Common Mistakes to Avoid
Watch out for these exam traps that candidates frequently miss on Regulation of Broker-Dealers questions:
Confusing fiduciary duty (IA) vs suitability standard (BD)
Forgetting broker-dealer exclusions from IA definition
Not understanding dual registration requirements
Sample Practice Questions
A firm that effects securities transactions for its own account, buying and selling from its own inventory, is acting as a:
A is correct. A dealer effects transactions for its own account, acting as a principal by buying and selling securities from its own inventory. This is the fundamental definition of the dealer function.
B (Broker) is incorrect because a broker effects transactions for others as an agent, not for its own account. C (Agent) is incorrect because an agent is a natural person representing a broker-dealer or issuer, not a firm acting as principal. D (Investment adviser) is incorrect because IAs provide investment advice for compensation, not execute securities transactions as principal.
Understanding the broker vs. dealer distinction is fundamental to Series 65 regulation questions. This concept appears throughout the exam because it determines which regulatory standards apply. Dealers acting as principals have different disclosure obligations than brokers acting as agents. Many firms are broker-dealers, performing both functions depending on the transaction. Remember: broker equals agent (for others), dealer equals principal (own account).
Which of the following is excluded from the definition of broker-dealer?
B is correct. Banks and savings institutions are specifically excluded from the broker-dealer definition because they are subject to separate banking regulations. This exclusion prevents dual regulatory oversight.
A (Institutional investors only) is incorrect because this describes a potential exclusion from state registration for BDs without a place of business, not an exclusion from the BD definition itself. C (Office in state) is incorrect because having an office requires full registration, not an exclusion. D (Transaction-based IA) is incorrect because IAs charging transaction fees might need to register as BDs, they are not automatically excluded.
BD exclusions are heavily tested because they define the scope of securities regulation. The three main exclusions (agents, issuers, banks) appear frequently in scenario questions. This is particularly important when analyzing whether an entity needs to register as a BD. Banks have their own regulatory structure through banking authorities, so securities laws don't double-regulate them. Watch for questions that try to confuse registration exclusions with definitional exclusions.
What is the primary difference between the standard of conduct for a broker-dealer and an investment adviser?
C is correct. Broker-dealers historically operated under a suitability standard (and now Regulation Best Interest for recommendations), which applies at the time of recommendation. Investment advisers owe a fiduciary duty throughout the entire client relationship, requiring them to act in the client's best interest at all times.
A (BDs fiduciary always) is incorrect because this is backwards. Broker-dealers operate under suitability or best interest standards, not full fiduciary duty. B (IAs suitability standard) is incorrect because this confuses the standards. Investment advisers must meet the higher fiduciary standard, not just suitability. D (Same standard) is incorrect because the standards are different, which is a key regulatory distinction.
This is the #1 most commonly tested distinction in broker-dealer regulation and appears on virtually every Series 65 exam. Understanding the difference between suitability (BD) and fiduciary duty (IA) is critical for analyzing regulatory scenarios. The fiduciary standard is higher and applies continuously, while suitability applies at recommendation. This matters for dual registrants and helps explain why IAs face stricter conflict-of-interest rules. Questions often present scenarios asking which standard applies.
A broker-dealer must register with:
C is correct. Broker-dealers must register with both the SEC (using Form BD) and each state where they conduct business. This dual registration requirement ensures oversight at both federal and state levels.
A (SEC only) is incorrect because BDs cannot skip state registration even though they register with the SEC. B (States only) is incorrect because SEC registration is required in addition to state registration. D (Either/or) is incorrect because this suggests a choice when both levels of registration are mandatory. Unlike investment advisers, there is no federal covered status that eliminates state requirements for broker-dealers.
BD registration requirements differ significantly from IA registration, and the exam tests whether you understand these distinctions. While IAs can be federal covered and avoid full state registration, BDs must register at both levels. This appears in questions comparing BD and IA registration or asking about a firm's obligations when opening offices in multiple states. Remember: BDs always need both SEC and state registration, plus FINRA membership.
An individual who represents a broker-dealer in effecting securities transactions is called a(n):
D is correct. Under state securities law (Uniform Securities Act), a natural person who represents a broker-dealer in effecting securities transactions is defined as an agent. This is the legal terminology used in state regulation.
A (Investment adviser representative) is incorrect because IARs represent investment advisers, not broker-dealers. B (Broker-dealer) is incorrect because the BD is the firm itself, not the individual representative. C (Registered representative) is incorrect in this context because FINRA uses the term "registered representative," the Uniform Securities Act and Series 65 exam use the term "agent" for state law purposes.
The term "agent" is critical vocabulary for the Series 65 because state securities laws (which the exam heavily covers) use this specific term. While you might hear "registered representative" in practice (FINRA terminology), the exam tests state law terminology. This distinction matters when answering questions about registration requirements, exemptions, and supervisory obligations. Agent registration is always with the state, never the SEC. Understanding who qualifies as an agent determines who needs Series 63 or 65 licensing.
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Access Free BetaWhich of the following is generally required for a broker-dealer to operate in the securities business?
B is correct. FINRA (Financial Industry Regulatory Authority) membership is generally required for broker-dealers. FINRA is the self-regulatory organization (SRO) that oversees broker-dealers and enforces securities industry rules.
A (Federal Reserve membership) is incorrect because the Federal Reserve System regulates banks, not broker-dealers. C (IA registration) is incorrect because BDs are not required to register as IAs unless they also provide investment advisory services. D ($1 million AUM) is incorrect because this relates to IA registration thresholds, not BD requirements. BDs don't have AUM thresholds; they're transaction-based businesses.
FINRA membership is a fundamental requirement that appears throughout Series 65 regulation questions. Understanding that BDs must join FINRA helps explain why certain rules (like the Conduct Rules) apply to BDs and their agents. This requirement is in addition to SEC and state registration. FINRA examines BDs, enforces rules, and handles arbitration. Questions may test whether you know FINRA oversees BDs while state securities regulators and the SEC oversee IAs directly.
A broker-dealer that exclusively effects transactions solely incidental to its investment advisory business would:
C is correct. When a firm provides investment advice (making it an IA) and also effects securities transactions (making it a BD), it must register in both capacities. This is known as dual registration. The BD activities are not excluded just because they're incidental to advisory services.
A (Excluded from IA definition) is incorrect because this is backwards. The broker-dealer exclusion from the IA definition only applies when brokerage is the primary business and any advice is solely incidental. B (Excluded from BD definition) is incorrect because there is no such exclusion. Effecting transactions makes the firm a BD. D (BD only) is incorrect because providing investment advice as a primary service requires IA registration regardless of other business activities.
Dual registration is a critical concept that appears frequently on the exam. Many firms operate as both IAs and BDs, and understanding when each registration is required prevents common mistakes. The BD exclusion from the IA definition only works one way: BDs giving solely incidental advice aren't IAs. But IAs that effect transactions must register as BDs. Questions often test this by presenting scenarios where a firm performs both functions and asking which registrations apply.
An individual representing an issuer in the sale of the issuer's own securities would NOT need to register as an agent when selling:
A is correct. Individuals representing issuers do not need agent registration when selling certain exempt securities, including U.S. government securities. This is one of five specific exempt securities that trigger the agent exclusion.
B (Startup common stock) is incorrect because common stock of a private company is not an exempt security under the agent exclusion rules, even when sold to accredited investors. C (Corporate bonds) is incorrect because corporate bonds are not exempt securities for purposes of the agent registration requirement. D (Preferred stock to public) is incorrect because preferred stock of a corporation requires the representative to register as an agent when representing the issuer.
Agent exclusions for issuer representatives are heavily tested on the Series 65. The five exempt securities (U.S. government, state/municipal, Canadian government, bank securities, and certain commercial paper) must be memorized. These exclusions make sense because these securities have other regulatory oversight or are considered low-risk. Questions often present scenarios where someone is selling securities for an issuer and ask whether agent registration is required. This frequently appears in questions about employee stock plans or Treasury securities sales.
A broker-dealer with no office in a state must register in that state if it effects transactions with:
D is correct. A broker-dealer with no place of business in a state must register if it directs communications to or effects transactions with retail investors in that state. Retail investors receive greater regulatory protection under state securities laws.
A (Other BDs only) is incorrect because BDs dealing exclusively with other broker-dealers without a state office may be excluded from registration. B (Institutional investors only) is incorrect because dealing only with institutional investors (without a state office) may also qualify for the no place of business exclusion. C (Federal covered IAs only) is incorrect because federal covered IAs are considered sophisticated parties similar to other institutions, allowing for the exclusion.
The no place of business exclusion is critical for understanding when out-of-state BDs must register. This concept appears frequently in questions about multi-state operations and helps distinguish BD registration from IA registration rules. The key trigger is retail investors: they always require full registration. Institutional investors and other industry professionals are considered sophisticated enough not to need this protection. Remember: office in the state equals must register, always. No office plus retail clients equals must register. No office plus only institutions equals may be excluded.
The difference between an introducing broker-dealer and a clearing broker-dealer is that:
B is correct. Clearing broker-dealers handle the back-office functions of settlement, custody, and record-keeping for securities transactions. Introducing broker-dealers are customer-facing, taking orders and providing service, but they clear trades through clearing firms.
A (Only introducing BDs register with SEC) is incorrect because both types of broker-dealers must register with the SEC. The distinction is operational, not regulatory. C (Only introducing BDs join FINRA) is incorrect because both introducing and clearing broker-dealers must be FINRA members. D (Only clearing BDs can transact) is incorrect because introducing BDs do effect transactions, they simply don't handle the settlement and custody functions.
Understanding introducing vs. clearing BDs was added to the NASAA outline in 2023 and represents current industry structure. Many smaller BDs are introducing firms that rely on larger clearing firms for back-office operations. This arrangement affects custody, financial responsibility, and operational questions. The exam may test this in scenarios about who holds customer assets or which BD is responsible for various regulatory obligations. Introducing BDs have lower capital requirements because they don't hold customer securities. This structure is efficient but requires understanding responsibility allocation.
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