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Private Securities Transactions What Investors Must Know

April 14, 2026  |  Uncategorized

A lot of investors first hear about a private deal the same way. A broker or advisor they trust says there’s an opportunity that isn’t available to the general public. It sounds exclusive. It sounds advanced. It often sounds safer than it is.

That’s where many serious losses start.

If you were sold a private investment that later froze up, dropped in value, stopped making distributions, or turned out to be something your brokerage firm never properly approved, you may have a legal claim. Private securities transactions can be legitimate. They can also be the vehicle brokers use to sell away, hide conflicts, avoid supervision, and place investors into products that never should have been recommended in the first place.

What Are Private Securities Transactions and Why Are They Risky

A private securities transaction usually means a securities deal that happens outside the normal, supervised business of a brokerage firm. In real life, that often looks like a broker pitching you a private placement, startup offering, non-traded REIT, BDC, oil and gas deal, or another off-market investment.

Public stocks trade on exchanges. Prices are visible. Reporting rules are more established. Private securities are different.

Think of it this way. Public investments are sold in a brightly lit store. Private investments are often sold in a back room. That doesn’t make every private offering fraudulent. It does mean you usually get less transparency, less liquidity, and less margin for error.

A wooden desk with a document, glasses, and a pen, featuring the text Hidden Risks above.

Why investors get pulled in

Most investors don’t go looking for these products on their own. A financial professional brings the idea to them.

The pitch is familiar:

  • Exclusive access: You’re told this opportunity is limited or only available to select clients.
  • Income story: The product is framed as a way to generate distributions without major stock market volatility.
  • Diversification claim: The advisor says private assets will balance your portfolio.
  • Confidence transfer: You rely on the advisor’s reputation instead of getting full independent due diligence.

That’s why private securities transactions create so much risk. Investors are often relying on trust when the product itself is hard to evaluate.

Private investments often fail in slow motion. There may be no daily market price, no easy exit, and no clear warning until the damage is already done.

The risks that matter most

The biggest issue isn’t that a private security is private. The issue is what often comes with that label.

Illiquidity is one of the first problems. You may not be able to sell when you want to. Some investors don’t realize that until they need cash for retirement, medical care, or family obligations.

Opaque valuation is another. If there’s no active market, the account statement may show a value that doesn’t reflect what you could recover.

Higher complexity also matters. Many private offerings use layered entities, sponsor fees, commissions, offering costs, and restrictions that most retail investors never see clearly explained.

Weak supervision can be the most dangerous problem of all. If your broker sold the investment outside firm channels, the ordinary checks that should have protected you may never have happened.

For a basic explanation of private placement structure, this overview of private placement meaning is useful background.

This is not a niche corner of the market

Private investments are not some tiny side market anymore. By the end of 2024, 53,611 private funds were reported on SEC Form PF, a 6.8% year-over-year increase, and those funds held $24.9 trillion in gross assets according to the SEC’s private fund statistics.

That scale matters for one reason. As more money moves into private markets, more individual investors get exposed to products they may not fully understand and to brokers who may treat those products as commission opportunities instead of client solutions.

What investors should take from this

If an advisor recommended a private investment, you should immediately ask three questions:

  1. Was this approved by the brokerage firm
  2. Was the investment appropriate for my age, goals, and need for liquidity
  3. Were the risks explained in plain English

If the answer to any of those questions is unclear, you shouldn’t assume the loss was just bad luck. Many private securities cases involve poor supervision, unsuitable recommendations, incomplete disclosures, or outright selling away.

The Regulatory Guardrails FINRA Rule 3280 Explained

Private securities transactions are not supposed to happen in the shadows. FINRA built a rule for this exact problem. It’s Rule 3280, and it exists because brokers cannot be allowed to sell side deals to clients without firm oversight.

That rule is simple in concept. A broker who wants to participate in a private securities transaction has to tell the firm first. If the firm approves it, the firm has to treat it like its own business and supervise it.

That is not optional.

A stack of documents, a glass of water, and an open book titled Rule on a wooden table.

The three duties that matter

Rule 3280 works through three core obligations.

Written notice

A registered person must give the brokerage firm prior written notice before participating in a private securities transaction.

That notice is supposed to identify the proposed deal, the broker’s role, and whether the broker will receive compensation. This requirement is critical because firms cannot supervise what brokers hide.

Firm approval

The firm then has to decide whether the broker can participate.

If the broker is receiving selling compensation, approval is not just a courtesy step. It is the point where the firm accepts responsibility to monitor what happens next.

Firm supervision

If approved, the member firm must record the transaction on its books and supervise it as if the transaction were executed on the firm’s behalf.

This is the heart of the rule. The firm doesn’t get to say, “That was his side deal, not ours,” after approving it.

For the rule text itself, see this summary of FINRA Rule 3280.

What selling away means

Selling away is the term investors need to know. It generally refers to a broker selling securities outside the regular course or scope of the broker’s employment and outside firm supervision.

A classic example looks like this:

A client trusts a long-time broker. The broker recommends an investment in a private company, real estate venture, or promissory note. The money gets wired to a third-party entity. The investment never appears on normal account statements. Later, the broker says the deal went bad.

That’s not a technical paperwork issue. That’s a major investor-protection problem.

Practical rule: If the investment was pitched by your broker but didn’t move through normal firm channels, treat that as a legal red flag immediately.

Why this rule matters in real disputes

Rule 3280 matters because it creates a framework for accountability.

If a broker gave no written notice, that points toward undisclosed activity. If the firm approved the transaction but failed to monitor it, that raises a supervision claim. If the firm missed obvious warning signs, it may still face liability for failure to supervise.

The governing rule states that associated persons must provide prior written notice, and if approved, the member must record and supervise the transaction as its own. It also notes that non-compliance often leads to fines exceeding $10,000, suspensions, or bars under FINRA Rule 3280.

Firms don’t get a free pass

Brokerage firms often try to distance themselves from bad private deals by saying the broker acted alone. Sometimes that defense works. Often it doesn’t.

If the broker used firm email, met the client through the firm, discussed the investment alongside the client’s regular accounts, or showed other warning signs, the firm may still be exposed. In arbitration, one of the central issues is whether the firm ignored signals it should have caught.

That’s why investors should not focus only on the individual broker. The broker may be insolvent or gone. The brokerage firm is usually the target in a recovery case because that’s where supervision duties live and where a meaningful recovery is more likely.

What you should review right now

If you suspect a private deal was sold improperly, check:

  • Account statements: Does the investment appear anywhere on your regular brokerage statements?
  • Emails and texts: Did the broker discuss the deal through firm-approved communications?
  • Subscription paperwork: Was the broker identified as your point of contact or selling representative?
  • Payment trail: Did funds go to an issuer, affiliate, or unfamiliar outside entity?

Those details often tell the story faster than the sales pitch ever did.

Recognizing Unsuitable Investments and Common Fraud Scenarios

A bad private securities transaction doesn’t always begin with a fake company or a forged document. Sometimes it begins with a real product sold to the wrong person in the wrong amount for the wrong reason.

That still gives rise to a claim.

U.S. law generally limits private market access to wealthier investors, yet pressure remains to put retail investors into private placements, non-traded REITs, and BDCs even when they are poorly suited to the risks. That concern is discussed in Blue Owl’s piece on private market access and retail investor risk.

The retiree sold an illiquid REIT

A retiree asks for income and preservation of principal. The broker recommends a non-traded REIT and describes it as stable because it owns real estate.

What gets left out is often the most important part. The investor may have no practical secondary market, limited redemption options, and no realistic way to access principal when life changes. Fees may be substantial and difficult to unpack. The value shown on statements may not match what the investor could recover.

That recommendation may be unsuitable even if the REIT itself is a real, operating product.

The client pushed into a BDC for yield

A BDC, or business development company, is often sold on yield. For some investors, that can sound like a solution to low interest rates.

But the question isn’t whether yield exists. The question is whether the investor understood the risk, the liquidity limits, and the nature of the underlying holdings.

For an elderly investor, a conservative investor, or someone who needed funds available on short notice, a private or thinly traded BDC may have been the wrong recommendation from the start.

The startup private placement sold on trust

This scenario shows up constantly. A broker says a private company is about to take off. The client hears words like “early-stage,” “ground floor,” or “pre-IPO.”

In many of these cases, the broker relies on relationship capital, not full disclosure. The investor gets optimistic projections but very little practical explanation of failure risk, dilution, financing uncertainty, or the possibility of total loss.

That’s not careful advising. That’s speculation dressed up as opportunity.

If your advisor sold a high-risk private placement as a routine part of retirement planning, the problem may be the recommendation itself, not just the outcome.

The oil and gas partnership sold as tax-smart investing

Oil and gas partnerships can be especially dangerous for ordinary investors. The paperwork is dense. The risks are layered. Liquidity is weak. Performance often depends on assumptions an ordinary investor cannot realistically test.

These products are often marketed as advanced investment options with tax advantages or diversification value. For many clients, especially retirees, they are too speculative and too hard to exit.

Overconcentration is its own form of misconduct

A private investment doesn’t have to be fraudulent to be improper. If too much of your money was placed into one private deal, one sponsor, or one narrow category of alternatives, that alone may support a claim.

A broker should not load a client’s portfolio with illiquid positions and then act surprised when the client can’t access funds or suffers steep losses. Concentration magnifies every hidden risk in private securities transactions:

  • Liquidity risk: You can’t exit enough of the portfolio when cash is needed.
  • Valuation risk: One flawed statement value distorts your entire financial picture.
  • Issuer risk: If one sponsor or project fails, the damage is severe.
  • Suitability risk: The portfolio stops matching the investor’s actual objectives.

Fraud tactics that keep recurring

The products change. The tactics don’t.

Some of the most common warning patterns include:

  • False safety language: Calling a speculative deal conservative, income-focused, or principal protected.
  • Urgency pressure: Saying the offering is closing immediately or that you need to wire funds fast.
  • Selective disclosure: Highlighting projected upside while skating past lockups, fees, and redemption limits.
  • Off-platform handling: Asking you to send money outside normal brokerage procedures.
  • Relationship pressure: Leaning on years of trust instead of producing complete, plain-English disclosure.

For more on unauthorized outside recommendations by brokers, see this discussion of FINRA selling away.

Ask the right question

Many investors ask, “Was this investment legitimate?” That’s not always the best first question.

Ask this instead: Was this investment suitable for me, and was it presented with transparency and full supervision?**

That question gets you closer to the legal issue. An investment can be real and still be wrong. It can exist on paper and still have been sold through deception, concealment, poor supervision, or reckless concentration.

Investor Red Flags and Steps to Protect Your Rights

When investors call after a private securities loss, the same warning signs show up again and again. Most were visible before the investment collapsed. They just weren’t obvious at the time.

If any of the following happened to you, treat the situation seriously.

Warning signs of a problematic private securities transaction

Red FlagWhat It Could Mean
Broker said the deal was exclusive or only available for a short timePressure tactics may have replaced real due diligence
You were asked to make a check payable to someone other than your brokerage firmThe investment may have been handled outside firm supervision
The investment does not appear on your regular account statementsThe transaction may have been off-book or inadequately supervised
The advisor focused on income or upside but gave weak answers about riskMaterial risks may have been downplayed
You were told not to worry about liquidityYou may have been steered into an illiquid product that doesn’t fit your needs
The broker used personal email, text messages, or informal communicationsThe broker may have been trying to avoid compliance oversight
The paperwork was confusing and you were rushed to signLack of informed consent is a common problem in unsuitable sales
Too much of your portfolio went into one private deal or one category of alternativesOverconcentration may have made the recommendation unsuitable
You were reassured by the broker’s personal involvement in the investmentA conflict of interest may have existed
You tried to redeem, sell, or get information and got vague responsesThe stated value or liquidity may not have reflected reality

The fastest way to damage a future case is to assume you should wait and see. Delay helps the broker and the firm, not you.

What to do immediately

Don’t improvise. Preserve the evidence.

Gather every document

Pull together:

  • Account statements
  • Emails and text messages
  • Subscription agreements
  • Private placement memoranda
  • Cancelled checks and wire records
  • Notes from phone calls or meetings
  • Advertising materials or slide decks

If you wrote details in a notebook or calendar, keep that too. Small details often become decisive evidence.

Stop communicating casually with the broker

You don’t need to argue with the advisor. You don’t need to accuse anyone. You also should not let the broker coach you into a new narrative.

Keep communications limited and in writing where possible. Don’t agree to roll the investment into another deal. Don’t sign new paperwork to “fix” the problem before legal review.

Request your full file

Ask the brokerage firm for your account records and all documents related to the investment. That may include internal notes, forms, approvals, correspondence, and supervisory records.

Be specific. Broad requests are easy to dodge. Ask for everything tied to the recommendation, purchase, and supervision of the investment.

What not to do

Investors hurt their own cases by trying to clean things up. Don’t do that.

  • Don’t delete emails or texts
  • Don’t throw away envelopes, statements, or offering materials
  • Don’t rely on memory alone
  • Don’t send more money
  • Don’t accept verbal assurances as proof

Build a timeline

A clear timeline helps any attorney evaluate your claim quickly. Write down:

  1. When the investment was first pitched
  2. What you were told about risk, liquidity, and returns
  3. When you invested
  4. Whether distributions stopped or values changed
  5. When you first realized something was wrong

That timeline often exposes the gap between what was promised and what happened.

Your Legal Remedies for Recovering Investment Losses

You invested because your advisor said the deal was solid, the risk was controlled, and the return justified the lockup. Now the distributions have stopped, the value is unclear, and the same advisor keeps telling you to wait. That is the moment to stop treating this like a disappointing investment and start evaluating it as a legal claim.

If a broker, brokerage firm, or affiliated person sold you a private security through bad advice, hidden conflicts, or weak supervision, you may have a real path to recover losses. The right remedy depends on who sold the product, what role the firm played, and whether the misconduct falls inside FINRA’s arbitration system or belongs in court.

The most common recovery path against a brokerage firm is FINRA arbitration.

A close-up of a person's hand using a silver pen to sign a document labeled Legal Recovery.

FINRA arbitration versus court

Investors need to choose the right forum early. That choice affects timing, procedure, available defendants, and settlement pressure.

OptionHow it generally worksWhen it may fit
FINRA arbitrationA formal dispute process used for claims against brokerage firms and registered brokersOften the primary path for unsuitable recommendations, selling away, and supervision claims
Court litigationA lawsuit filed in state or federal courtMay fit cases involving non-broker defendants, parallel fraud claims, or issues outside FINRA’s reach
Class actionA group-based case for investors with similar claimsMay fit some widespread offerings, but many investor losses are better pursued individually

For many investors, arbitration is the stronger option because it is built for disputes with brokerage firms and registered representatives. You present the documents, testimony, and legal claims to an arbitration panel, and that panel can award damages. If you want a practical overview of the process, review how to file for arbitration.

Why arbitration is often the main remedy

Most brokerage account agreements require arbitration. In private securities cases, that often works in the investor’s favor because the claim usually centers on recommendation misconduct, supervision failures, and omissions by people regulated through FINRA.

Arbitration claims commonly include:

  • Unsuitable private placements
  • Selling away
  • Failure to supervise
  • Misrepresentation or omission
  • Breach of fiduciary duty
  • Overconcentration in illiquid alternatives

These claims are not abstract. They focus on a straightforward question. Was this investment sold in a way that violated the broker’s duties and caused your loss?

Recovery is real

Investors often assume that once money goes into a private deal, it is gone for good. That is wrong.

A failed private investment can still produce a recoverable legal claim if the sale involved unsuitable advice, false statements, omitted risks, unauthorized outside selling, or a brokerage firm that failed to supervise the broker who made the recommendation. In 2023, FINRA reported disciplinary actions, restitution, and other sanctions against firms and individuals in its year in review. Regulatory enforcement is not your lawsuit, but it confirms a basic point. Securities misconduct leads to financial consequences, and investor recovery is not theoretical.

A private securities loss is often more than a market loss. If the investment was sold through misconduct, the loss may be legally actionable.

Deadlines can destroy good claims

Delay helps the other side.

Private securities cases are often muddied by stale records, fading memories, dissolved entities, and brokers who keep investors calm with promises about a coming liquidity event or temporary delay. None of that stops the filing clock. If you wait too long, a strong claim can become harder to prove or time-barred entirely.

Get the case reviewed as soon as the facts stop making sense.

What you may be able to recover

The available remedy depends on the facts and the forum, but investors often pursue:

  • Out-of-pocket losses
  • Rescission or rescissory damages in some cases
  • Interest, when allowed
  • Attorneys’ fees or costs, when authorized
  • Other relief tied to the misconduct

The right legal strategy is not to sit on a bad private investment and hope the story improves. It is to identify who is responsible, bring the claim in the right forum, and pursue recovery before more time is lost.

How Kons Law Investigates Your Claim and Fights for You

You invested because your advisor said the deal was vetted, appropriate, and worth the risk. Months later, distributions stop, account values turn opaque, and the advisor starts offering explanations instead of answers. That is usually the point where investors need more than updates. They need a legal strategy aimed at recovery.

Kons Law investigates private securities cases by tracing how the investment was sold, who approved it, what the firm knew, and where responsibility sits. In many cases, the loss did not start with market performance. It started with a sale that should not have happened in the first place.

The review begins with a free, no-obligation consultation with an experienced securities attorney. You discuss what you were told, what documents you signed, how the investment fit into your overall finances, and what happened after the purchase. The point is straightforward. Identify whether you have a viable claim, preserve the evidence, and determine the best path to recover your money.

What the investigation focuses on

A strong claim is built from records, not assumptions. Private securities cases often turn on subscription agreements, new account forms, emails, notes, marketing materials, due diligence files, compensation records, and internal supervisory documents.

Kons Law examines questions such as:

  • Was the investment approved by the brokerage firm
  • Did the advisor disclose conflicts and compensation
  • Was the investment suitable for your age, liquidity needs, and objectives
  • Did the firm ignore warning signs of selling away
  • Was your account overconcentrated in an illiquid or speculative product

Those questions matter because liability often extends beyond the individual broker. A firm may be responsible for failing to supervise, allowing outside business activity to continue unchecked, or permitting recommendations that never fit the investor’s profile. That is where recovery often becomes realistic.

What clients can expect

Kons Law investigates private securities cases by tracing how the investment was sold, who approved it, what the firm knew, and where responsibility sits.

Kons Law represents investors in FINRA arbitration and court actions against brokerage firms, advisors, investment advisory firms, and related financial entities. The firm’s job is to identify the strongest defendants, frame the misconduct clearly, and press the claim in the forum most likely to produce a result.

Why investors call Kons Law

Kons Law has more than 18 years of experience, has handled 700+ matters, and has recovered over $50 million for investors. The firm typically handles cases on a contingency-fee basis, which means you do not pay attorneys’ fees upfront to pursue recovery.

If your broker sold you a private placement, non-traded REIT, BDC, oil and gas program, or another off-book or unsuitable investment, stop waiting for the story to improve. Get the transaction reviewed, identify who can be held responsible, and act before more evidence disappears.

If you’d like a free consultation to discuss the investment loss recovery process in more detail, contact Kons Law or call Kons Law Firm at (860) 920-5181 for a FREE, NO OBLIGATION consultation.

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