Connecticut Practice Area
Connecticut Securities & Finance attorneys.
Connecticut's concentration of hedge funds in Greenwich and Stamford, insurance company investment operations, and wealth management industry generate complex securities disputes. Browse securities attorneys who understand federal securities regulations and Connecticut's Uniform Securities Act.
Why attorneys matter
Why people hire securities & finance attorneys
Securities laws are among the most complex and heavily regulated areas of law — overlapping federal statutes (Securities Act, Exchange Act, Investment Advisers Act), SEC rules, FINRA regulations, and state blue sky laws. An attorney navigates this regulatory maze and protects your rights.
Investment losses can be devastating — retirement savings, college funds, and life savings wiped out by fraud, unsuitable recommendations, or unauthorized trading. An attorney evaluates whether your losses resulted from misconduct and pursues recovery through FINRA arbitration, SEC complaints, or civil litigation.
SEC and FINRA enforcement actions carry serious consequences — fines, disgorgement, industry bars, and even criminal referrals. An attorney experienced in securities enforcement can negotiate with regulators, mount a defense, and minimize the impact on your career and business.
Securities disputes often involve complex financial instruments, trading strategies, and valuation issues that require specialized knowledge. An attorney who understands these products can evaluate claims, retain financial experts, and present the case effectively.
Time is critical in securities matters — statutes of limitations, FINRA arbitration filing deadlines, and regulatory response requirements create narrow windows for action. An attorney ensures you meet all deadlines and preserve your claims.
Common questions
Common questions about securities & finance
General information only — not legal advice.
What should I do if I suspect investment fraud?
Document everything — statements, communications with your broker or advisor, and the timeline of events. Don't destroy any records. Contact an attorney who handles securities cases — they can evaluate whether you have a claim and advise on the best forum (FINRA arbitration, SEC complaint, state action, or civil lawsuit). Report suspected fraud to the SEC, FINRA, and your state securities regulator.
What is FINRA arbitration?
FINRA arbitration is a dispute resolution process for claims between investors and brokerage firms or financial advisors. Most brokerage account agreements include mandatory arbitration clauses, meaning you must resolve disputes through FINRA rather than in court. The process is generally faster and less expensive than litigation, but decisions are binding and very difficult to appeal. An attorney experienced in FINRA arbitration is critical.
What is an "unsuitable" investment recommendation?
FINRA rules require brokers to recommend investments that are suitable for each customer based on their age, risk tolerance, financial situation, investment objectives, and time horizon. An unsuitable recommendation might include putting a retiree's savings into high-risk speculative investments, over-concentrating a portfolio in one sector, or recommending complex products the customer doesn't understand.
Can I recover money lost in the stock market?
Market losses alone are not recoverable — investing involves risk. However, if your losses resulted from fraud, unsuitable recommendations, unauthorized trading, excessive fees (churning), misrepresentation of risks, or failure to diversify, you may have a valid claim. An attorney can analyze your account activity, trading patterns, and communications to determine whether broker misconduct contributed to your losses.
What are "blue sky" laws?
Blue sky laws are state-level securities regulations that operate alongside federal securities laws. They typically require registration of securities offerings and broker-dealers within the state, prohibit fraud in connection with securities transactions, and provide state-level enforcement and private rights of action. These laws vary significantly by state and can provide additional protections beyond federal law.
What is insider trading?
Insider trading involves buying or selling securities based on material, non-public information in violation of a duty of trust or confidence. It's illegal under federal law and carries severe penalties — civil fines up to three times the profit gained or loss avoided, criminal fines up to $5 million, and up to 20 years in prison. The SEC actively investigates insider trading using sophisticated surveillance technology.
What is the difference between SEC and FINRA?
The SEC (Securities and Exchange Commission) is a federal government agency that regulates securities markets, enforces federal securities laws, and oversees market participants. FINRA (Financial Industry Regulatory Authority) is a self-regulatory organization that oversees broker-dealers and their registered representatives. Both can bring enforcement actions, but FINRA also runs the arbitration system for investor disputes with brokers.
How long do I have to file a securities claim?
Deadlines vary by claim type and forum. Federal securities fraud claims generally must be filed within 2 years of discovery (or when you should have discovered the fraud) and within 5 years of the violation. FINRA arbitration claims must be filed within 6 years of the event. State blue sky law deadlines vary. These deadlines are strictly enforced — consult an attorney promptly if you suspect misconduct.
Connecticut Coverage
Securities & Finance attorneys throughout Connecticut
Serving Bridgeport, New Haven, Hartford, Stamford, Waterbury, Norwalk, Danbury, New Britain, Bristol, Meriden, and communities across Connecticut.
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