Reasonable Basis Suitability
Reasonable Basis Suitability
The first prong of FINRA Rule 2111's three-part suitability test requiring the adviser or broker to have a reasonable basis to believe a security or strategy is suitable for at least SOME investors before recommending it to ANY client. Requires understanding the product's features, risks, potential returns, and costs through reasonable diligence and investigation.
Before recommending a complex leveraged inverse ETF, a broker must research and understand the product's daily rebalancing mechanics, compounding effects, and suitability only for short-term sophisticated traders. Without this research, recommending it to anyone violates reasonable basis suitability, even if a particular client has high risk tolerance.
Students often confuse reasonable basis suitability (understanding the PRODUCT is suitable for SOME investors) with customer-specific suitability (matching the product to THIS PARTICULAR client). Reasonable basis is about product understanding and general suitability, not individual client matching.
How This Is Tested
- Identifying when an adviser lacks reasonable basis due to insufficient product research or understanding
- Distinguishing reasonable basis suitability (product-level) from customer-specific suitability (client-level)
- Recognizing violations when complex products are recommended without adequate due diligence
- Understanding that reasonable basis must be established BEFORE any recommendation to ANY client
- Evaluating whether an adviser performed adequate investigation of a security's features, risks, and costs
Regulatory Limits
| Description | Limit | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| FINRA Rule 2111 reasonable basis requirement | Must have reasonable basis to believe the security or strategy is suitable for at least some investors | Required before ANY recommendation to ANY client; based on reasonable diligence and investigation |
| Three prongs of suitability (FINRA Rule 2111) | Reasonable basis, customer-specific, and quantitative suitability | All three must be satisfied for each recommendation |
Example Exam Questions
Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.
David, a broker-dealer representative, learns about a new structured product from a wholesaler who claims it offers "equity-like returns with downside protection." David finds the product appealing and begins recommending it to several of his aggressive growth clients without reading the prospectus or understanding the derivative structure, fees, or liquidity constraints. Which type of suitability violation has David most likely committed?
B is correct. David violated reasonable basis suitability by recommending a complex structured product without performing adequate due diligence. Reasonable basis requires the adviser to understand the product's features, risks, returns, costs, and liquidity through reasonable investigation BEFORE recommending it to ANY client. Relying solely on a wholesaler's sales pitch without reading the prospectus or understanding the derivative structure is insufficient.
A is incorrect because customer-specific suitability addresses whether the product matches each individual client's profile, not the adviser's product understanding. While David may have also violated customer-specific suitability, the primary violation is reasonable basis. C is incorrect because quantitative suitability addresses excessive trading frequency or turnover, not the number of different clients receiving the same recommendation. D is incorrect because advisers cannot delegate their due diligence obligation to wholesalers; they must independently verify and understand products before recommending them.
The Series 65 exam tests your understanding that reasonable basis suitability is the foundation of all recommendations. An adviser must research and understand a product's mechanics, risks, and costs BEFORE recommending it to anyone. No amount of client matching (customer-specific suitability) can cure a recommendation made without reasonable basis. This protects investors from advisers pushing products they don't understand.
What does reasonable basis suitability require under FINRA Rule 2111?
B is correct. Reasonable basis suitability requires the adviser to have a reasonable basis to believe that a security or investment strategy is suitable for at least SOME investors before recommending it to ANY client. This requires understanding the product through reasonable diligence, including its features, risks, potential returns, costs, and complexity.
A describes customer-specific suitability (the second prong), which requires matching the recommendation to the individual client's profile. C describes quantitative suitability (the third prong), which addresses excessive trading even when individual transactions are suitable. D is incorrect because reasonable returns are not the standard; the standard is understanding whether the product is suitable for some category of investors based on its risk-return profile.
The Series 65 exam frequently tests your ability to distinguish among the three types of suitability. Reasonable basis is the first prong, focusing on product-level understanding and general suitability. Understanding this distinction is critical for identifying which type of suitability violation has occurred in scenario-based questions.
Master Laws & Regulations Concepts
CertFuel's spaced repetition system helps you retain key terms like Reasonable Basis Suitability and 500+ other exam concepts. Start practicing for free.
Access Free BetaAn adviser is considering recommending a new cryptocurrency-linked exchange-traded note (ETN) to clients. Which of the following actions would best satisfy the reasonable basis suitability requirement?
B is correct. Reading the prospectus and thoroughly understanding the ETN's mechanics, risks (including credit risk since ETNs are debt instruments of the issuer), and liquidity directly satisfies reasonable basis suitability. The adviser must understand WHAT they're recommending BEFORE recommending it to ANY client.
A addresses customer-specific suitability (matching the investment to the client's profile), not reasonable basis suitability (understanding the product itself). C addresses quantitative suitability or concentration risk management, not whether the adviser understands the product. D addresses customer-specific suitability by considering client experience, but does not establish that the adviser has adequate product understanding.
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to identify actions that satisfy each of the three suitability prongs. Reasonable basis is satisfied through due diligence and product research BEFORE any client interaction. This question type requires recognizing that understanding the product comes first, then matching it to appropriate clients (customer-specific), then managing trading frequency (quantitative).
All of the following statements about reasonable basis suitability are accurate EXCEPT
C is correct (the EXCEPT answer). This statement is FALSE. Reasonable basis suitability is about understanding the PRODUCT, not about client matching. Just because a product is suitable for one client does NOT mean the adviser has established reasonable basis for understanding the product itself. Reasonable basis requires independent due diligence and investigation of the product's characteristics, regardless of individual client profiles. Additionally, customer-specific suitability (not reasonable basis) determines whether a product matches a particular client.
A is accurate: Reasonable basis requires understanding product features, risks, potential returns, costs, and complexity through reasonable diligence. B is accurate: Reasonable basis is the first prong and must be satisfied BEFORE making recommendations to anyone. D is accurate: The standard is "suitable for at least some investors," not all investors. a highly risky derivative might be suitable for sophisticated traders but not for conservative retirees, and that's acceptable if the adviser understands it.
The Series 65 exam tests your understanding that reasonable basis suitability is product-focused and universal (must be done for every product before ANY recommendation), while customer-specific suitability is client-focused and individualized (must be done for EACH client receiving a recommendation). Confusing these two prongs is a common mistake.
A broker is evaluating whether to recommend a new variable annuity product with complex living benefit riders. The broker has taken the following actions. Which satisfy the reasonable basis suitability requirement?
1. Attended a 2-hour training session conducted by the insurance company explaining the product features and benefits
2. Read the product prospectus and understood the fees, surrender charges, and how the living benefit rider calculates payouts
3. Verified that at least three of the broker's existing clients have investment profiles that would match this product
4. Researched independent third-party analyses of similar variable annuity products to understand industry-wide risks and costs
C is correct. Statements 1, 2, and 4 satisfy reasonable basis suitability.
Statement 1 is TRUE: Attending product training helps the adviser understand the features and benefits, contributing to reasonable basis. However, training alone from the product issuer is typically insufficient without independent verification.
Statement 2 is TRUE: Reading the prospectus and understanding fees, surrender charges, and payout mechanics directly satisfies the requirement to understand the product's features, risks, and costs. This is essential for reasonable basis.
Statement 3 is FALSE: Verifying that existing clients might be suitable for the product addresses customer-specific suitability (client matching), NOT reasonable basis suitability (product understanding). Reasonable basis must be established BEFORE considering any individual clients.
Statement 4 is TRUE: Researching independent third-party analyses demonstrates reasonable diligence by going beyond issuer-provided materials to understand broader risks and cost comparisons. This strengthens the reasonable basis determination.
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to distinguish between actions that establish reasonable basis (product research, prospectus review, independent analysis) and actions that address other suitability prongs (client matching for customer-specific, trading frequency for quantitative). The key insight is that reasonable basis is entirely about understanding the PRODUCT, not about CLIENT profiles. Multiple sources of product information (issuer training, prospectus, independent research) provide stronger reasonable basis than relying on any single source.
💡 Memory Aid
Think of reasonable basis like a doctor learning about a new drug BEFORE prescribing it: The doctor must understand what it does, side effects, and who it might help (product research) BEFORE giving it to any patient (client matching). Product knowledge comes FIRST, patient matching comes SECOND. "Know the pill before prescribing the pill."
Related Concepts
This term is part of this cluster:
More in Ethical Obligations
Margin Account
A brokerage account that allows investors to borrow money from their broker-deal...
Suitability
The obligation to recommend securities appropriate for a client's financial situ...
Investment Policy Statement (IPS)
A written document that establishes a client's investment objectives, risk toler...
Where This Appears on the Exam
This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics:
Fiduciary Obligations
Practice questions on fiduciary duty, duty of care, duty of loyalty, and best interest standard....
Practice Questions →Client Profile and Data Gathering
Practice questions on risk tolerance, investment objectives, time horizon, and suitability analysis....
Practice Questions →Ethical Practices
Series 65 questions on conflicts of interest, disclosure requirements, and ethical obligations....
Practice Questions →