
News Release
Read the SIPC-NAIC survey results. (Need Adobe Acrobat? Click here for free version.)
Take the SIPC-NAIC quiz.
SURVEY: MORE THAN 4 OUT OF
5 U.S. INVESTORS FAIL
QUIZ OF BASIC
"SURVIVAL" KNOWLEDGE
Most
Investors Mistakenly Think "Insurance" Exists for Fraud,
Market Losses;
Concepts of Limit Orders and Margin Calls Poorly Understood By Most.
WASHINGTON,
D.C. August 1, 2001 - A substantial 85 percent of U.S.
investors do not know enough to pass a "survival" quiz gauging
their awareness of what to do in times of market downturns and other
financial difficulties, according to a survey conducted for the Securities
Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC) and the National Association
of Investors Corporation (NAIC). In particular, investors
are ill informed about their recourse when they have lost money due
to investment fraud or market reverses, how to deal with problem brokers,
and the workings of both limit orders and margin accounts.
The
nonprofit SIPC maintains a special reserve fund authorized by Congress
to protect investors at bankrupt brokerage firms. NAIC, based
in Madison Heights, Michigan, is the nonprofit organization of 35,500
investment clubs and 500,000 individual member investors in the U.S.
SIPC
President Michael Don said: "It has become increasingly
evident to us over the last few years that many investors either have
no knowledge or, even worse, the wrong information about a number
of key issues that can haunt them during tough financial times.
SIPC is committed to working with other organizations to help raise
the level of investor awareness about such issues, including the need
to document complaints in writing against bad brokers and the extent
and limits of coverage for investors when brokerage firms collapse.
The General Accounting Office has correctly pointed out that it is
incumbent upon SIPC to get out the word to as many people as far and
wide as possible and we will do so."
NAIC
Vice President Robert O'Hara said: "We've been at this
for 50 years now and we see the same problem over and over again:
New investors come in during bull markets and then don't know what
to do when things go sour later. People need to take the
time to learn the basics about investing and then put them into practice.
Our experience is that investors who work together in investment clubs
get a chance to share their knowledge and help each other out."
In
addition to releasing the national investor "survival quiz"
survey, SIPC launched an overhauled Web site (www.sipc.org)
and plain-English brochure describing the extent and limits to SIPC
coverage. The new SIPC Web site features a detailed, step-by-step
claim form fill-in process that significantly simplifies and automates
the process by which investors make liquidation claims to court-appointed
trustees or, in some cases, directly to SIPC.
KEY
INVESTOR SURVIVAL QUIZ FINDINGS
SIPC
and NAIC developed a five-question "investor survival" quiz
to measure investor awareness of what to do in turbulent markets or
when faced with other financial problems. The survey conducted
by Opinion Research Corporation International (ORCI) included a weighted
sample of 933 adult investors. The key findings were as follows:
-
Fewer than one
in five U.S. investors pass a basic "survival" quiz.
Do most American investors know what to do when the market, a
particular stock, or their relationship with a broker goes bad?
The answer in nearly all cases is "no." With a
total of five basic questions asked, 85 percent of investors surveyed
failed to get a passing grade by picking the right answers for
at least three of the questions. In fact, a tiny 1
percent of those surveyed got four or five of the questions correct,
only 15 percent got three or more questions right.
A slightly greater share of investors (16 percent) answered only
one question correctly. The mean score (including
none) of all those surveyed was 1.5, exactly half of a passing
score.
-
Almost two in
three investors do not know what to do first when they suspect
they are dealing with a problem broker.
Just 36 percent of those surveyed knew that they should "set
out (their) concerns in writing to the brokerage firm and keep
a copy for self." A nearly equal number (33 percent)
incorrectly answered that they would create no documentation and,
instead, "call the stockbroker and give him or her a chance
to work out the problem." Another quarter (23
percent) said that they also would skip the documentation stage
and proceed directly to "call the branch office manager or
compliance department and make a complaint by phone."
Note: The existence of a documented
complaint can be crucial to
the ability of investors to recover money from brokerage firms
that collapse due to fraud or other factors. Investors
should always set out their complaint to a brokerage firm in writing
and keep a copy for their records.
-
More than four
in five investors do not understand how margin calls work.
Only 14 percent of those surveyed knew that, under Federal Reserve
rules, 25 percent is the level in a margin account below which
a brokerage firm may issue a margin call requiring an investor
to deposit additional funds or stocks. Nearly two
in five investors (39 percent) offered no guess as to the margin
call "trigger" level. Nearly half of the
investors (47 percent) said that the margin equity minimum was
at some level other than 25 percent, with specific answers ranging
from 10-60 percent. Note: While
25 percent is the minimum margin level, most brokerage firms impose
a higher margin requirement.
-
Fewer than one
in four investors understand the use of limit orders.
Provided a scenario in which they hold a fast-moving stock while
on vacation, only 22 percent of investors knew that the best way
to lock in a profit and avoid a loss on the stock was to place
a limit order, rather than a market order. A nearly
equal percentage (20 percent) of respondents incorrectly opted
for a market order. Interestingly, nearly two in five
respondents (39 percent) said that the best way to make a profit
or avoid a loss with the stock in question was to stay in close
contact with financial news and their broker while or vacation
(36 percent) or cancel their vacation outright (3 percent)!
Note: A limit order would be the best
way to set a specific price for sale of a stock in a situation
where an investor did not want to watch the market constantly.
-
Fewer than one
in five investors know there is no "insurance" for stock
market losses. When asked to identify the
"organization that insures you against losing money in the
stock market or as the result of investment fraud," only
16 percent of investors knew that there is no such group.
A nearly equal number (18 percent) were unsure or did not know
how to answer the question. The balance of those surveyed
incorrectly attributed then open-ended insurance role to the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission (33 percent); the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (16 percent); and SIPC (16 percent).
Note: No "insurance" against
investment fraud or simple market-related losses is available
from any government agency or non-profit organization, including
SIPC.
-
Only one of the
five "survivor" questions was answered correctly by
a majority of the investors. When given different
explanations of Chapter 11, almost three in five (59 percent)
correct answered that it described a company that is "is
seeking protection under bankruptcy law and intends to reorganize
itself." Fewer than one in four (23 percent) confused
Chapter 11 with Chapter 7 proceedings in which a company is "seeking
protection under bankruptcy law and ceases all operations.
ABOUT
THE SURVEY
The
SIPC/NAIC national opinion survey was conducted by CARAVAN Opinion
Research Corporation International (ORCI) during the period, May
31-June 4, 2001. Telephone interviews were conducted among
a national probability sample of 2067 adults comprising 1013 men
and 1054 women 18 years of age and older, living in private households
in the continental United States. The margin of error is
plus or minus 3 percent.
ABOUT
SIPC AND NAIC
From its creation by Congress in 1970 through December 2000, the Securities Investor
Protection Corporation (www.sipc.org) advanced $391 million in order to
make possible the recovery of $3.8 billion in assets for an estimated
443,000 investors. SIPC estimates that
more than 99 percent of eligible investors have been made whole
in the failed brokerage firm cases that it has handled to date.
SIPC
either acts as trustee or works with an independent court-appointed
trustee in a missing asset case to recover funds. The statute
that created SIPC provides that customers of a failed brokerage
firm receive all non-negotiable securities that are already registered
in their names or in the process of being registered. At
the same time, funds from the SIPC reserve are available to satisfy
the remaining claims of each customer up to a maximum of $500,000.
This figure includes a maximum of $100,000 on claims for cash.
Recovered funds are used to
pay investors whose claims exceed SIPC's protection limit of $500,000.
SIPC often draws down its reserve to aid investors.
Recovered funds also are used to replenish SIPC's reserve in the
event that the reserve is tapped in the early stages of a liquidation
proceeding.
NAIC
is a national, non-profit organization of investment clubs and
individual investors, based in Madison Heights, Michigan. Founded
in 1951, NAIC is dedicated to providing a sound program of investment
education and information to help its members become successful,
lifetime investors. NAIC is considered the pioneer of the modern
investment club movement in the United States as well as the voice
for the individual investor.
NAIC
currently serves more than 550,000 members including over 35,500
investment clubs. On average, NAIC members invest $45 per month
in an investment club portfolio, and invest in excess of $350
per month in their personal portfolios. These regular investments
by NAIC members, in the aggregate, exceed $48 million invested
every month in stocks and mutual funds. The combined investment
portfolios of NAIC members exceed $197 billion. For more information
on NAIC, visit www.better-investing.org or call 877-ASK-NAIC
(877-275-6242).
CONTACT:
Ailis Aaron or Scott Stapf, The Hastings Group, 703/276-3256,
or aaaron@hastingsgroup.com.
VISIT
SIPC AND NAIC ON THE WEB AT:
www.sipc.org
www.better-investing.org
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