rights attorneys from California, New York, Florida, Texas and Illinois.

Contact:

Thomas F. Shine, a former Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") Division of Enforcement attorney (Florida, 800-838-8320, www.thomasfshinelawblog.com);

 

Read this story on MSNBC


Naples, Fla. -- The Shine-Vernon legal team has formed a coast-to-coast alliance with other former Securities and Exchange Commission regulators, former prosecutors and investor advocates to investigate misconduct and seek recovery of losses for purchasers of the Schwab YieldPlus Fund.

Securities fraud litigators in the alliance have now filed claims on behalf of both corporate and individual investor clients in California, New York, Texas, Florida, Missouri, Minnesota, Illinois and Hawaii, and are currently investigating claims on behalf of investors in multiple other states.

The team filed another arbitration claim today on behalf of a California retiree who sustained more than $225,000 in Schwab YieldPlus Fund losses in his retirement savings account. Just prior to investing in the Schwab YieldPlus Fund, the retiree had the bulk of his retirement savings in cash or money market funds. Today's claim follows earlier claims filed by the team on behalf of corporate and small business owners, a retired publisher, a retired accountant, a retired emergency room physician, a retired computer consultant and an 82-year-old widow -- among others.

Charles Schwab & Co. marketed its Schwab YieldPlus Fund as a safe "cash alternative" to retirees and others around the country, but that safety was a charade: The Schwab YieldPlus Fund has lost more than 40 percent of its value in the past 18 months because of the reckless concentration of mortgage and asset-backed securities in the fund by former high-profile fund manager Kimon Daifotis.

Charles Schwab issued inaccurate statements or omitted information regarding material facts about the fund's lack of diversification and deceived Schwab YieldPlus Fund investors by concentrating the fund in mortgage and asset-backed securities while it touted the fund's safety on its web site and to financial advisors who recommended the fund, the claim states. Charles Schwab compared the safety of its Schwab YieldPlus Fund to that of one and two-year certificates of deposit.

"People from all walks of life invested in Schwab's YieldPlus Fund, and investors who sought safety in YieldPlus are now paying dearly for Schwab's betrayal," securities attorney Christopher Vernon said. "We believe we've assembled an exceptional group of attorneys to bring claims on behalf of Schwab YieldPlus investors seeking recovery."

For in-depth information about the Schwab YieldPlus Fund, see  http://www.protectinginvestors.com and http://www.thomasfshinelawblog.com

The alliance includes:

  • Christopher Bebel, a former Securities and Exchange Commission Division of Enforcement attorney, former regulator with the Financial Industry Regulatory Association (aka NASD) and former federal prosecutor, (Texas, 281-348-2572, www.chrisbebel.com);
  • Timothy Dennin, a former Securities and Exchange Commission Division of Enforcement attorney and former assistant district attorney, (New York, 212-826-1500, www.denninlaw.com);
  • Thomas Mauriello, an investor rights attorney who represents investors throughout the United States, (California, 888-612-1961, www.maurlaw.com);
  •  Howard Prossnitz, an investor rights attorney who represents investors throughout the United States (Illinois, 312-960-1800, www.prossnitzlaw.com);
  • Thomas Shine, a former Securities and Exchange Commission Division of Enforcement attorney (Florida, 321-724-4445, www.thomasfshinelaw.com);
  • Christopher Vernon, an investor rights attorney who represents investors throughout the United States (Florida, 239-649-5390, www.vernonhealy.com

Charles Schwab & Co.'s misrepresentations about the safety of the Schwab YieldPlus Fund caused considerable harm to the business operations of a California-based company, according to a claim filed with FINRA Dispute Resolution today by the investor rights' legal team headed by former Securities and Exchange Commission attorney Thomas F. Shine and investor rights' attorneys Christopher T. Vernon and Thomas D. Mauriello.

The San Diego-based corporation, which develops service solutions for small businesses and consumers, had recently sold one of its business segments and its executives were looking for a safe place to invest the sales proceeds while they laid the groundwork for developing a new line of business for the company.  


Charles Schwab's web page promoting its Schwab YieldPlus Fund invited investors to "discover a smart alternative for your long-term cash." Charles Schwab touted the Schwab YieldPlus Fund as a safe and conservative "cash alternative" and compared its safety to that of one and two-year certificates of deposit, but investors have seen the bond mutual fund's price fall by almost 40 percent during the past sixteen months.

The claim alleges that Charles Schwab issued inaccurate statements and omitted material facts about the fund's lack of diversification and deceived Schwab YieldPlus Fund investors by concentrating the fund in mortgage and asset-backed securities while it recklessly touted the fund's safety on its web site and to financial advisors who recommended the fund.

In addition, Charles Schwab executives and former high profile fund manager Kimon Daifotis committed misconduct when they embarked on a "damage control" campaign to avert liquidations of Schwab YieldPlus by Charles Schwab clients, the claim contends. Behind the scenes, Schwab dumped 2.9 million YieldPlus shares from the portfolios of its other mutual funds from Jan. 31, 2008 to April 1, 2008 while unwitting Schwab clients simultaneously held on to their shares.

The Shine-Vernon legal team believes that this case is a prime example of the adverse economic consequences of the misconduct and deceptions engaged in by financial firms like Charles Schwab in recent years. It's not only retirees who've been hurt, but also companies small and large who thought they were maintaining their operating capital in safe, conservative accounts.

"This is the type of financial institution behavior that can have a direct impact on Main Street's ability to create and protect jobs and this misconduct should not go unpunished," Vernon said. In addition to the arbitration claim filed on behalf of the corporate client described herein, which will be heard in San Diego, the Shine-Vernon team has filed arbitration claims against Charles Schwab with the Financial Industry Regulatory Association (FINRA) on behalf of investors from California, New York, Texas, Florida, Missouri, Minnesota, Illinois and Hawaii and is currently investigating claims in New Mexico, Virginia, and several other states as part of its nationwide fraud investigation of the Schwab YieldPlus Fund.

Thomas Shine, a former enforcement attorney with the Securities and Exchange Commission in Washington, D.C., is in private practice in the Melbourne, Fla. area. Securities attorney Chris Vernon is a founding partner of the Naples, Fla. based law firm Vernon Healy, which represents investors throughout the United States. Thomas Mauriello is in private practice in Southern California and represents investors throughout California.


Release URL: http://www.protectinginvestors.com/
For information, contact:


Thomas F. Shine, attorney at law

http://www.thomasfshinelaw.com http://www.thomasfshinelawblog.com
321-724-4445

1-800-838-8320

e-mail: tfshine@aol.com


or

Christopher T. Vernon, attorney at law

http://www.vernonhealy.com
http://www.protectinginvestors.com

239-649-5390
1-877-649-5394
e-mail:
cvernon@vernonhealy.com


or

Thomas D. Mauriello, attorney at law
http://www.maurlaw.com
949-542-3555

1-888-612-1961

e-mail: tomm@maurlaw.com

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Pages

Powered by Movable Type 4.1