Regulation of Investment Adviser Representatives: Rapid Fire
Chapters in this video
- 0:00 The five functions that trigger IAR status
- 2:08 Where IARs register: state-registered IA versus federal covered adviser
- 3:18 The de minimis exemption and the office trap
- 4:11 Form U4, consent to service, and the 30-day effective rule
- 5:57 Aaron the agent versus Ivan the IAR: termination and overlap rules
- 7:17 Rapid-fire recap: one-liners that win points
What this video covers
- Why performing just one of five functions (recommending, managing accounts, determining advice, soliciting, or supervising) triggers IAR status, and why purely clerical staff never qualify
- Where a state-registered investment adviser IAR must register versus where a federal covered adviser IAR must register, and why client location does not drive federal covered IAR registration
- How the de minimis exemption requires both zero in-state place of business and five or fewer non-institutional clients in the prior 12 months, and why any office kills the exemption entirely
- The Form U4 filing sequence, irrevocable consent to service of process, and why registration becomes effective at noon on the 30th day without Administrator approval
- Why passing the Series 65 or the Series 66 plus Series 7 combination does not alone make someone an IAR, and why a current professional designation can waive the exam
- Who notifies the Administrator of termination for a state-registered IA versus a federal covered adviser, and why the IAR notifies directly in the latter case
- The shared rules between agent and IAR registration, including tied registration, December 31 annual expiration, and 30-day withdrawal effective date
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