Social Media for RIAs in Massachusetts: The Fourth Castle
Compliance, FINRA/SEC — By Tim Walker on January 24, 2012 11:27 am
(This is a guest post from Stephen Selby, Director of Regulatory Services at LIMRA.)
As social media users in financial services have discovered over the past couple of years, it’s tough to build a business in a swamp. It makes me think of the King of Swamp Castle from Monty Python and the Holy Grail.
Listen, lad. I’ve built this kingdom up from nothing. When I started here, all there was was swamp. All the kings said I was daft to build a castle in a swamp, but I built it all the same, just to show ‘em. It sank into the swamp. So, I built a second one. That sank into the swamp. So I built a third one. That burned down, fell over, then sank into the swamp. But the fourth one stayed up. An’ that’s what your gonna get, lad—the strongest castle in these islands.
Social media regulation has been a little like Swamp Castle. FINRA released Regulatory Notice 10-06, and built a foundational concept for all of us to follow—all the old rules apply. But the financial services industry as a whole did not believe that foundation was solid enough. We let the first castle sink into the swamp.
Then FINRA released Regulatory Notice 11-39. The financial services industry again said that foundation was not strong enough, so we again let social media fall into the swamp. Foreign regulators like the FSA in Great Britain and the IIROC in Canada published social media guidance in their own countries. The National Association of Insurance Commissioners issued its own white paper on social media. The messages from the FSA, IIROC, and NAIC all tracked well with FINRA’s core message—all the old rules apply. But the financial services industry was not happy with that foundation yet and, even with all of the positives, watched social media again fall into the swamp.
January 2012: The Fourth Castle of Social Media Regulation
Now we have both the SEC and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts issuing guidance for Registered Investment Advisors. To paraphrase the King of Swamp Castle—I am here to tell you what you’ve gotten—the strongest castle in these islands! We have seen securities regulators, insurance regulators, and now RIA regulators all say the same things: Yes, social media is an exciting new form of communication. Yes, we will apply existing rules to this new technology. It should be clear that we are no longer standing in a swamp, but on the strong foundation of a consistent message.
Let’s see how that consistent message applies to RIAs in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. I will present these points in a different order than communicated by the Massachusetts Securities Division their memo of January 18, 2012. This order should help you structure your approach to social media for RIAs:
- Social Media is subject to supervision. Have a plan. Document it. Test the plan at least annually.
- Training. No policy or procedure is very good unless people know what it is. Therefore training is a really good idea.
- The firm is responsible for all business content. It’s social media time. Do you know what your investment advisor representatives (IARs) are saying?
- Social media is subject to record-keeping requirements. You will need a method of capturing and retaining social media content in a manner consistent with SEC retention rules. (For more, see 950 CMR 12.205(7)(a) and 17 CFR 275.204-2.)
- Frequent supervision is better. Massachusetts states on page 6 of their document “A review done daily would be considered a reasonable supervision of the adviser’s social media site.” Less frequent review can be acceptable—if you have low traffic volumes.
- Social media is usually advertising under RIA rules. Go back to the basics and apply current advertising content and supervision standards for RIAs to social media. Performance reporting via social media is subject to the same content and time standards as any other kind of media. Cherry picking past performance is not permitted. Recommendations are not permitted.
- Adoption and Entanglement applied across regulators. RIAs are responsible for content which they post, Tweet, re-Tweet, or like, or to which they link. RIAs are also responsible for content which is posted on behalf of their representatives by business partners or anyone else who has an interest in the success of the IAR. Selective removal of some content results in the “adoption” of the remaining content.
- “Liking” can be Problematic. To completely understand what Massachusetts is saying about the “Like” button, I encourage you to read SEC Regulation FD and the recent SEC risk alert. The key take-away is that your firm is responsible for any content which is “Liked” by the firm or an IAR. Make sure it’s good content.
- Read the SEC guidance. Massachusetts makes reference to recent SEC guidance on social media usage.
More Best Practices for Social Media Compliance
The Massachusetts document “The Use of Social Media by Investment Advisers” is not intended to tell the whole story. Here are a few ideas you need to consider beyond the recent guidance provided by the Commonwealth.
- Put clear license and registration disclosures in social media profiles. This will help insulate the firm against the appearance of soliciting where the firm is not registered.
- Update the firm’s Code of Ethics. Not all states require a code of ethics, but communicating a standard and then training your people to that standard is always a good idea.
- Face-to-face supervision is a best practice. Take time to review the computers and mobile devices of IARs when visiting satellite offices.
- Understand what is being said about you by solicitors and other business partners. You may need to review agreements to specifically address the use of social media.
- Get help, but take responsibility. Social media use and supervision is ultimately up to you, but Socialware and LIMRA can help get you going.
In closing, think of the King of Swamp castle. “All the other kings” may say you are daft for using social media when there are so many questions, from ROI to compliance. Prove them wrong. Now that regulators for the securities, insurance, and investment advisory business have spoken, you have a firm compliance foundation on which to build your social media practice.
When so many regulators are saying the same thing—maybe you really do have the opportunity to build the strongest castle in these islands.
Socialware

1 Comment
Great article! Very simple and straight forward!