Uniform Investment Adviser Law Exam

Uniform Investment Adviser Law Examination, also called the Series 65 exam, is a test taken by individuals in the United States who seek to become licensed investment adviser representatives. The exam covers topics necessary to provide investment advice to clients.{{cite web

| title = FINRA Registration and Examination Requirement

| publisher = Financial Industry Regulatory Authority

| url = http://www.finra.org/industry/compliance/registration/qualificationsexams/qualifications/p011051

| access-date = February 11, 2014 }}.

The Uniform Investment Adviser Law Examination was developed by the North American Securities Administrators Association (NASAA) and is administered by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA). Each Series 65, Uniform Investment Adviser Law Examination, contains a total of 140 questions. One hundred thirty (130) of the questions count toward whether the candidate passes or fails the Series 65 exam. The other 10 questions are pretest and could appear in any position within the exam but do not count towards the final grade. To pass the Series 65 Exam, candidates must correctly answer at least 92 of the 130 scored questions. Applicants have 180 minutes to complete the exam.{{cite web

| title = Series 65 & 66 Resources

| publisher = North American Securities Administrators Association

| url = http://www.nasaa.org/industry-resources/exams/series-65-66-resources/

| access-date = February 11, 2014 }}.

The Uniform Investment Adviser Law Examinations are assembled by FINRA using a process called "on the fly." Each question in the pool has two parameters that are used as part of the assembly, a difficulty parameter and a content parameter. Each exam is assembled to meet the exam specifications for content and to have the same difficulty level as all other exams in the same Series.

Examination

The Uniform Investment Adviser Law Examination consists of 130 questions plus 10 pretest questions that cover topics applicants must know to provide investment advice to clients. Applicants have 180 minutes to complete the examination, and must answer at least 94 (72%) of the questions correctly to pass the Series 65 exam.{{cite web |date=June 12, 2023 |title=Series 65 Study Guide |url=https://www.nasaa.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/Series-65-Outline-June-2023.pdf |access-date=February 11, 2014 |publisher=North American Securities Administrators Association}}.

The graded exam questions are categorized as follows:

class="wikitable"

|+

|SUBJECT MATTER

|WEIGHTING

|NUMBER OF QUESTIONS

Economic Factors and Business Information

|15%

|20

Investment Vehicle Characteristics

|25%

|32

Client Investment Recommendations and Strategies

|30%

|39

Laws, Regulations and Guidelines Including Prohibition on Unethical Business Practices

|30%

|39

TOTALS

|100%

|130

There are a total of 140 questions, but an extra 10 questions do not count towards the final grade.

Source: {{Cite book |title=NASAA Series 65 Exam Study Guide |publisher=NASAA}}

The examination is a closed book test. On completion of the examination, the score for each section and the overall test score are immediately available to the candidate.

Prior to January 1, 2010, a score of 68.5% was required to pass.

Registration

Individuals providing investment advice are called "Investment Adviser Representatives" (IAR). These IARs must generally complete The Uniform Investment Adviser Law Examination (see List of securities examinations) known as the Series 65 Exam, or by meeting the exam waiver requirement by holding one or more of the following pre-qualifying designations:

Source: {{Cite web|url=http://www.nasaa.org/Industry___Regulatory_Resources/Exams/1088.cfm|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110930081857/http://www.nasaa.org/industry___regulatory_resources/exams/1088.cfm|url-status=dead|title=North American Securities Administrators Association (NASAA)|archivedate=September 30, 2011}}

==History==

Since August 2020, when the SEC broadened the definition of accredited investor,{{Cite web|url=https://www.sec.gov/news/press-release/2020-191|title=SEC.gov | SEC Modernizes the Accredited Investor Definition|website=www.sec.gov}} the Series 65 exam is the only qualifying exam that doesn't require the sponsorship of a firm.

See also

Notes