SEC Hits Firm, Advisor Over Leveraged ETFs in Portfolios

Risk dial turned all the way to max

An RIA and an advisor have agreed to pay more than $900,000 to the Securities and Exchange Commission to settle allegations it recommended large holdings of leveraged ETFs to investors without understanding the funds’ risks.

The SEC said Thursday it has settled charges against Fargo, North Dakota-based registered investment advisor Classic Asset Management LLC and part owner and investment advisor representative Douglas G. Schmitz for breach of fiduciary duty.

The firm and Schmitz agreed, without admitting or denying the SEC’s findings, to a cease-and-desist order and censures. Classic Asset Management and Schmitz also agreed to pay $195,228 and $738,113, respectively, in disgorgement, prejudgment interest and civil penalties.

The RIA had 917 clients and about $158 million in assets under management as of March 16, according to a Form ADV cited in the SEC’s order.

From at least 2017 through December 2020, Classic Asset Management and Schmitz invested advisory clients in leveraged ETFs for long periods, often in significant concentrations, despite warnings in fund prospectuses that the products carried unique risks, were designed to be held for no more than a single trading day and required frequent monitoring, according to the SEC order.

The order finds that the firm and Schmitz misunderstood these fundamental characteristics of the leveraged ETFs and therefore lacked a reasonable belief that the funds were in their clients’ best interests, the SEC said in a statement.

The leveraged ETFs “are complex securities that carry significant risks and included at least 15 different funds, all of which seek to deliver multiples of the performance of the index or benchmark they track,” the agency’s order said.

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One such fund was the ProShares UltraPro Dow 30 (UDOW), a fund intended to capture three times the daily performance of the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

Classic Asset Management and Schmitz failed to appropriately monitor the ETFs’ performance and consequently didn’t evaluate whether the investments were in their clients’ best interests throughout the holding period, the order found. The SEC said the firm failed to adopt and implement policies and procedures to prevent violations of the Advisers Act.