Front-Running

Laws & Regulations High Relevance

The prohibited practice of trading in a security ahead of a client's order to profit from the anticipated price movement caused by the client's trade. Constitutes a severe breach of fiduciary duty and misuse of material non-public information. Violates both state and federal securities laws.

Example

An investment adviser receives a $5 million buy order for ABC stock from a pension fund client. Before executing the client order, the adviser purchases 1,000 shares of ABC for their personal account at $50, knowing the large client order will likely drive the price up to $52.

Common Confusion

Front-running uses knowledge of pending client orders (material non-public information), not traditional insider information about the company itself. Both are illegal but involve different information sources.

How This Is Tested

  • Identifying front-running scenarios where advisers trade ahead of client orders
  • Understanding that front-running violates the duty of loyalty to clients
  • Recognizing that knowledge of pending client orders constitutes material non-public information
  • Determining appropriate penalties and regulatory consequences for front-running
  • Distinguishing front-running from other prohibited practices like churning or insider trading

Regulatory Limits

Description Limit Notes
Classification Federal securities law violation Violates Investment Advisers Act of 1940, Section 206 (antifraud provisions)
State enforcement Uniform Securities Act violation Prohibited as unethical business practice under state law
Fiduciary breach Duty of loyalty violation Places adviser interests ahead of client interests

Example Exam Questions

Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.

Question 1

Jennifer, an investment adviser representative, receives an order from her largest institutional client to purchase 500,000 shares of TechCorp stock, which will likely move the market price significantly. Before executing the client order, Jennifer purchases 2,000 shares of TechCorp in her personal brokerage account. After executing the client's order at progressively higher prices, Jennifer sells her personal shares for a quick profit. Which of the following best describes Jennifer's actions?

Question 2

Front-running primarily violates which fiduciary duty owed by investment advisers to their clients?

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Question 3

An investment adviser front-runs a client's order by purchasing 5,000 shares at $40 per share before executing the client's 200,000-share buy order. The client's large order moves the market price to $42. The adviser immediately sells their 5,000 shares at the new market price. What is the adviser's illegal profit from this front-running scheme?

Question 4

All of the following statements about front-running are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

An investment adviser representative learns that a major institutional client will be placing a large sell order for 1 million shares of XYZ Corporation tomorrow morning, likely driving down the price. Which of the following actions would constitute illegal front-running?

1. Selling XYZ shares short in the adviser's personal account today
2. Recommending other clients sell XYZ stock before executing the institutional order
3. Purchasing put options on XYZ stock in the adviser's personal account
4. Informing the institutional client that the order may have significant market impact

๐Ÿ’ก Memory Aid

Front-Running = "Cutting in Line": Adviser sees client's shopping list, sprints ahead to buy first, resells at markup. Uses client order info (MNPI). ALWAYS prohibited - no exceptions, no disclosure cure!

Related Concepts

This term is part of this cluster:

Where This Appears on the Exam

This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics:

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