Chattanooga Times Free Press

SunTrust: Federal agency may hit its investment unit with fraud charge

- BY RUSSELL GRANTHAM THE ATLANTA JOURNALCON­STITUTION

Fraud charges against SunTrust Banks are being considered by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission over allegation­s its investment business steered customers into costly mutual funds when cheaper options were available.

The Atlanta bank said in a filing the SEC’s enforcemen­t division “made a preliminar­y determinat­ion to recommend that the SEC bring an enforcemen­t action” against SunTrust Investment Services, the bank’s broker-dealer and insurance arm.

The federal probe was disclosed last week in SunTrust’s annual report filed with the SEC.

If found guilty, the bank potentiall­y faces not only fines but the potential loss of some of its investment business income and its fast-track status for issuing new bonds and other securities.

In late 2015, J.P. Morgan paid $267 million to settle SEC charges that it failed to disclose conflicts of interest when it steered customers into its own investment products that were more costly than alternativ­e funds.

Last year, the SEC launched a campaign to investigat­e whether banks and investment firms were making self-serving investment recommenda­tions to customers.

At the center of the SunTrust investigat­ion is whether the bank’s investment arm bought costly mutual funds on the behalf of clients that charged a type of marketing fee, called 12b-1 fees, rather than recommendi­ng cheaper mutual funds that don’t charge such fees.

Often, mutual funds that charge the higher fees pay higher commission­s to the companies and brokers that sell them.

Such actions could violate the 77-yearold federal Investment Advisers Act. The law requires money managers registered with the SEC, as SunTrust’s investment unit is, to act in their clients’ best interests.

The U.S. Department of Labor rolled out a similar rule, set to take effect next month, that requires brokers, insurance agents and other investment advisers to act in clients’ best interests when selling or recommendi­ng investment­s in retirement accounts, such as 401(k) accounts.

However, President Donald Trump is seeking to de-rail that new rule by delaying it or repealing it. Last month, he issued an executive order directing the Labor Department to delay implementa­tion of the so-called fiduciary rule, which is set to take effect April 10. This week, the Labor Department proposed delaying it for 60 days.

Meanwhile, SunTrust said in its filing that its investment business, STIS, is “researchin­g the extent to which alternate mutual fund classes existed which did not impose such fees.”

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