Articles Tagged with Moloney Securities investment attorney

shutterstock_20354398-300x200Former financial advisor Glennon Cole (Cole), formerly employed by brokerage firm Moloney Securities Co., Inc. (Moloney) has been subject to at least 13 customer complaints, one tax lien, one employment termination for cause, and one criminal matter during the course of his career.  According to a BrokerCheck reports most of the recent customer complaints concern either corporate debt securities or alternative investments such as direct participation products (DPPs) like business development companies (BDCs), non-traded real estate investment trusts (REITs), oil & gas programs, annuities, and private placements.  The attorneys at Gana Weinstein LLP have represented hundreds of investors who suffered losses caused by these types of high risk, low reward products.

In June 2019 it appears that Cole had a domestic criminal matter involving harassment and threating to disseminate images.  Thereafter in February 2021 Moloney discharged Cole as being disqualified under the securities laws.

DDPs include products such as non-traded REITs, oil and gas offerings, equipment leasing products, and other alternative investments.  These alternative investments virtually never profit investors and are almost always unsuitable for investors because of their high fee and cost structure.  Brokers selling these products are paid additional commission in order to hype these inferior quality investments providing a perverse incentives to create an artificial market for the investments.

Several studies have confirmed that Non-traded REITs underperform publicly traded REITs with some showing that Non-Traded REITs cannot even beat safe benchmarks, like U.S. treasury bonds.  Brokers selling these products must disclose to the investor that non-traded REITs provide lower investment returns than treasuries while being high risk and illiquid – but almost never do.  Because investors are not compensated with additional return in exchange for higher risk and illiquidity, these kinds of alternative investment products are rarely, if ever, appropriate for investors.  Continue Reading

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