Product-Specific Disclosures: Investment Companies and Variable Contracts
Chapters in this video
- 0:00 Anti-fraud rule and the zero-expense trap
- 1:28 Mutual fund advertising rule: not a safe harbor
- 2:53 Summary prospectus delivery and the 3-day rule
- 4:04 Variable annuity architecture: separate vs general account
- 5:15 Liquidity trap: surrender charges and tax penalties
- 6:05 FINRA filing: 10 business days for variable contracts
- 6:29 Standardized performance and the volatility-rating vocab trick
- 8:03 Rapid-fire exam recap
What this video covers
- Why the mutual fund advertising rule is not a safe harbor from anti-fraud liability, even when formatting requirements are perfectly followed
- How standardized return periods (1-year, 5-year, 10-year) work in mutual fund advertising, and why cherry-picking custom time periods is prohibited
- What summary prospectus delivery satisfies: the legal prospectus delivery requirement, with the statutory prospectus and Statement of Additional Information (SAI) available online free of charge
- The exact timing for delivering a statutory prospectus after investor request: three business days
- Why variable annuity guarantees depend solely on the insurance company's claims-paying ability and general account, not the separate account where investment risk lives
- Why representing variable contracts as short-term, liquid investments is strictly prohibited: surrender charges, 10% tax penalty before age 59-1/2, and ordinary income tax
- The 10-business-day filing requirement for certain variable contract retail communications with FINRA
- Why a bond mutual fund volatility rating must never be called a risk rating
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