Robert Gehring, et al. v. Osaic Incorporated, et al.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Arizona
DecidedJanuary 30, 2026
Docket2:25-cv-00367
StatusUnknown

This text of Robert Gehring, et al. v. Osaic Incorporated, et al. (Robert Gehring, et al. v. Osaic Incorporated, et al.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert Gehring, et al. v. Osaic Incorporated, et al., (D. Ariz. 2026).

Opinion

1 WO 2 3 4 5 6 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 7 FOR THE DISTRICT OF ARIZONA

9 Robert Gehring, et al., No. CV-25-00367-PHX-KML

10 Plaintiffs, ORDER

11 v.

12 Osaic Incorporated, et al.,

13 Defendants. 14 15 This suit is one of many filed in recent years against financial firms involving the 16 operation of “cash sweep programs.” These programs allow financial firms to sweep 17 uninvested money out of their client accounts and place it with a list of selected banks to 18 invest or lend. The banks pay interest to the financial firms, but the firms pass along only 19 a fraction of that interest to their clients. Plaintiffs Robert Gehring, Harold Hunt, and Jeana 20 Norris participated in cash sweep programs offered by certain defendants. According to 21 plaintiffs, the way those programs operated constituted breaches of contract or unjust 22 enrichment, breaches of fiduciary duty, and violations of a federal statute. Some of 23 plaintiffs’ claims fail, but the central claims involving breach of contract and breach of 24 fiduciary duty may proceed. 25 I. Background 26 A. Defendants 27 Defendants are American Portfolios Advisors, Inc. (“APA”), Osaic Wealth, Inc. 28 (“Osaic Wealth”), Osaic Institutions, Inc. (“Osaic Institutions”)—collectively “Osaic 1 Broker-Advisors”—and Osaic, Inc. There is a complicated history of acquisitions and 2 name changes related to the defendants, which is mostly irrelevant for present purposes. 3 (See Doc. 17 at 9–11.) The following is a greatly-simplified version of that history. 4 Osaic, Inc. is a Maryland corporation headquartered in Arizona. (Doc. 17 at 7.) 5 Osaic, Inc. is the parent company of the Osaic Broker-Advisors. In 2022, Osaic, Inc. (then 6 called “Advisor Group Holdings, Inc.”) acquired American Portfolios Holdings, Inc., 7 which in turn owned APA and its affiliated broker-dealer American Portfolios Financial 8 Services (“APFS”). (Doc. 17 at 7–8.) 9 APA was a Delaware corporation headquartered in New York. (Doc. 17 at 7.) APA 10 was formerly registered as an investment advisor with the SEC. (Doc. 17 at 7.) APA offered 11 personalized investment advisory services to individuals and many other business entities, 12 and recommended advisory clients establish accounts through APFS for trade execution 13 and account service. (Doc. 17 at 7.) Following its 2022 acquisition, APA was subsumed 14 into Osaic Wealth, along with its affiliate APFS. (Doc. 17 at 8.) 15 Osaic Wealth is a Delaware corporation and SEC-registered broker-dealer and 16 investment advisor headquartered in Arizona. (Doc. 17 at 8.) Osaic Wealth is the company 17 into which APA and APFS were consolidated and integrated. (Doc. 17 at 8.) 18 Osaic Institutions is an SEC-registered broker-dealer and investment advisor 19 incorporated and headquartered in Connecticut. (Doc. 17 at 8.) Osaic Institutions is the 20 successor to Infinex Financial Group, which Osaic, Inc. acquired in 2022. (Doc. 17 at 8.) 21 B. Plaintiffs 22 Plaintiffs are Robert Gehring, Harold Hunt, and Jeana Norris. Gehring, Hunt, and 23 Norris seek to represent a class of investors who participated in the defendants’ cash sweep 24 programs and were allegedly underpaid on their cash balances. 25 Gehring is an individual investor from New Hampshire who maintained both an 26 APA advisory individual retirement account (“IRA”) and a separate non-advisory IRA 27 through APFS beginning in 2016. (Docs. 17 at 6; 28 at 7.) After the consolidation of APA 28 and APFS into Osaic Wealth, customer accounts continued under the Osaic cash sweep 1 program. (Doc. 17 at 8, 22.) Gehring’s APA advisory account was closed the day before 2 the acquisition (Doc. 29 at 10), but it appears his non-advisory account with APFS 3 continued under the sweep program at Osaic Wealth. 4 Hunt and Norris, both Tennessee residents, opened self-directed IRAs with Infinex 5 Investments in 2016 and 2015, respectively. (Docs. 17 at 6–7; 30 at 10.) After Osaic, Inc.’s 6 acquisition of Infinex, their accounts became Osaic Institutions accounts. (Doc. 17 at 26.) 7 All three plaintiffs allege their uninvested cash was moved into defendants’ cash 8 sweep programs and that they were subsequently paid unreasonably low interest rates. 9 C. Cash Sweep Programs 10 A cash sweep program is a common offering from investment advisors and 11 brokerages. (Doc. 37 at 13.) A typical cash sweep program takes idle funds (e.g., funds not 12 currently invested) and “sweeps” them into an interest-bearing account to earn money in 13 the interim. (Doc. 37 at 13.) Generally, customers with brokerage or investment accounts 14 are paid out a portion of the interest generated by the swept funds. (Doc. 17 at 4.) The 15 operation of the cash sweep programs at issue in this case is set forth in the complaint, 16 which the court accepts for purposes of the motions to dismiss. 17 Here, defendants provided a cash sweep program to customers with brokerage 18 accounts, investment advisory accounts, and IRAs. (Doc. 17 at 20.) Defendants designed 19 their cash sweep program to ensure they retained nearly all of the interest earnings. (Doc. 20 37 at 13.) Under the sweep program, uninvested cash is automatically transferred to 21 interest-bearing deposit accounts at participating program banks. (Doc. 17 at 22–23.) The 22 banks pay interest to defendants, which in turn pay a lower rate to customers, retaining the 23 difference as revenue. Customers are automatically enrolled in the sweep program when 24 opening brokerage or advisory accounts unless they affirmatively opt out. (Doc. 37 at 14, 25 34.) Customers who opt out may leave funds as a “free credit balance,” which does not 26 earn interest and is not FDIC-insured. (See Doc. 37-2 at 13.) 27 Plaintiffs allege defendants’ standardized account agreements incorporated sweep- 28 program materials and imposed obligations to act in clients’ best interests and to set and 1 periodically review sweep interest rates based on economic, market, and business 2 conditions, including paying a “reasonable” rate. (Doc. 17 at 16–20.) Plaintiffs cite, among 3 other materials, Osaic Wealth’s and Osaic Institutions’ Form Client Relationship 4 Summaries and a Broker Dealer Firm Brochure as reflecting best-interest and fiduciary- 5 type commitments in connection with brokerage and advisory services. (Doc. 17 at 13, 16– 6 17.) Plaintiffs also allege defendants’ retirement-account materials include fiduciary 7 acknowledgments and other representations emphasizing reasonable rates of return on IRA 8 cash balances. (Doc. 17 at 18–19.) Plaintiffs contend defendants breached these contractual 9 and fiduciary obligations by designing and maintaining the sweep program to benefit 10 defendants more than clients, including by paying unreasonably low sweep rates and 11 recommending continued use of the sweep program. (Doc. 17 at 46–47.) Plaintiffs further 12 allege fiduciary obligations arising under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (“IAA”) 13 and the Regulation Best Interest: The Broker Dealer Standard of Conduct. (Doc. 17 at 11– 14 13.) Plaintiffs also point to the Internal Revenue Code and U.S. Treasury Regulations as 15 requiring reasonable interest rates for some or all sweep deposits. (Doc. 17 at 15–16.) 16 According to plaintiffs, defendants failed to honor their contractual and fiduciary 17 obligations, which became particularly apparent when short-term interest rates rose sharply 18 beginning in March 2022. (Doc. 17 at 5.) While benchmark rates climbed above 5%, sweep 19 rates allegedly remained near zero (and never more than 1.5%, depending on balances), 20 allowing defendants to retain most of the increased spread and generate millions of dollars 21 in revenue. (Docs.

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Robert Gehring, et al. v. Osaic Incorporated, et al., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-gehring-et-al-v-osaic-incorporated-et-al-azd-2026.