Registered Investment Advisors: How to Become an Investment Advisor
Investment Advisors are individuals or organizations of people that help you invest your money better. To be certified to dispense investment advice and carry out the brokering activities, it is important to register yourself or your firm with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
Registered Investment Advisor
A registered investment advisor manages the assets of individuals and institutional investors and performs the fiduciary duty to their clients of choosing the best possible investments for them and providing full disclosure of transactions and ensuing fees. The investments may be in the form of stocks, mutual funds, hedge funds or a combination of one or more forms of investment.
Registration of an investment advice body can be done in three ways depending upon the sum of market value of assets being managed by that firm. This sum, commonly known as Assets Under Management (AUM), forms the basic registration criteria for the process of registration. While the exact definition of AUM is not clear, for registration purposes, the definition given under Form ADV Part 1, of the SEC, is used.
To register your investment advice firm with the SEC, you have to first determine the amount of AUM that your firm is managing. The amounts can be divided into 3 categories:
- Up to $25 million
- between $25 million and $30 million
- above $30 million
If your investment advice firm is not currently managing a sum of $25 million and does not anticipate managing $25 million within 120 days of registration, the firm has to register itself with the state in which it is operating.
$25 million to $30 million
If your AUM ranges between $25 million and $30 million, you have a choice of either registering with the SEC, or with the state in which your firm is operating.
Above $30 million
If your AUM is over $30 million, then the registration has to be done with the SEC.
How to Become an Investment Advisor?
To become an investment advisor the first step is to figure out your AUM and the jurisdiction under which your investment advice firm falls. The firm has to pay the service provider fees to either the SEC or the state. If registered with the state, the fee comes to between $2500 and $3500, while for registering with the SEC, your firm might have to shell out anything between $4000 to $8000, depending upon the size and diversity of your portfolios.
As the firm is being registered, the registration bodies would feel compelled to test the knowledge of the investment managers and advisors, to ensure their accountability and investors' safety. No test needs to be given if the advisor/manager is already qualified as a Chartered Financial Planner (CFP) or a Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA). But in case the advisors are not equipped with the above qualifications, they are required to give the Series 65 exam two years prior to registration although many states allow registration on the basis of having given the Series 7 and Series 66 examinations.
Along with the examinations, you have to fill various forms such as the Investment Advisor Registration Depository Form (IARD); Form ADV, which is mandatory for all investment advisors; Form ADV Part II, which covers all the information on activities of a registered investment advisor; and Form U4 which has to be filled by those people who represent the investment advisor.
Actually, a very small amount of advisory firms get themselves registered. A registration does not necessarily mean that the firm or individual is recommended by the SEC or any such body. However, it is considered safer to 'bank' upon registered advisors as they are under the control and supervision of the SEC.

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