Charles Schwab & Co.'s misrepresentations about the
safety of the Schwab YieldPlus Fund caused considerable harm to the business
operations of a California-based company, according to a claim filed with FINRA
Dispute Resolution today by the investor rights' legal team headed by former
Securities and Exchange Commission attorney Thomas F. Shine and investor rights'
attorneys Christopher T. Vernon and Thomas D. Mauriello.
The San Diego-based corporation, which develops service
solutions for small businesses and consumers, had recently sold one of its
business segments and its executives were looking for a safe place to invest
the sales proceeds while they laid the groundwork for developing a new line of
business for the company.
Charles Schwab's web page promoting its Schwab
YieldPlus Fund invited investors to "discover a smart alternative for your
long-term cash." Charles Schwab touted the Schwab YieldPlus Fund as a safe and conservative
"cash alternative" and compared its safety to that of one and two-year
certificates of deposit, but investors have seen the bond mutual fund's price
fall by almost 40 percent during the past sixteen months.
The claim alleges that Charles Schwab issued inaccurate
statements and omitted material facts about the fund's lack of diversification
and deceived Schwab
YieldPlus Fund investors by concentrating the fund in mortgage and
asset-backed securities while it recklessly touted the fund's safety on its web
site and to financial advisors who recommended the fund.
In addition, Charles Schwab executives and former high
profile fund manager Kimon
Daifotis committed misconduct when they embarked on a "damage control"
campaign to avert liquidations of Schwab
YieldPlus by Charles Schwab clients, the claim contends. Behind the scenes,
Schwab dumped 2.9 million YieldPlus shares from the portfolios of its other
mutual funds from Jan. 31, 2008 to April 1, 2008 while unwitting Schwab clients
simultaneously held on to their shares.
The Shine-Vernon legal team believes that this case is a
prime example of the adverse economic consequences of the misconduct and
deceptions engaged in by financial firms like Charles Schwab in recent years.
It's not only retirees who've been hurt, but also companies small and large who
thought they were maintaining their operating capital in safe, conservative accounts.
"This is the type of financial institution behavior that can
have a direct impact on Main Street's ability to create and protect jobs and
this misconduct should not go unpunished," Vernon said.
In addition to the arbitration claim filed on behalf of the
corporate client described herein, which will be heard in San Diego, the
Shine-Vernon team has filed arbitration claims against Charles Schwab with the
Financial Industry Regulatory Association (FINRA) on behalf of investors from California,
New York, Texas, Florida,
Missouri,
Minnesota, Illinois and Hawaii
and is currently investigating claims in New Mexico, Virginia, and several
other states as part of its nationwide fraud investigation of the Schwab
YieldPlus Fund.
Thomas Shine,
a former enforcement attorney with the Securities and Exchange Commission in
Washington, D.C., is in private practice in the Melbourne, Fla. area.
Securities attorney Chris Vernon is
a founding partner of the Naples, Fla. based law firm Vernon Healy, which
represents investors throughout the United States. Thomas Mauriello is in private
practice in Southern California and represents investors throughout California.
Release URL: http://www.protectinginvestors.com/
For information, contact:
Thomas F. Shine, attorney at law
http://www.thomasfshinelaw.com
http://www.thomasfshinelawblog.com
321-724-4445
1-800-838-8320
e-mail: tfshine@aol.com
or
Christopher T. Vernon, attorney
at law
http://www.vernonhealy.com
http://www.protectinginvestors.com
239-649-5390
1-877-649-5394
e-mail: cvernon@vernonhealy.com
or
Thomas D. Mauriello, attorney at law
http://www.maurlaw.com
949-542-3555
1-888-612-1961
e-mail: tomm@maurlaw.com