Front-Running
Front-Running
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.
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.
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.
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?
B is correct. Jennifer engaged in front-running by trading ahead of her client's order to profit from the anticipated price movement. This is a severe violation of fiduciary duty that cannot be cured by disclosure. Front-running misuses material non-public information (knowledge of the pending client order) and places the adviser's interests ahead of the client's, violating the duty of loyalty.
A is incorrect because front-running is prohibited even with disclosure. it is a per se violation of securities laws. C is incorrect because using personal capital doesn't justify profiting from client order information; the breach lies in misusing confidential order flow data. D is incorrect because client order information is material NON-public information, not public information, and this is front-running, not insider trading in the traditional sense.
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to identify front-running scenarios and understand why they violate fiduciary duties. Recognizing that disclosure doesn't cure the violation is critical. front-running is categorically prohibited because it inherently places the adviser's financial interests ahead of the client's best execution.
Front-running primarily violates which fiduciary duty owed by investment advisers to their clients?
B is correct. Front-running primarily violates the duty of loyalty, which requires advisers to place clients' interests ahead of their own. By trading ahead of client orders to profit from anticipated price movements, the adviser is prioritizing personal gain over the client's best interests.
A (duty of care) involves providing competent and diligent service, which is violated but is secondary to the loyalty breach. C (duty of confidentiality) is violated when client information is misused, but the core violation is self-dealing, not just information disclosure. D (duty of best execution) relates to obtaining the best available prices for client trades, which may also be compromised by front-running, but the fundamental breach is putting self-interest first (loyalty).
The Series 65 exam tests your understanding of which fiduciary duties apply to specific violations. While front-running may implicate multiple duties, identifying the duty of loyalty as the primary violation is essential for understanding the ethical foundation of adviser conduct rules.
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Access Free BetaAn 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?
B is correct. Calculate: (Sale price - Purchase price) ร Number of shares = ($42 - $40) ร 5,000 = $2 ร 5,000 = $10,000. The adviser's illegal profit is $10,000 from the $2 per share price increase on 5,000 shares.
A ($8,000) incorrectly uses $1.60 per share ($8,000 รท 5,000 = $1.60), which doesn't correspond to the actual price movement. C ($200,000) incorrectly multiplies the client's 200,000-share order by $1, confusing the client's position size with the adviser's personal trade. D ($400,000) incorrectly calculates the client's total cost increase (200,000 shares ร $2 price impact = $400,000), which shows the harm to the client, not the adviser's profit from 5,000 shares.
The Series 65 exam may test your ability to calculate the financial impact of prohibited practices. Understanding how to quantify the adviser's illegal profit demonstrates comprehension of both the mechanics and consequences of front-running, including the market impact on client execution prices.
All of the following statements about front-running are accurate EXCEPT
C is correct (the EXCEPT answer). Front-running is NEVER permissible, regardless of disclosure. It is a per se violation of securities laws and fiduciary duty. Disclosure in Form ADV Part 2A cannot cure or authorize this prohibited practice because it constitutes fraud and a fundamental breach of the duty of loyalty.
A is accurate: front-running's core definition is trading ahead of client orders to profit from the expected price impact. B is accurate: knowledge of pending client orders is material non-public information that advisers are prohibited from using for personal benefit. D is accurate: front-running violates the Investment Advisers Act (federal) Section 206 antifraud provisions and the Uniform Securities Act (state) prohibitions on unethical business practices.
The Series 65 exam tests your understanding that certain practices like front-running are categorically prohibited and cannot be authorized through disclosure or consent. This distinguishes per se violations from practices that might be permissible with proper disclosure and client consent (like principal trading or agency cross transactions).
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
C is correct. Statements 1, 2, and 3 all constitute illegal front-running.
Statement 1 is front-running: Selling short in a personal account ahead of the client order to profit from the anticipated price decline is classic front-running. trading ahead of client orders for personal benefit.
Statement 2 is front-running: Using knowledge of the pending institutional sell order to benefit other clients (by recommending they sell first) is also front-running. The adviser is misusing material non-public information about client order flow, even when benefiting other clients rather than personally.
Statement 3 is front-running: Purchasing put options (which profit from price declines) in a personal account based on knowledge of the pending sell order is front-running using derivatives instead of the underlying stock.
Statement 4 is NOT front-running: Informing the client about potential market impact is proper disclosure and fulfills the duty of care. Educating clients about the price impact of large orders is part of best execution obligations, not front-running.
The Series 65 exam tests your understanding that front-running can take multiple forms: personal trading in the underlying security, using derivatives (options, futures), or even misusing client information to benefit other clients. The key element is trading or advising based on material non-public knowledge of pending client orders. Understanding that proper client disclosure about market impact is NOT front-running helps distinguish prohibited trading from fulfilling fiduciary duties.
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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:
More in Prohibited Practices
Where This Appears on the Exam
This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics: