Series 63: 5.3.5 Suitability

Taken from our Series 63 Online Guide

5.3.5  Suitability

While some ethical standards for securities professionals are simple black and white, do this or don’t do that kinds of rules, others are a lot more gray. Suitability is one of those concepts that require professionals to make an ongoing effort to ensure that they are looking out for their clients’ best interests and walking the ethical line.

Suitability is the idea that not all investments are right for all clients, due to a wide variety of factors, including an investment’s cost, level of risk, expected return, and growth or income features. These factors, though they may make an investment seem attractive relative to other investments, must be measured only in comparison to a client’s financial situation, investment objectives, and risk tolerance. A client’s other securities holdings, financial needs, and tax status should be considered as well.

In other words, a top-ranked mutual fund that has posted great growth for ten years in a row may be completely inappropriate for someone who never, ever, wants to see his investments have a negative performance year. Likewise, som

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