According to records kept by The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) financial Broker Juan Dibildox (Dibildox), currently associated with Morgan Stanley, has at least one disclosable event. These events include one customer complaint, alleging that Dibildox recommended unsuitable investments in different investment products including debt securities among other allegations and complaints.
FINRA BrokerCheck shows a pending customer complaint on November 26, 2024.
Claimant alleged, inter alia, misrepresentation with respect to the performance and use of his account assets – Dec 2020 to Nov 2024
Brokers must adhere to securities laws by ensuring they act in their clients’ best interests and offer only appropriate investment recommendations. The SEC has also implemented “Regulation Best Interest (Reg BI)“, which, according to the SEC, strengthens the brokerdealer standard of conduct beyond current suitability obligations, requiring brokerdealers to act in a retail customer’s best interest when recommending any securities transaction or investment strategy involving securities. Regulation Best Interest and the fiduciary standard for investment advisers are drawn from key fiduciary principles that include an obligation to act in the retail investor’s best interest and not to place their own interests ahead of the investor’s interest.
Brokers have an obligation to first obtain and evaluate sufficient information about a retail investor to form a reasonable basis to believe the account recommendations are in the retail investor’s best interest. Recommendations cannot be based on materially inaccurate or incomplete information. Material information always includes information concerning the investor as well as the cost of the recommendation. Types of costs that must be considered including account fees, commissions and transaction costs, tax considerations, as well as indirect costs.
In addition to obligation to understand the customer the broker must also investigate the product being sold. FINRA firms have an obligation to conduct a reasonable investigation of the issuer and the securities they recommend in offerings. A brokerage firm has a special relationship with a customer from the fact that in recommending the security, the broker represents to the customer that a reasonable investigation has been made. Thus, without conducting its own reasonable investigation, a brokerage firm cannot depend solely on the issuer for information about a company.
Additional, it should be required to mandate broker disclosures for investor’s protection. Brokers must publicly disclose reportable events on their BrokerCheck reports that include customer complaints, IRS tax liens, judgments, investigations, terminations, and even criminal matters. FINRA has recognized that recent research shows past regulatory and customer complaint issues can indicate future problems for brokers. The Office of the Chief Economist (OCE) at FINRA released a study demonstrating that past disciplinary and disclosure events can indicate the likelihood of future similar events. The OCE study showed that past disclosure events, including regulatory actions, customer arbitrations and litigations of brokers, have significant power to predict future investor harm. The data shows that where a member firm on-boards brokers with a significant history of misconduct there is a high likelihood that the broker will continue to engage in similar behavior.
Dibildox entered the securities industry in 2001. Dibildox has been registered as a Broker with Morgan Stanley since 2009.
Investors who have suffered losses are encouraged to contact us at (800) 810-4262 for consultation. At Gana Weinstein LLP, our attorneys are experienced representing investors who have suffered securities losses due to the mishandling of their accounts. Claims may be brought in securities arbitration before FINRA. Our consultations are free of charge and the firm is only compensated if you recover.