Commission
Commission
Per-transaction compensation paid to broker-dealers and agents based on each trade executed, creating potential conflicts of interest between generating transactions and serving client interests. Differs from fee-based advisory compensation (typically a percentage of AUM). Subject to suitability obligations and reasonableness standards.
A broker-dealer agent earns a $200 commission on each stock trade executed for a client. This creates an inherent conflict: the agent profits more from frequent trading, potentially incentivizing excessive transactions even when staying invested would better serve the client. In contrast, a fee-based adviser charging 1% of AUM annually has no per-trade incentive.
Students often confuse commissions (per-transaction payments to broker-dealers/agents) with advisory fees (ongoing percentage of AUM paid to investment advisers). Commission-based compensation creates churning risk because advisers profit from each trade, while fee-based compensation aligns adviser and client interests since both benefit from portfolio growth.
How This Is Tested
- Identifying when commission-based compensation creates conflicts of interest or churning violations
- Distinguishing between commission-based broker-dealer compensation and fee-based advisory compensation
- Determining whether commission structures meet suitability and reasonableness standards
- Recognizing disclosure obligations when receiving commission compensation
- Understanding when excessive commissions violate fiduciary or suitability duties
Regulatory Limits
| Description | Limit | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Reasonableness standard | Commissions must be reasonable and not excessive | No specific percentage cap exists; determined by industry standards and transaction complexity |
| Suitability requirement | Commission-based recommendations must meet suitability standards | Recommendations must be appropriate for client objectives, risk tolerance, and financial situation |
| Disclosure obligation | Commission arrangements must be disclosed to clients | Material compensation arrangements must be disclosed in writing |
| Churning prohibition | Excessive trading to generate commissions is prohibited | Requires control over account, excessive trading activity, and intent to generate commissions |
Example Exam Questions
Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.
David, a conservative 55-year-old investor with a $300,000 portfolio, works with a commission-based broker. Over the past year, the broker executed 65 trades in David's account, generating $12,000 in commissions. David's account returned 3% while the S&P 500 returned 11%. The broker tells David that "active trading captures market opportunities." Meanwhile, David's colleague Emily uses a fee-based adviser who charges 1% of AUM annually, executed 8 trades, and her account returned 10%. Which statement best describes this situation?
B is correct. This scenario illustrates the core conflict created by commission-based compensation. David paid $12,000 (4% of account value) for 65 trades that significantly underperformed the market, while Emily paid $3,000 (1%) for 8 trades that matched market performance. The broker's per-transaction compensation created an incentive to trade excessively, likely constituting churning given the control, excessive activity (65 trades for a conservative investor), and commission-generation motive.
A is incorrect because positive absolute returns do not justify excessive trading that generates high commissions and underperforms benchmarks. The 8% underperformance is significant. C is incorrect because the compensation structures are NOT equivalent: David paid 4x more in costs and received inferior results, demonstrating how commission incentives can harm clients. D is incorrect because legal and disclosed compensation does not eliminate suitability or fiduciary violations. excessive trading driven by commission incentives violates the reasonableness standard and potentially constitutes churning.
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to identify how commission-based compensation creates conflicts of interest that can lead to churning and suitability violations. Understanding the structural difference between per-transaction commissions (which incentivize trading volume) and fee-based compensation (which aligns adviser and client interests) is critical for recognizing prohibited practices.
What is the primary difference between commission-based compensation paid to broker-dealer agents and fee-based compensation paid to investment advisers?
B is correct. The fundamental difference is the payment structure and resulting incentives. Commission-based compensation pays the agent for each individual transaction, creating an incentive to maximize trading frequency (even when unnecessary). Fee-based advisory compensation typically charges a percentage of assets under management (AUM) annually, aligning the adviser's interests with the client's since both benefit from portfolio growth rather than transaction volume.
A is incorrect because commission-based compensation is legal and widely used by broker-dealers; it simply creates different conflicts than fee-based compensation. C is incorrect because BOTH commission arrangements and advisory fee structures require disclosure to clients. commissions must be disclosed per transaction or in advance, and advisory fees must be disclosed in Form ADV Part 2A. D is incorrect because commissions have no specific regulatory percentage cap; they must be "reasonable" based on industry standards, services provided, and transaction complexity.
The Series 65 exam frequently tests understanding of how different compensation structures create different conflicts of interest. Commission-based compensation is a core concept for identifying churning violations, suitability issues, and conflicts between broker-dealer and investment adviser business models. Recognizing that commissions incentivize trading volume while AUM fees incentivize portfolio growth is essential.
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Access Free BetaA broker recommends that a client purchase a corporate bond generating a $500 commission for the broker. The client is conservative, seeking income, and the bond has investment-grade rating with a 5% yield. An identical bond from a different issuer with the same rating and yield is available at another firm for a $200 commission, but the broker does not mention this alternative. Which statement is most accurate?
C is correct. This question highlights the critical difference between suitability (broker-dealer standard) and fiduciary duty (investment adviser standard). The bond itself is suitable: it matches the client's conservative profile and income objectives. Under broker-dealer suitability rules, the recommendation is appropriate even though a lower-cost alternative exists, as long as the commission is reasonable. However, if the broker were acting as an investment adviser with fiduciary duty, they would be required to recommend the lower-cost identical bond because fiduciary duty requires acting in the client's BEST interest, not just making appropriate recommendations.
A is partially true but incomplete: the bond is suitable, but this doesn't address the compensation issue or the existence of a better alternative. B is incorrect because the $500 commission itself is not necessarily "excessive" in absolute terms for a bond transaction, and the existence of a lower-cost alternative does not automatically make the recommendation unsuitable under broker-dealer standards. D is incorrect because disclosure alone does not satisfy best interest or eliminate all conflicts; the question is whether the recommendation meets applicable standards, not just whether it's disclosed.
The Series 65 exam tests your understanding that broker-dealers operating under suitability standards have different obligations than investment advisers operating under fiduciary duty. Commission-based recommendations must be suitable (appropriate for the client), but need not be optimal. This is a critical distinction because the Series 65 primarily covers investment adviser regulation, where fiduciary duty applies and advisers must act in the client's best interest regardless of compensation structure.
All of the following statements about commission-based compensation are accurate EXCEPT
C is correct (the EXCEPT answer). Commission-based compensation does NOT eliminate suitability requirements. Regardless of how a broker-dealer or agent is compensated (commissions, fees, or other arrangements), they must still ensure that recommendations are suitable for the client based on the client's investment profile, objectives, risk tolerance, and financial situation. The compensation structure is irrelevant to the suitability obligation.
A is accurate: Commission-based compensation inherently creates a conflict because the agent earns more by executing more transactions, which may not align with the client's best interest of minimizing unnecessary trading costs. B is accurate: Churning (excessive trading to generate commissions) is a prohibited practice that violates both fiduciary duty and suitability standards, particularly when the agent has control over the account and trades excessively with intent to generate commissions. D is accurate: While no specific percentage cap exists for commissions, they must be "reasonable" based on the complexity of the transaction, services provided, and prevailing industry standards for similar transactions.
The Series 65 exam tests your understanding that suitability obligations apply regardless of compensation structure. Many candidates incorrectly believe that commission-based compensation or client knowledge of fees eliminates compliance requirements. Understanding that all recommendations must meet suitability standards and that commissions must be reasonable is essential for identifying violations.
A broker-dealer agent recommends a mutual fund to a client that charges a 5.75% front-end load, from which the agent receives a 4% commission. An identical no-load mutual fund with the same investment strategy, holdings, and performance history is available, but the agent does not receive any commission on no-load funds. The client is a long-term investor seeking growth. Which of the following statements are accurate?
1. The agent has a conflict of interest between earning commission and recommending the lower-cost option
2. The recommendation violates suitability because a no-load alternative exists
3. Under broker-dealer suitability standards, the recommendation may be acceptable if the load fund is suitable and the commission is disclosed
4. Under investment adviser fiduciary standards, the adviser would be required to recommend the no-load fund
B is correct. Statements 1, 3, and 4 are accurate.
Statement 1 is TRUE: The agent faces a clear conflict of interest. recommending the load fund generates a 4% commission, while recommending the identical no-load fund generates no commission. This creates an incentive to recommend the higher-cost option despite it being financially worse for the client.
Statement 2 is FALSE: The recommendation does not automatically violate broker-dealer suitability standards merely because a lower-cost alternative exists. Under suitability (as opposed to fiduciary duty), the recommendation must be appropriate for the client's objectives and risk tolerance, which the load fund may satisfy. Broker-dealers are held to a suitability standard (appropriate), not a best interest standard (optimal), though the commission must be reasonable and disclosed.
Statement 3 is TRUE: Under broker-dealer suitability standards, the agent can recommend the load fund if it meets the client's investment objectives, risk tolerance, and financial situation, the 5.75% load is reasonable for the industry and services provided, and the commission/load is properly disclosed. Suitability does not require recommending the absolute lowest-cost option.
Statement 4 is TRUE: Under investment adviser fiduciary duty, the adviser would be required to recommend the no-load fund. Fiduciary duty requires acting in the client's BEST interest, and when two funds are identical except for cost, the lower-cost option is always in the client's best interest. Disclosure of the conflict does not eliminate the duty to recommend the optimal choice.
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to distinguish between broker-dealer suitability standards and investment adviser fiduciary standards, especially regarding compensation conflicts. This question demonstrates how commission-based compensation creates conflicts, how those conflicts are managed differently under different regulatory frameworks, and why fiduciary duty is considered a higher standard. Understanding these distinctions is critical because investment advisers (the primary focus of Series 65) owe fiduciary duty regardless of how they are compensated.
💡 Memory Aid
Think of commissions like paying a taxi driver per turn they take: The more turns (trades) they make, the more they earn, even if a direct route (buy-and-hold) gets you there faster and cheaper. Per-Transaction = Potential Churning. Fee-based advisers are like Uber (flat rate): they profit when you reach your destination successfully, not from taking extra turns.
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Where This Appears on the Exam
This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics: