Help Your Employees Achieve Their Retirement Dream: Tips for Spotting Early Retirement Scams
Your company offers retirement benefits to help your employees lay the groundwork for financial independence when they leave the workplace. There is one more thing you can do for those employees nearing retirement—help ensure they do not fall prey to early retirement scams that may wipe out years of savings and company benefits.
Your company may host seminars or other meetings to educate your employees about retirement planning, or your company may permit third party providers to conduct seminars for your employees. While most third-party provided retirement planning seminars offer valuable information, others may not be appropriate, particularly those that promote voluntary early retirement. For example, some seminars include misleading assumptions about investment returns, suggest risky withdrawal strategies, or lead to outright fraud. This brochure will help you spot early retirement seminar schemes that can derail years of employee savings and sound corporate policy.
Because not all early retirement seminars are in your employees’ best interest, you can take these steps to help ensure your employees receive sound financial information in a seminar:
Here is how you can put this checklist into practice.
FINRA Protects Investors
You have a partner in helping your employees make the most of their retirement assets. Our name is FINRA, the largest non-governmental securities regulator, and we oversee securities firms doing business in this country. We examine securities firms, write rules and enforce those rules and the federal securities laws. A major FINRA objective is investor protection. We believe that informing and educating the investing public helps individuals protect themselves.
When communicating with investors, including your employees, securities firms need to follow rules that are designed to protect the public from scams, irresponsible promises of future investment returns, and other improper communications. FINRA rules require that communications from securities firms and their personnel:
FINRA reviews thousands of communications every year for compliance with the standards listed above. We tell the firm whether materials can be used as filed, need to be revised, or cannot be used.
TIP: If seminar material has been filed with FINRA, the firm or individual making the presentation should be able to tell you whether it was approved for use or not and show you FINRA’s review letter if you request it. Of course, not all sales material must be filed with FINRA and even communications that are not filed with FINRA may comply with the rules.
How You Can Protect Your Employees
You want your employees to make sound retirement decisions. If your company allows representatives of a firm to solicit your employees to attend retirement seminars, you can ask a few questions and take some simple steps to determine whether the seminar complies with applicable requirements.
Protect Employees: If you are not satisfied with the timeliness or detail of the answers to your questions or you are concerned about the content of the seminar materials, you can make a referral of the seminar materials to FINRA for review.
How to Refer Seminar Materials to FINRA for Review
Please forward the seminar materials with the following information:
Mail to:
FINRA Investor Education
1735 K Street, NW
Washington, DC 20006-1506
If you have questions, call us at (202) 728-6964.
When FINRA gets your referral, we will:
Please understand that, as a regulator, FINRA typically does not confirm or deny publicly what regulatory action we are taking. That means that once you make a referral to us you might not hear anything further from us.
You should know that not all retirement seminar sponsors or the individuals conducting them are registered with FINRA. We have jurisdiction over virtually all brokerage firms, their employees and associated persons. Registered Investment Advisers may be registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission or the state securities regulator where they conduct business. Insurance agents are licensed and regulated by state insurance commissions.
Links:
For brokers and investment adviser representatives, use FINRA BrokerCheck or call (800) 289-9999.
For registered investment advisers, you may also use SEC Investment Adviser Public Disclosure Database.
For an insurance agent, check with your state insurance regulator. Get contact information from the National Association of Insurance Commissioners.
To find your state securities regulator, use the North American Securities Administrators Association or call (202) 737-0900.