Free Series 6 Exam Braindumps (page: 8)

Page 8 of 83

Mr. Cross wanders into your office with a $35,000 check that he has received from his recently-deceased wife's insurance company and wants you to advise him how to invest it, since that is your job, as he puts it.
You ask him to fill out a standard investor profile questionnaire, but he refuses to do so. You offer to fill it out for him, based on his answers to your verbal questions, but he still refuses and calls you a "nibby-nose." Based on this, you can:

  1. allocate the $35,000 any way you choose since you have an uncooperative client.
  2. advise him to invest the money in a money market mutual fund instead of holding it as cash.
  3. advise him to invest the money in an S&P 500 Index fund.
  4. The advice provided in either Choice B or Choice C would be appropriate.

Answer(s): B

Explanation:

If you cannot get any personal information from a client, you cannot legitimately recommend (or execute) an asset allocation for him. You can advise him to invest the money in a money market mutual fund instead of holding it as cash since this will provide him with a small return on his money. You cannot advise him to invest the money in an S&P 500 Index fund, which would subject him to more risk. This would be considered an unsuitable recommendation and is in violation of securities' laws.



An order to buy or sell a stock at the prevailing market price is called a(n):

  1. open-ended order.
  2. market order.
  3. stop order.
  4. limit order.

Answer(s): B

Explanation:

An order to buy or sell a stock at the prevailing market price is called a market order. Stop orders and limit orders specify prices at which the order is triggered.



Regulation D:

I). enables smaller firms to raise capital more quickly and more cheaply.
II). exempts the issuing firm from all disclosure requirements as long as the issue is being sold to no more than five investors.
III). has restrictions regarding the resale of the securities being sold.

  1. I only
  2. I and II only
  3. I and III only
  4. I, II, and III

Answer(s): C

Explanation:

Only Selections I and III are accurate statements regarding Regulation
D. Regulation D enables smaller firms to raise capital more quickly and more cheaply, but it also restricts the resale of the securities being sold in a Regulation D offering. It does not exempt the issuing firm from all disclosure requirements, even if the issue is being sold to only a single investor. The disclosure requirements are minimal with a Regulation D offering, however.



You have just become a licensed registered representative with Fine, Howard, Fine and Associates, a broker-dealer. (Congratulations!) You have had a brokerage account with Anon Brokerage for the past ten years. In this instance, you are required to:

  1. transfer the assets in your account with Anon to a Fine, Howard, Fine account and close your account with Anon.
  2. provide Fine, Howard, Fine with written notification of this fact.
  3. provide Anon Brokerage with written notification of your association with Fine, Howard, Fine.
  4. The actions described in both B and C are requirements.

Answer(s): D

Explanation:

If you have an account with another member firm upon becoming associated with a member firm, you are required to provide both the firm with which you have your account and your new employer in writing of the fact.



Page 8 of 83



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asl commented on September 14, 2023
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Av dey commented on August 16, 2023
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