Fidelity Investments Is F*cking You Over
What I saw in five years, what I questioned, and what they did to me when I wouldn’t stop asking
I spent five years at Fidelity Investments. Series 6, 7, 26, 63, and 65 licenses. Chartered Financial Consultant. Managed a $500M book of business. I believed in it enough to bring five people to the company.
And when I started asking questions about what we were actually doing to clients, they tried to destroy me with a Form U5.
I’m not the only one. And that’s the part you need to understand.
What I Saw Every Single Day
We had managed accounts that couldn’t outperform our own asset allocation mutual funds. The mutual funds cost half as much and delivered better returns. They were right there in our lineup.
We never told clients about them.
We had this “best research in the world” pitch we’d give every prospect. World-class analysis. Sophisticated modeling. My manager even claimed we had quarterly standing meetings with the Fed—like we had some edge on information that justified our fees.
And those professionally managed accounts were getting beat by simple index strategies that a college student could implement.
We’re amazing at everything except creating alpha or excess returns, apparently.
I watched advisors run clients through the Planning & Guidance Center like it was some advanced financial modeling system. It’s not. It’s an elementary tool that doesn’t account for half the variables that actually matter in real planning.
But clients don’t know that. They see charts and projections and they assume we know what we’re talking about. The tool is designed to create fear. To show gaps. To make people anxious about their future.
And then we’d solve that manufactured anxiety with expensive products that benefited us more than them.
I watched this for five years. Every single day.
When I Started Asking Questions
I started having doubts about the approach. The process felt manipulative. We were playing on people’s ignorance and calling it planning. We were pushing products that underperformed our own cheaper alternatives.
So I asked questions.
“Why aren’t we showing clients the asset allocation funds that perform better and cost less?”
“How do we justify these managed account fees when the performance doesn’t support them?”
“Isn’t this planning tool too simplistic to be treated like gospel?”
“If we have quarterly meetings with the Fed and the best research in the world, why can’t we beat a basic index fund?”
I wasn’t trying to be difficult. I genuinely wanted to understand how this was in clients’ best interests.
You know what happened?
They filed a U5 termination designed to end my career.
The Weapon They Use When You Won’t Shut Up
Here’s what most people don’t know about the financial services industry: when you’re terminated or resign, your employer files a Form U5 with FINRA. That form is public. It goes on your permanent record that anyone—future employers, clients, regulators—can access through BrokerCheck.
And if your employer wants to destroy you, they just put the right language in that U5.
U5 defamation cases increased 24% between 2019 and 2020. In 2020, Form U5 defamation was the fourth most common claim filed with FINRA—behind only breach of contract, promissory notes, and compensation disputes.
Think about that. The fourth most common dispute in the entire securities industry is advisors fighting defamatory career-ending language their former employers put on their records.
This isn’t a few bad actors. This is systemic.
Fidelity’s Pattern
I’m not alone in fighting Fidelity over U5 abuse.
A FINRA arbitration panel unanimously found that Fidelity Brokerage Services defamed former advisor Dillon Pacholek by making false statements on his U5. Pacholek had voluntarily resigned but Fidelity reported he resigned under allegations of misconduct. He was denied multiple job opportunities because of the defamatory U5, resulting in his securities licenses expiring.
Ryan Sanghak Lee won $500,000 in compensatory damages after a FINRA panel found Fidelity wrongfully terminated him and defamed him. The arbitrators ordered expungement of the termination disclosure from his record, finding the allegations “factually impossible or clearly erroneous.”
A 12-year veteran Fidelity advisor in Boston spent three years unable to secure employment after Fidelity filed a U5 alleging he was improperly paid under reimbursement programs—despite the fact that he had properly adhered to all program requirements. An arbitrator determined the allegations were defamatory and ordered expungement.
Notice the pattern? Advisors with clean records. False allegations. Career destruction. Years of fighting just to clear their names.
And even when they win, careers get destroyed. One case resulted in a $52 million award—one of the largest in FINRA defamation history—but the advisor’s career was still over.
It’s Not Just About Me. It’s About Anyone Who Questions Them.
In May 2024, former Fidelity advisor Michael Maeker filed a wrongful termination lawsuit accusing Fidelity of retaliating against him for reporting that the firm pressured advisors to move clients into higher-revenue investments regardless of client best interests.
Maeker had a spotless 28-year record with zero client complaints. After he blew the whistle on Fidelity violating Regulation Best Interest, they fired him and tarnished his U5. A man with nearly three decades of clean work ended up taking a job in the Home Depot paint department to support his family.
Read that again. Twenty-eight years. Zero complaints. He reported illegal sales practices. They destroyed him.
Fidelity created compensation incentives and threats to advisors’ careers if they didn’t move clients into Tier 3 investments that generated the highest revenues for Fidelity—regardless of whether those investments were in clients’ best interests.
And when Maeker reported it? They ended his career.
If Something Can’t Be Questioned, There’s Something Being Hidden
This is the part that should terrify you as an investor.
A legitimate fiduciary can answer questions about why their recommendations serve your best interest. A legitimate company can address internal concerns without destroying the people asking.
Fidelity does neither.
Instead of answering questions about underperforming expensive products, they file career-ending U5s. Instead of fixing illegal sales practices, they fire the whistleblowers.
FINRA has no process for advisors to contest U5 filings before they go public. There’s no appeals process. Your only recourse is expensive arbitration that comes after the damage is done.
Even when advisors win arbitration, it typically costs tens of thousands of dollars and takes 2-3 years. By then, careers are destroyed and licenses have expired.
What does that tell you about a system designed to “protect investors”?
The Products Are Still Dogshit
While Fidelity is busy destroying careers of advisors who ask questions, let’s talk about what you’re actually getting:
Managed accounts that can’t beat their own cheaper mutual funds. “World-class research” that doesn’t translate into better returns. Planning tools that manufacture fear instead of providing clarity. A tiered compensation system that pays advisors 10 times more to put your money in expensive products (Tier 3) versus low-cost alternatives (Tier 1).
And a company culture that retaliates against anyone—advisor or whistleblower—who points out this isn’t serving clients.
What You Need to Know
Ask your Fidelity advisor these questions:
“What is the total annual fee I’m paying on this managed account, including all underlying expenses?”
“How has this performed compared to your asset allocation mutual funds over the last 5 years?”
“Are you compensated differently for putting me in different products?”
“Has anyone at this company ever been terminated for questioning whether expensive products serve client interests?”
Watch what happens. Watch if they answer directly or redirect. Watch if they get defensive.
Why This Matters
Because I asked questions and they tried to end my career with a U5.
Because U5 defamation is the fourth most common claim in FINRA arbitration, which means this pattern is industry-wide.
Because multiple Fidelity advisors have won arbitration proving Fidelity filed false, defamatory U5s—and those are just the ones who had the resources to fight back.
Because a 28-year advisor with zero complaints reported Fidelity for illegal sales practices and ended up working at Home Depot.
Because millions of people are being rolled out of lower-cost 401(k)s into higher-cost IRAs using manipulated projections and fear tactics.
I settled my case. The claims were dismissed. But I’m telling you what I saw because you deserve to know what happens behind the “world-class research” pitch and the planning presentations.
If something can’t be questioned, there’s something being hidden.
I questioned it. Other advisors questioned it. And Fidelity’s response wasn’t to fix the problems—it was to destroy the people asking.
Stay the fuck away from them and their advisors.
You’re not a client to be served. You’re revenue to be captured. And if your advisor starts asking whether you’re really being served? They’ll be gone before you know what happened.
Your 401(k) rollover isn’t about what’s best for you. It’s about what generates the most fees for them. And they’ll use every tool they have to make you believe otherwise.
—Cody Taymore
Kill The Silence
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"If Something Can’t Be Questioned, There’s Something Being Hidden". Yep. Spot on.
Most people should put most of their money in index funds such as advice of Boggle heads and others. If these “advisors” are so good, I figure they would all be retired on their boat by age 50.