SEC Settles Charges With Equity Fund Adviser for Acting as Unregistered Broker

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By Chris Lange Updated Published
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SEC Settles Charges With Equity Fund Adviser for Acting as Unregistered Broker

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The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) recently announced that a Maryland-based private equity fund advisory firm and its owner have agreed to pay more than $3.1 million to settle charges that they engaged in brokerage activity and charged fees without registering as a broker-dealer and committed other securities law violations.

The agency found that Blackstreet Capital Management and Murry N. Gunty performed in-house brokerage services rather than using investment banks or broker-dealers to handle the acquisition and disposition of portfolio companies for a pair of private equity funds they advise.

Blackstreet fully disclosed to its funds and their investors that it would provide brokerage services in exchange for a fee. However, the firm failed to comply with the registration requirements to operate as a broker-dealer.

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The SEC’s investigation, which stemmed from an agency examination of Blackstreet, further found that the firm and Gunty engaged in conflicted transactions and inadequately disclosed fees and expenses.

According to the SEC’s order:

  • Blackstreet charged fees to portfolio companies in one fund for providing operating partner oversight, but the fund’s limited partnership agreement (LPA) did not disclose that Blackstreet received such fees.  This resulted in a conflict of interest because Blackstreet used fund assets to compensate itself.
  • Blackstreet used fund assets to pay for political and charitable contributions as well as entertainment expenses. These expenditures were not expressly authorized by the funds’ governing documents, and Blackstreet neither sought nor obtained appropriate consent.
  • Blackstreet engaged in a conflicted transaction when it acquired a departing employee’s shares in one fund’s portfolio companies without disclosing its financial interests or obtaining appropriate consent to engage in the transaction.
  • Gunty, through an entity he controlled, acquired fund interests from certain limited partners and then directed the fund’s general partner (which he also controlled) to waive his obligation to satisfy future capital calls associated with new investments.  These acquisitions and subsequent waivers were contrary to the terms of the fund’s LPA, and Blackstreet’s failure to disclose these waivers rendered the LPA materially misleading.
  • Blackstreet failed to adopt and implement reasonably designed policies and procedures.

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Anthony S. Kelly, chief of the SEC Enforcement Division’s Asset Management Unit, said:

Private equity fund advisers must manage their funds in accordance with the governing documents. Blackstreet operated outside of the funds’ documents by using fund assets to make political and charitable contributions and pay entertainment expenses.

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About the Author Chris Lange →

Chris Lange is a writer for 24/7 Wall St., based in Houston. He has covered financial markets over the past decade with an emphasis on healthcare, tech, and IPOs. During this time, he has published thousands of articles with insightful analysis across these complex fields. Currently, Lange's focus is on military and geopolitical topics.

Lange's work has been quoted or mentioned in Forbes, The New York Times, Business Insider, USA Today, MSN, Yahoo, The Verge, Vice, The Intelligencer, Quartz, Nasdaq, The Motley Fool, Fox Business, International Business Times, The Street, Seeking Alpha, Barron’s, Benzinga, and many other major publications.

A graduate of Southwestern University in Georgetown, Texas, Lange majored in business with a particular focus on investments. He has previous experience in the banking industry and startups.

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