NASAA Series 63 Practice Test & Mock Exam

Practice NASAA Series 63 with free sample questions, timed mock exams, topic drills, and detailed answer explanations in Securities Prep.

Series 63 covers the state-law and ethics decisions that shape U.S. securities-agent conduct. If you are searching for Series 63 sample questions, a practice test, mock exam, or simulator, this is the main Securities Prep page to start on web and continue on iOS or Android with the same account. This page includes 24 sample questions with detailed explanations so you can try the exam style before opening the full app question bank.

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What this Series 63 practice page gives you

  • a direct route into the Securities Prep simulator for Series 63
  • 24 sample questions with detailed explanations across the main Series 63 rule buckets
  • targeted practice around registration, exemptions, ethics, communications, and prohibited conduct
  • detailed explanations that show why the best state-law answer is correct
  • a clear free-preview path before you subscribe
  • the same subscription across web and mobile

Series 63 exam snapshot

  • Issuer: NASAA
  • Official exam name: Uniform Securities Agent State Law Examination
  • Exam code: Series 63
  • Question count: 60
  • Exam time: 75 minutes
  • Practice reference: 60 practice questions in 75 minutes

Series 63 questions usually reward the option that applies the correct registration or ethics rule trigger cleanly instead of the one that sounds generally reasonable but misses a state-law detail.

Topic coverage for Series 63 practice

  • Registration rules: agents, broker-dealers, and state-law registration triggers
  • Exemptions: exempt securities, exempt transactions, and scope boundaries
  • Ethics and conduct: misleading statements, conflicts, communications, and prohibited practices
  • Decision speed: short state-law scenarios that test precise vocabulary and rule application

What Series 63 is really testing

Series 63 is primarily a state-law-classification-and-safest-next-step exam:

  • identifying the role before deciding what registration rule applies
  • distinguishing exempt securities from exempt transactions
  • recognizing that antifraud and ethical duties do not disappear just because something is exempt
  • choosing the compliant response that stops, discloses, documents, or escalates when a red flag appears
  • applying state-law vocabulary precisely instead of relying on general securities intuition

Common question styles

  • Who is this actor under state law?: agent, broker-dealer, investment adviser, investment adviser representative, or administrator
  • What is the trigger?: registration, notice filing, exemption, administrator authority, or antifraud duty
  • What changed the result?: the role, the state, the type of security, or the type of transaction
  • What is the safest compliant next step?: stop, disclose, preserve records, escalate, or proceed with documentation
  • Which communication is improper?: omission, misleading claim, guarantee, conflict, or unethical sales conduct

High-yield pitfalls

  • mixing up the actor before applying the rule
  • assuming an exemption removes antifraud obligations
  • confusing an exempt security with an exempt transaction
  • overlooking a word that changes jurisdiction or role context
  • choosing the answer that sounds commercially reasonable instead of legally safer
  • treating state-law ethics as optional if registration is not required

How to use the Series 63 simulator efficiently

  1. Start with registration and exemption drills so the core rule triggers become easier to recognize.
  2. Review every miss until you can explain the exact legal or ethical principle behind the best answer.
  3. Move into mixed sets once you can shift between definitions, exemptions, and conduct scenarios quickly.
  4. Finish with timed runs so the 75-minute pace feels comfortable before exam day.

Free preview vs premium

  • Free preview: 24 public sample questions on this page plus the web app entry so you can validate the question style and explanation depth.
  • Premium: the full Series 63 practice bank, focused drills, mixed sets, timed mock exams, detailed explanations, and progress tracking across web and mobile.

Free samples and full bank

  • Live now: this exact practice route is available in Securities Prep on web, iOS, and Android.
  • On-page sample set: this page includes 24 public sample questions from the current practice coverage.
  • Full app: open the Securities Prep web app or mobile app for broader timed coverage.

Free review resources

Use these free SecuritiesMastery.com resources for concept review, then return to this page when you are ready to practice in Securities Prep.

Focused sample questions

Use these focused Series 63 sample-question pages when you want to isolate one official topic area before returning to the mixed simulator.

24 Series 63 sample questions with detailed explanations

These sample questions follow the standard single-answer style used for Series 63 and cover multiple blueprint areas for this exam code. Use them to check your readiness here, then move into the full Securities Prep question bank for broader timed coverage.

Question 1

Topic: Topic VIII — Ethical Practices and Obligations

Which statement about supervision expectations for discretionary accounts is most accurate?

  • A. Discretionary authority does not eliminate supervision; the firm must monitor the account’s activity for suitability and signs of unauthorized or excessive trading.
  • B. Discretionary authority removes the need to assess suitability for each trade because the customer pre-approved the strategy.
  • C. A discretionary account only needs review when the customer complains; otherwise, trades are presumed authorized and suitable.
  • D. Once a customer grants discretionary authority, the agent may trade without principal review because the customer accepted the risk.

Best answer: A

Explanation: Discretionary authority changes who makes day-to-day trading decisions, but it does not reduce the firm’s duty to supervise. Because the agent can place trades without contacting the client each time, the broker-dealer is expected to apply heightened oversight to detect unsuitable recommendations and red flags such as excessive trading or other unauthorized activity.

In a discretionary account, the customer has given the agent authority to decide the timing and details of trades. That arrangement increases the risk of misuse (for example, unsuitable trading, excessive trading, or activity outside the customer’s objectives), so supervision expectations are higher, not lower. Firms are expected to have a supervisor/principal review discretionary activity as part of their normal supervisory system, looking for suitability on an ongoing basis and for indications that the account is being used improperly. Discretion is not a waiver of suitability, and it does not convert questionable trades into “authorized” conduct simply because discretion exists. The key takeaway is that discretion triggers closer monitoring for suitability and potential abuse.


Question 2

Topic: Topic III — Regulations of Broker-Dealers

A broker-dealer is onboarding several newly registered agents and expanding into a new sales channel. At a planning meeting, the firm’s chief compliance officer (CCO) discusses the broker-dealer’s supervisory obligations under state law.

Which statement by the CCO best reflects the purpose of broker-dealer supervision requirements?

  • A. To replace written policies with reliance on agent attestations
  • B. To ensure customer accounts achieve stated performance targets
  • C. To guarantee that no agent will ever violate securities laws
  • D. To maintain a system reasonably designed to prevent and detect violations

Best answer: D

Explanation: State supervision standards focus on requiring broker-dealers to build and enforce a supervisory system that is reasonably designed to achieve compliance. The goal is to prevent and detect violations through policies, training, reviews, and escalation-not to promise perfect outcomes or eliminate all risk of misconduct.

Broker-dealer supervision requirements are designed to promote compliance by requiring firms to establish, implement, and enforce supervisory systems and controls that can reasonably prevent and detect violations of securities laws and unethical practices. In practice, this means supervision is proactive and structured, such as maintaining written supervisory procedures, assigning qualified supervisors, reviewing communications and transactions, training agents, monitoring for red flags, and documenting follow-up when issues arise. The standard is not perfection; it is a “reasonable design” and good-faith execution of a system intended to reduce the likelihood of misconduct and to identify it promptly when it occurs. A key takeaway is that supervision is about compliance risk management, not guaranteeing investment results or relying solely on employees’ promises.


Question 3

Topic: Topic VIII — Ethical Practices and Obligations

A broker-dealer’s agent submits a draft social-media ad for approval that says, “Trade stocks with us for FREE-no commissions.” The agent confirms the firm charges a per-trade platform fee and may add a markup on principal transactions. As the firm’s designated principal reviewing communications, what is the best next step before the ad is used?

  • A. Reject the ad and require clear disclosure of all applicable charges
  • B. Approve the ad if it adds “other fees may apply” in small print
  • C. File the ad with the state Administrator for preapproval
  • D. Approve the ad only for accounts over a specified minimum balance

Best answer: A

Explanation: Under state ethical standards, communications cannot be false or misleading or omit material facts. Calling trades “free” while charging platform fees and potentially adding markups misleads customers about the true cost of the service. The principal should require the ad to be revised to disclose the charges so investors can evaluate total cost.

State securities law and NASAA policy treat misleading advertising as a dishonest or unethical practice, including statements that imply an investor will pay nothing when other charges apply. Here, the ad’s “FREE-no commissions” claim omits material costs (a per-trade platform fee and possible markups), so it can mislead investors about what they will actually pay. The appropriate workflow step is to stop the communication from being used and require it to be rewritten so it accurately describes pricing and clearly discloses all material charges (i.e., the total cost picture) before approval and distribution. A generic disclaimer is usually not enough to cure a headline “free” claim when specific fees are known.

Key takeaway: if there are fees, the message must not present the service as no-cost.


Question 4

Topic: Topic VIII — Ethical Practices and Obligations

An associated person of a broker-dealer receives an emailed customer complaint alleging unauthorized trading. Firm procedures require that all written complaints be promptly forwarded to the compliance department and retained. Instead, the agent deletes the email and does not notify the firm; the issue is later discovered during a state examination.

Under the Uniform Securities Act, what is the most likely regulatory consequence?

  • A. The Administrator will “approve” the firm’s advertising only after the customer is made whole.
  • B. The state will require SIPC to reimburse the customer for any losses.
  • C. The Administrator may suspend or revoke the agent’s registration for dishonest or unethical practices.
  • D. The customer’s only remedy is mandatory arbitration, so the Administrator has no authority to act.

Best answer: C

Explanation: Deleting and failing to escalate a written complaint violates firm supervisory processes and is treated as dishonest or unethical conduct. State Administrators have broad authority to investigate and take administrative action against registrants for unethical practices. The most likely consequence is disciplinary action against the agent’s registration, such as suspension or revocation.

Written customer complaints must be captured, retained, and escalated through the firm’s supervisory channels so the broker-dealer can investigate, respond, and correct issues. When an agent deletes a written complaint and bypasses required escalation, the conduct is commonly viewed as dishonest or unethical under state securities law because it defeats supervision and recordkeeping.

If uncovered (for example, in a state examination), the Administrator can use administrative remedies against the registrant, including:

  • Investigating and requiring production of records
  • Issuing orders and imposing registration discipline (for example, suspension or revocation)

The key takeaway is that complaint-handling failures can trigger Administrator discipline even before any separate civil recovery is established.


Question 5

Topic: Topic VI — Remedies and Administrative Provisions

Under the Uniform Securities Act, which statement best describes a purchaser’s typical private remedy and what generally must be shown?

  • A. The purchaser’s only remedy is through the Administrator, who may order the seller to compensate investors as part of a criminal action.
  • B. The purchaser may seek rescission by tendering the security for a return of the consideration paid (plus interest, less any income received), or damages if the security was sold, by showing the sale violated the Act.
  • C. The purchaser may rescind only by proving reliance on the seller’s statements and intent to defraud.
  • D. The purchaser may keep the security and recover expected future profits by showing market losses were foreseeable.

Best answer: B

Explanation: The Uniform Securities Act’s private civil remedy is typically designed to put the buyer back where they started: rescission (return of the purchase price, with interest, adjusted for income received) upon tender of the security, or damages if the security has already been sold. The purchaser generally must show that the seller’s conduct in the sale violated the Act (such as selling an unregistered, nonexempt security or committing a prohibited misstatement/omission).

A key private remedy under the Uniform Securities Act is purchaser rescission or, if rescission is no longer possible, damages. Rescission requires the buyer to tender (offer to return) the security and allows recovery of the consideration paid plus interest, typically reduced by any income received on the security. If the buyer has already sold the security, the buyer generally seeks damages designed to approximate rescission economics (what was paid versus what was received on sale), again typically adjusted for income and interest.

To access this civil remedy, the purchaser generally must show the sale itself involved a violation of the Act-commonly a registration violation (unregistered, nonexempt sale) or an unlawful misrepresentation/omission in connection with the sale. The core takeaway is that the remedy is restitution-like, not a claim for speculative future profits.


Question 6

Topic: Topic VIII — Ethical Practices and Obligations

A broker-dealer’s compliance department reviews a distribution request submitted by an agent. The agent’s name is Tracy Rivera.

Exhibit: Distribution request (excerpt)

Account #: 3392
Request: Mail check for \$9,600 to address on file
Customer signature: Tracy Rivera
Prepared by (agent): Tracy Rivera

Under the Uniform Securities Act, what interpretation is best supported by the exhibit?

  • A. The agent acted properly because the check is mailed to the address on file
  • B. This is only a minor recordkeeping deficiency if no funds are misdirected
  • C. The agent engaged in a dishonest practice by forging customer instructions
  • D. This is permissible if the agent has verbal customer authorization

Best answer: C

Explanation: The exhibit shows the same person listed as both the customer signer and the agent who prepared the request, supporting that the agent signed the customer’s name. Forging or falsifying customer instructions is a dishonest and unethical practice under state securities law. Such conduct can trigger administrative action and other serious consequences.

Forging a client’s signature or falsifying a client instruction is treated as fraudulent, dishonest, and unethical conduct under state securities law. Here, the distribution request lists “Customer signature: Tracy Rivera” while also showing “Prepared by (agent): Tracy Rivera,” indicating the agent signed the customer’s name rather than obtaining the customer’s genuine written authorization. Even if the requested disbursement appears routine (e.g., mailed to the address on file), falsifying documents undermines supervision and investor protection and can lead to denial, suspension, or revocation of registration and potential civil/criminal exposure. The key takeaway is that client instructions must be authentic and properly documented; an agent cannot substitute their own signature for the customer’s.


Question 7

Topic: Topic III — Regulations of Broker-Dealers

A broker-dealer registered in a state is opening a new branch office and hiring several newly registered agents who will begin soliciting retail customers next month. The firm’s CCO is updating the firm’s compliance program to meet state broker-dealer supervision standards.

What is the best next step to satisfy the purpose of the supervision requirement?

  • A. Adopt and enforce written supervisory procedures and reviews
  • B. Rely on agents’ annual attestations that they will comply
  • C. Submit all sales literature to the Administrator for approval
  • D. Wait to enhance supervision until a customer complaint occurs

Best answer: A

Explanation: Broker-dealer supervision standards are aimed at preventing and detecting securities law violations through a reasonable supervisory system. Before agents begin soliciting clients, the firm should implement and enforce written supervisory procedures, including review and escalation processes. This aligns the firm’s controls with the preventive and detective purpose of supervision requirements.

Under state broker-dealer supervision standards, the firm must reasonably supervise its agents and activities by maintaining a supervisory system designed to prevent and detect violations (not merely to react after harm occurs). In a start-up or expansion event like opening a branch and onboarding new agents, the compliance “next step” is to put controls in place before business begins.

A reasonable system commonly includes:

  • Written supervisory procedures tailored to the firm’s business
  • Designated supervisors with clear responsibility and authority
  • Ongoing review of transactions and customer communications
  • Documentation, escalation, and corrective action when red flags appear

Administrator pre-approval of routine communications is generally not the model; the obligation is on the firm to supervise and maintain evidence of supervision.


Question 8

Topic: Topic VII — Communication with Customers and Prospects

Which statement best describes discretionary authority in a customer’s brokerage account under state securities law and common supervisory expectations?

  • A. A customer names a third party to place trades, so the agent has discretion over the account
  • B. The agent may change only time and price without written authorization
  • C. The agent can place trades as long as the customer confirms the order by phone after execution
  • D. The agent chooses the security and quantity without prior approval; written customer authorization and firm acceptance are required

Best answer: D

Explanation: Discretionary authority is the power to decide the key terms of a trade (such as the security and amount) without obtaining the customer’s permission for each transaction. Because it increases the risk of abuse, it typically requires written authorization from the customer and written acceptance/approval by the firm before it is exercised.

Discretionary authority exists when an agent can effect transactions without first contacting the customer for each trade’s essential decision(s), such as what security to buy or sell and how much. Because this control can facilitate unsuitable trading or churning, firms are expected to require written discretionary authorization from the customer (often a limited power of attorney) and documented firm approval/acceptance before discretion is used.

By contrast, “time and price discretion” (deciding when and at what price to execute an order the customer already approved) is generally treated as a limited execution function, not full discretionary authority. Separately, a third-party trading authorization is permission for someone else to place orders, not a grant of discretion to the agent.


Question 9

Topic: Topic VII — Communication with Customers and Prospects

Which statement about supervising an agent’s use of social media is most accurate?

  • A. Static social media content is typically treated like advertising and should be approved before use, while interactive posts are typically supervised like correspondence (often reviewed after use).
  • B. Interactive social media communications are treated as advertising and must be approved by a principal before every post is made.
  • C. Static social media content is not considered advertising because it is posted on a third-party platform rather than the firm’s website.
  • D. If social media is accessed from an employee’s personal device, the communications are not subject to firm supervision or recordkeeping.

Best answer: A

Explanation: Supervision frameworks generally distinguish between static social media content and interactive engagement. Static content (such as a profile or banner) resembles an advertisement and is typically subject to pre-use approval. Interactive communications (such as real-time posts and replies) are commonly supervised like correspondence, with controls and review that may occur after use.

A key supervision concept for digital communications is whether the content is “static” or “interactive.” Static content is posted and remains available in substantially the same form (for example, a bio, profile page, or fixed marketing message). Because it functions like an advertisement, firms typically must apply advertising controls, including principal review/approval before first use and appropriate recordkeeping.

Interactive content involves real-time communications (for example, posts, comments, replies, or direct messages) that are more like correspondence. Firms still must supervise and retain these communications, but review is commonly risk-based and may be done after the communication occurs rather than pre-approving each interaction. The takeaway is that the medium (social media) does not eliminate supervision obligations.


Question 10

Topic: Topic VII — Communication with Customers and Prospects

A state-registered investment adviser’s marketing department posts a paid social-media ad that says, “State-registered-so you can trust we’re approved by regulators,” and “Our income program guarantees a 6% annual return.” The CCO learns the post went live without compliance review and there is no documentation supporting the claims.

What is the firm’s best next step?

  • A. Leave the ad up but add “past performance is no guarantee”
  • B. Amend Form ADV to disclose that the ad is “promotional”
  • C. Notice file the ad with the Administrator for approval
  • D. Stop the ad and require substantiation or revision before reuse

Best answer: D

Explanation: Under state law ethical standards, advertising to customers must be fair and balanced, not misleading, and supported by a reasonable basis. Claims implying government approval and performance guarantees are problematic, especially when the firm cannot substantiate them. The appropriate workflow step is to halt the communication and fix it before it is used again.

The core standard is that communications with customers and prospects cannot be false or misleading and must have a reasonable basis (support) for any material claim. Here, the ad implies state “approval” based on registration and also promises a guaranteed return-both are classic red flags that make the message misleading. Because the post was released without review and there is no supporting documentation, the proper compliance step is to stop the communication, document the issue, and only re-publish after removing/rewriting the problematic statements and ensuring any remaining claims can be substantiated. A disclosure legend does not cure an otherwise misleading or unfounded claim.


Question 11

Topic: Topic VIII — Ethical Practices and Obligations

A registered agent at a broker-dealer receives a phone call from a long-time retail client who alleges two recent trades were unauthorized and demands the firm “fix it today.” The client has not yet submitted anything in writing.

Which of the following actions by the agent is NOT appropriate under typical firm complaint-handling expectations and ethical practice?

  • A. Provide the client with the firm’s complaint contact information and next steps
  • B. Immediately notify a supervisor/compliance and follow the firm’s escalation process
  • C. Create a dated record of the complaint details and request a written complaint
  • D. Offer to reimburse the client personally if they agree not to report it

Best answer: D

Explanation: Customer complaints-especially allegations like unauthorized trading-must be promptly documented and escalated through the broker-dealer’s supervisory/compliance process. Firms generally require capture of complaint details even if the complaint is initially oral, and the customer should be informed of how the firm will handle it. Privately paying the customer to keep the issue off the books defeats required supervision and recordkeeping.

A key ethical obligation is that complaints are firm matters, not personal matters for an agent to “handle quietly.” When a client alleges a problem, the agent should promptly escalate it to a supervisor or compliance, document what was alleged (even if the initial complaint is oral), and follow the firm’s procedures for investigation and response. This supports required supervision, recordkeeping, and consistent treatment of clients.

Trying to resolve a complaint by paying the customer personally in exchange for silence is improper because it circumvents internal controls and can conceal misconduct from the firm and regulators. The proper approach is transparency within the firm’s process and clear communication to the client about next steps.


Question 12

Topic: Topic I — Regulations of Investment Advisers, Including State-Registered and Federal Covered Advisers

A sole proprietor provides individualized securities recommendations by video call and charges a monthly fee. She has no office or other place of business in State B, but she regularly solicits and advises 15 residents of State B. She is not SEC-registered and is not otherwise excluded from the definition of investment adviser.

Which action best complies with state law before she continues advising those State B clients for compensation?

  • A. Apply for investment adviser registration in State B before providing advice
  • B. Continue advising without registration because she has no place of business in State B
  • C. Register only as an investment adviser representative in State B to satisfy the requirement
  • D. Send a disclosure stating the state does not endorse her advice, then continue unregistered

Best answer: A

Explanation: Providing individualized securities advice for compensation is investment adviser activity. Even without a physical office, regularly advising a significant number of residents of a state generally triggers that state’s investment adviser registration requirement unless an exclusion or exemption applies. Here, the adviser is not SEC-registered and no exclusion is available, so registration in State B is the compliant step before continuing the activity.

Under the Uniform Securities Act, a person that is in the business of giving advice about securities for compensation is an investment adviser. If the adviser is not a federal covered adviser (SEC-registered) and does not fit an exclusion, the adviser generally must register at the state level when conducting advisory business with clients in that state, even if the adviser has no physical office there. In this scenario, the adviser is providing individualized recommendations for a fee and has an ongoing advisory business with numerous residents of State B, so she should pursue State B investment adviser registration before continuing to provide advice for compensation. Disclosures may be required for other purposes, but they do not replace registration.


Question 13

Topic: Topic IV — Regulations of Agents of Broker-Dealers

An agent at a broker-dealer forwards to her supervisor an emailed complaint from a customer alleging the agent “churned my account,” and demanding reimbursement for losses. No arbitration claim or lawsuit has been filed, and the firm has not yet responded to the customer.

Which supervisor response best complies with typical Uniform Form (e.g., Form U4) disclosure expectations under state law ethical standards?

  • A. No update is needed because an email is not a formal written complaint
  • B. Treat it as a reportable customer complaint and update the agent’s U4 as required
  • C. No update is needed if the firm later resolves the matter with the customer
  • D. Wait to update until the customer files arbitration or a civil lawsuit

Best answer: B

Explanation: Uniform Forms generally require disclosure of certain reportable events, including written customer complaints that allege a sales-practice violation and seek monetary damages. The firm should follow its reporting procedures and update the agent’s disclosure information as required, rather than waiting for the dispute to escalate. This supports accurate regulatory records and helps prevent misleading omissions.

Uniform Forms (such as Form U4) are designed to capture high-level categories of events regulators consider material to an individual’s fitness, including criminal matters, regulatory/disciplinary actions, certain civil proceedings/judgments, and written customer complaints. In this scenario, the customer has made a written allegation of churning (a sales-practice violation) and is demanding reimbursement, which is the type of complaint that is typically reportable even if it is only at the complaint stage. Ethical standards under state law emphasize full and fair disclosure and prohibit misleading omissions in required filings. The best practice is to treat the complaint as reportable, document it per firm procedures, and ensure the agent’s disclosure record is updated as required, rather than conditioning reporting on arbitration, litigation, or the outcome.


Question 14

Topic: Topic VIII — Ethical Practices and Obligations

A broker-dealer’s agent suspects that a 74-year-old client (a “specified adult” under state law) is being financially exploited after an unusually large wire request initiated by a new caregiver. Which compliance outcome best matches the purpose of escalation and reporting mechanisms designed to protect specified adults?

  • A. Process the wire request immediately to avoid interfering with customer instructions
  • B. Decline to report because customer information cannot be shared outside the firm
  • C. Tell the client that the transaction is “state-approved” if it is completed
  • D. Escalate internally and report the suspicion to the appropriate state authority

Best answer: D

Explanation: When a firm suspects exploitation of a specified adult, escalation and reporting mechanisms exist to get the matter promptly to compliance and the appropriate state authority so protective action can occur. These frameworks are intended to deter and detect abuse, not to guarantee outcomes or to prevent all information sharing. The best match is internal escalation plus reporting the suspicion through the channels contemplated by state protections.

State-level protections for specified (vulnerable) adults are aimed at early detection and rapid intervention when financial exploitation is suspected. In practice, that means the firm should not treat the situation as a routine customer instruction; instead it should escalate the red flags to supervisory/compliance personnel and use the reporting channel contemplated by state law (often to a state securities administrator and/or adult protective services or similar agencies). These mechanisms are designed to protect the customer and support an investigation while the firm documents what it observed and why it believed exploitation might be occurring. A key takeaway is that privacy concerns generally do not eliminate a firm’s ability (and in some cases obligation) to report suspected exploitation through the prescribed process.


Question 15

Topic: Topic V — Regulations of Securities and Issuers

A state securities Administrator investigates a fraudulent private placement. The issuer’s CFO supplied inflated revenue figures for the offering materials, and a registered agent of a broker-dealer used those figures when soliciting investors.

Under the Uniform Securities Act, which statement about who may be subject to state enforcement for the fraud is correct?

  • A. Only the agent may be sanctioned because the agent solicited
  • B. Only the issuer may be sanctioned because it created the offering
  • C. The issuer, the broker-dealer/agent, and others who materially aided
  • D. Only the broker-dealer may be sanctioned because it supervised sales

Best answer: C

Explanation: State antifraud authority is broad and is not limited to registered broker-dealers and agents. When an issuer and its personnel provide misleading information and registrants use it to sell the offering, the Administrator can pursue enforcement against multiple participants who made or materially aided the fraud.

Under the Uniform Securities Act, antifraud provisions apply to “any person” who makes untrue statements, omits material facts, or otherwise engages in fraud in connection with the offer, sale, or purchase of securities. That means enforcement is not limited to the sales agent or the broker-dealer; the issuer and individuals who helped create or distribute the misleading materials can also be targets. In this fact pattern, the issuer (through the CFO’s inflated numbers) and the selling side (the broker-dealer and its agent who used the figures with investors) are all part of the distribution chain connected to the misstatement. A common trap is assuming only registrants, or only the issuer, can be pursued; state antifraud authority can reach both.


Question 16

Topic: Topic VIII — Ethical Practices and Obligations

A broker-dealer’s agent has been placing trades without contacting the customer each time, based only on the customer’s verbal instruction to “use your judgment going forward.” Under state securities law ethical standards, which compliance requirement best matches how the firm must handle this as a discretionary account?

  • A. File a notice with the state administrator before using discretion
  • B. Oral authorization is sufficient if trade confirmations are sent
  • C. Written authorization plus principal approval and heightened trade review
  • D. Discretion is prohibited unless the customer is an accredited investor

Best answer: C

Explanation: Discretionary trading authority is a higher-risk arrangement that requires tighter controls. At a high level, the customer’s discretionary authority must be documented in writing and accepted by the firm, and the account must receive closer supervisory review to ensure trades remain suitable and are not unauthorized or excessive.

Discretionary authority means the agent can choose the security, amount, or timing of trades without obtaining the customer’s approval for each order. Because this increases the risk of unauthorized trading and unsuitable or excessive activity, state ethical standards expect firms to (1) obtain written evidence of the customer’s grant of discretion and (2) have a supervisor/principal approve (accept) the discretionary account, along with enhanced ongoing supervision.

Supervisory review commonly focuses on:

  • Whether each trade and the overall strategy remain suitable
  • Whether trading appears excessive (potential churning)
  • Whether activity aligns with the customer’s objectives and risk tolerance

Mere delivery of confirmations does not replace the requirement for written authority and principal acceptance.


Question 17

Topic: Topic IV — Regulations of Agents of Broker-Dealers

An agent emails the broker-dealer’s registration principal with the following information.

Exhibit: Internal “U4 Change Request” excerpt

Rep: Jordan Lee (Agent)
CRD: 4567890
Change requested:
- Residential address: 10 Oak St, Denver, CO 80202
New: 225 Pine Ave, Denver, CO 80206
- Employer/position: No change
- Disclosure answers: No change
Effective date: February 1

Under the Uniform Securities Act, what action is required based on this exhibit?

  • A. File Form U5 because a change request ends the agent’s registration
  • B. Promptly file an amended Form U4 to update the address
  • C. No filing is required because only disclosures must be updated
  • D. Wait and update the address at the next annual renewal

Best answer: B

Explanation: The exhibit shows a change in the agent’s residential address, which is part of the required information on the uniform registration forms. When material information on a registration form changes, the registrant must keep the filing current by submitting an amendment. Therefore, the broker-dealer/agent must update the record by amending Form U4 promptly.

Uniform registration filings must be kept current. When material information reported on a uniform form changes-such as a registrant’s name or residential address, employment or business activities, or reportable disciplinary events-the filing must be amended so the state securities Administrator has accurate information.

Here, the only change shown is the agent’s residential address. Because address is a reportable item on Form U4, the proper response is to submit an amended U4 reflecting the new address rather than waiting for renewal or using a termination form. Key takeaway: material changes require an amendment to the existing registration filing.


Question 18

Topic: Topic VII — Communication with Customers and Prospects

A state-registered investment adviser discovers that one of its investment adviser representatives has been texting clients from a personal phone about account activity. The text messages include clients’ full names and account numbers, and the firm cannot archive or supervise the personal texting. Under state law standards for digital communications and protecting customer information, what is the best next step?

  • A. Notice-file the texting application with the Administrator for approval
  • B. Stop the texting and move to an approved secure, archived channel
  • C. Obtain written client consent to text account numbers on a personal phone
  • D. Amend Form ADV to disclose the representative’s texting practice

Best answer: B

Explanation: State administrators expect firms to supervise digital communications and safeguard confidential customer information. When a representative uses an unapproved channel that cannot be archived and includes sensitive data, the immediate compliance step is to stop that activity and transition communications to a secure, supervised, record-retained platform. This addresses both privacy risk and books-and-records/supervision concerns.

Safeguarding client information is part of an adviser’s ethical duty and a key supervisory expectation under state securities law. If a representative is using personal texting that (1) cannot be retained for recordkeeping and (2) exposes sensitive customer data, the priority is to contain the risk and restore supervision.

A practical next-step sequence is:

  • Stop use of the non-firm channel for client business
  • Move communications to a firm-approved method that is secure and archived
  • Document the issue and remedial actions (e.g., training, monitoring, policy reinforcement)

Disclosures or filings may be evaluated after containment, but they do not substitute for promptly protecting customer information and ensuring communications can be supervised and retained.


Question 19

Topic: Topic VIII — Ethical Practices and Obligations

A registered agent’s firm offers a quarterly bonus to agents who exceed a target number of trades. A client opens a non-discretionary account and does not grant written discretionary authority. While the client is traveling and unreachable, the agent places several buy and sell orders in the client’s account “to take advantage of the market.” The trades result in a small profit.

What is the primary ethical/compliance risk that must be addressed?

  • A. Receiving a bonus tied to transaction volume
  • B. Placing trades without the customer’s prior authorization
  • C. The client experiencing only a small profit
  • D. Implying the strategy is approved by the state

Best answer: B

Explanation: The account is non-discretionary, so each trade requires the customer’s authorization before execution. Placing trades while the customer is unreachable is unauthorized trading, even if the trades make money. Ethical violations are judged by the conduct (authority and disclosure), not by whether performance happened to be good or bad.

Unauthorized trading occurs when an agent executes transactions without the customer’s prior approval in a non-discretionary account. Discretionary trading is permitted only when the customer provides written authorization and the broker-dealer accepts and supervises that authority; absent that, “helpful” trading while a customer is unavailable is still an unethical practice. The fact that the trades produced a profit does not cure the violation-improper authority and customer consent are the central compliance issues under state law ethical standards.

Key takeaway: performance outcomes (profit or loss) are not the test; customer authorization and truthful communications are.


Question 20

Topic: Topic IV — Regulations of Agents of Broker-Dealers

An agent of a broker-dealer is offering interests in a Regulation D private placement to existing retail clients in the state. To close sales quickly and earn a higher commission, the agent tells clients that because the offering is “exempt from registration,” the firm does not need to provide written risk disclosures and that the issuer is “financially solid” despite having no current financial statements.

What is the primary ethical/compliance risk the firm must address?

  • A. Failure to file the private placement with the SEC
  • B. Failure to deliver a statutory prospectus before the sale
  • C. Failure to register the security with the state administrator
  • D. Material misstatements or omissions despite the offering being exempt

Best answer: D

Explanation: Even when an offering is exempt from state registration, agents remain fully subject to antifraud provisions and standards of conduct. Claiming the firm need not provide risk disclosures and asserting financial strength without a reasonable basis creates material misstatements and omissions. The key issue is fraud/unethical practices, not the exemption status of the transaction.

State registration exemptions generally relieve the issuer (or the transaction) from registration requirements, but they do not permit dishonest or unethical selling practices. Under the Uniform Securities Act framework, agents and broker-dealers must avoid material misstatements, misleading half-truths, and the omission of material facts needed to make statements not misleading. Here, using the “exempt” label to justify withholding risk information and making an unsupported claim about the issuer’s financial condition creates an antifraud problem regardless of whether the private placement is properly exempt.

Key takeaway: exemptions change registration obligations, not antifraud liability.


Question 21

Topic: Topic VIII — Ethical Practices and Obligations

An agent at a broker-dealer takes a retail customer’s order to buy a thinly traded corporate bond and wants immediate execution. The firm can fill the order from its own inventory (a principal trade) at a price that includes a built-in markup, and the agent suggests calling the compensation a “commission” on the trade ticket. Under fair pricing standards, what is the single best compliance decision that satisfies these constraints?

  • A. Treat the markup as an advisory fee under the IA rules
  • B. Use the term “commission” so long as the bond is from inventory
  • C. Price reasonably versus the prevailing market and disclose principal capacity
  • D. Charge any markup if the customer receives immediate execution

Best answer: C

Explanation: A markup/markdown is the built-in compensation in a principal trade, and it must be reasonably related to the bond’s prevailing market price. Fair pricing standards apply even when the firm sells from (or buys into) its own inventory. The firm should also ensure the customer is told the firm acted as principal rather than mislabeling the compensation.

In a principal transaction, the broker-dealer is the counterparty: selling to the customer from inventory (markup) or buying from the customer into inventory (markdown). Because the customer cannot separately negotiate the firm’s “spread,” state law treats excessive or unfair markups/markdowns as an unethical business practice. The compliance-appropriate approach is to determine the bond’s prevailing market price using contemporaneous market information, then ensure the customer’s price (and resulting markup/markdown) is reasonable given the security and the services provided. The firm should also accurately disclose its capacity as principal on the confirmation and avoid misleading labels that imply a different compensation structure.


Question 22

Topic: Topic VIII — Ethical Practices and Obligations

Why does documenting cost comparisons and the rationale for an investment recommendation best support ethical practices and supervision under state securities law?

  • A. It permits describing the recommendation as approved by the state administrator.
  • B. It protects the registrant from liability by guaranteeing the recommendation’s performance was reasonable.
  • C. It creates a record that supports supervisory review and helps demonstrate the recommendation was made on a reasonable, client-focused basis.
  • D. It eliminates the need to disclose conflicts of interest if the client signs the documentation.

Best answer: C

Explanation: Documenting costs and the basis for a recommendation supports ethical conduct by making the decision transparent and reviewable. It helps supervisors evaluate whether the recommendation was reasonable for the client and helps the firm evidence good-faith compliance if questions arise. This directly aligns with fair dealing and effective supervision expectations under state law.

A key ethical expectation under state securities law is that recommendations and related compensation practices be fair, not misleading, and capable of being supervised. Keeping written cost comparisons (for example, fees, commissions, or share-class expenses) and the rationale for choosing one alternative over another helps show the recommendation had a reasonable basis and considered the client’s interests rather than the registrant’s compensation.

Good documentation also enables:

  • Effective supervisory review and exception surveillance
  • Consistent application of firm policies (including conflicts management)
  • A defensible record if a complaint, exam, or enforcement inquiry occurs

The takeaway is that documentation supports both ethical recommendation-making and the firm’s ability to supervise and demonstrate compliance.


Question 23

Topic: Topic V — Regulations of Securities and Issuers

Under the Uniform Securities Act, which statement is most accurate about exempt securities versus exempt transactions?

  • A. Because a security or transaction is exempt, the state administrator cannot bring an antifraud action based on that sale.
  • B. An exempt security is exempt from state registration for any offer or sale, while an exempt transaction exempts only that specific offer or sale; in both cases, antifraud provisions still apply.
  • C. If a transaction is exempt, the security becomes exempt and may be freely resold in the state without registration.
  • D. Exempt securities are exempt only when sold by the issuer; secondary-market sales generally require registration.

Best answer: B

Explanation: Exempt securities are securities the Act removes from the state registration requirement regardless of the type of transaction. Exempt transactions, by contrast, are specific sales that do not have to be registered even though the security itself might otherwise require registration. In both cases, the administrator’s antifraud authority still applies.

The key distinction is what is being exempted from the state registration requirement. An exempt security is a category of security (for example, certain government or bank-related issues) that does not need to be registered in the state when offered or sold. An exempt transaction is a type of sale (for example, certain isolated or private offerings) that does not require registration for that specific sale, even though the same security could require registration in a different type of sale.

This matters because an exempt transaction does not “follow the security” into future offers or resales, and neither exemption is a license to commit fraud-state antifraud provisions apply to all offers and sales.


Question 24

Topic: Topic VII — Communication with Customers and Prospects

A broker-dealer’s compliance department is reviewing a newly registered agent’s proposed social media bio directed to residents of the same state where the agent is registered. Under the Uniform Securities Act, which statement about registration status is most appropriate and not misleading?

  • A. “I am registered as an agent in this state; registration does not imply endorsement.”
  • B. “I am state-approved to sell securities in this state.”
  • C. “The state Administrator has reviewed and approved my recommendations.”
  • D. “Because I’m state-registered, investors are protected against losses.”

Best answer: A

Explanation: Under state law, an agent may make a truthful, factual statement that they are registered. However, communications cannot imply that registration means the Administrator has approved, endorsed, reviewed, or guaranteed the agent’s services or the securities being offered. A disclaimer that registration is not an endorsement keeps the statement from being misleading.

The core rule is that statements about registration must be accurate and must not suggest the state has “approved,” “endorsed,” or “passed on” the merits of an agent, a firm, or any securities. Registration is a legal status (permission to do business in the state), not a merit review or investor-protection guarantee.

A compliant communication typically:

  • States the registration fact in a straightforward way
  • Avoids words like “approved,” “recommended,” or “vetted” by the state
  • Avoids implying that registration prevents losses or ensures safety

The best choice is the one that truthfully describes registration while expressly avoiding any implication of state endorsement.

Series 63 state law map

Use this map after the sample questions to connect individual items to state registration, exemptions, securities definitions, prohibited practices, recordkeeping, and administrator authority decisions these Securities Prep samples test.

    flowchart LR
	  S1["State securities law scenario"] --> S2
	  S2["Classify person security or transaction"] --> S3
	  S3["Check registration exemption or exclusion"] --> S4
	  S4["Apply anti-fraud and prohibited-practice rule"] --> S5
	  S5["Identify administrator power or filing result"] --> S6
	  S6["Choose compliant next step"]

Quick Cheat Sheet

CueWhat to remember
DefinitionsAgent, broker-dealer, investment adviser, IAR, security, offer, sale, exempt security, and exempt transaction are core.
RegistrationKnow when people, firms, securities, and transactions must register or qualify for an exemption.
Anti-fraudFraud, omission, unsuitable sales, misrepresentation, and unethical practices remain prohibited even with exemptions.
State administratorOrders, investigations, subpoenas, denials, suspensions, and record requests are common.
JurisdictionLocation of offer, acceptance, client, and firm can change state authority.

Mini Glossary

  • Investment adviser: Person or firm that provides securities advice for compensation.
  • Suitability: Assessment that advice or a transaction fits client facts, objectives, risk, and constraints.
  • Disclosure: Clear communication of material risks, conflicts, costs, and limitations before the client relies on the advice.
  • Form ADV: Investment adviser registration and disclosure form, including client-facing brochure information.
  • Fiduciary duty: Obligation to act in the client’s best interest where the standard applies.

In this section

  • Series 63: Investment Adviser Regulations
    Try 10 focused Series 63 questions on Investment Adviser Regulations, with explanations, then continue with the full Securities Prep practice test.
  • Series 63: IAR Regulations
    Try 10 focused Series 63 questions on IAR Regulations, with explanations, then continue with the full Securities Prep practice test.
  • Series 63: Broker-Dealer Regulations
    Try 10 focused Series 63 questions on Broker-Dealer Regulations, with explanations, then continue with the full Securities Prep practice test.
  • Series 63: Agent Regulations
    Try 10 focused Series 63 questions on Agent Regulations, with explanations, then continue with the full Securities Prep practice test.
  • Series 63: Securities and Issuers
    Try 10 focused Series 63 questions on Securities and Issuers, with explanations, then continue with the full Securities Prep practice test.
  • Series 63: Remedies and Administration
    Try 10 focused Series 63 questions on Remedies and Administration, with explanations, then continue with the full Securities Prep practice test.
  • Series 63: Customer Communications
    Try 10 focused Series 63 questions on Customer Communications, with explanations, then continue with the full Securities Prep practice test.
  • Series 63: Ethical Practices
    Try 10 focused Series 63 questions on Ethical Practices, with explanations, then continue with the full Securities Prep practice test.
  • Free Series 63 Full-Length Practice Exam: 60 Questions
    Try 60 free Series 63 practice questions across the official topic areas, with answers and explanations, then continue with the full Securities Prep question bank.
Revised on Sunday, May 3, 2026