Six Years of Lies to Private Equity Investors | TPEG Securities

TPEG Securities Misled Investors for Six Years with Fake Return Projections
EvilCorporations.com — Corporate Accountability Project
TPEG Securities, LLC · FINRA Enforcement

TPEG Securities Misled Investors for Six Years with Fabricated Return Projections

A Texas broker-dealer sold over 200 private placements using inflated performance promises while systematically burying customer complaints from regulators.

🏭 Securities / Private Placements
📋 FINRA AWC Enforcement Action
📅 2018–2024
🔴 HIGH SEVERITY
TL;DR

From 2018 through 2024, TPEG Securities, a Southlake, Texas broker-dealer, distributed sales materials to private investors that were laced with fabricated return projections and misleading aggregated performance numbers. They promised target returns as high as 31.1% on specific deals, figures that obscured the actual performance of individual investments. When investors raised formal grievances, TPEG buried at least 15 written complaints by misclassifying them as being directed at their unregulated affiliate rather than the firm itself. FINRA caught them, fined them $175,000, and put a permanent censure on their record. But the real question is how many investors made decisions based on numbers that were never real.

Investors deserve honest numbers. When a firm games its own sales pitch for six years, the fine is the floor, not the ceiling. Demand full accountability.

$175K
FINRA fine imposed on TPEG
200+
Private placements sold during violation period
15
Customer complaints buried and unreported
3
Form U4s left unfiled, hiding rep misconduct
6 yrs
Duration of violations (Sept 2018 to May 2024)
31.1%
Fabricated target IRR projected to investors
⚠️
Core Allegations
What they did
01 TPEG distributed sales materials to investors that included projected investment performance, directly violating FINRA’s prohibition on performance forecasting in retail communications. HIGH
02 TPEG sent communications featuring aggregated Internal Rates of Return and Cash Multiple Values from prior closed deals, using blended numbers that masked the underperformance of individual investments. HIGH
03 In at least one offering communication, TPEG explicitly projected a target IRR of 31.1% and a cash multiple of approximately 296% over a four-year hold period, presenting speculation as a reasonable return expectation. HIGH
04 TPEG systematically failed to report 15 written customer complaints to FINRA, deliberately miscategorizing investor grievances as relating to an unregulated affiliate rather than TPEG itself. HIGH
05 TPEG failed to amend Form U4 filings for at least three registered representatives who had customer complaints alleging sales practice violations with claims of $5,000 or more. HIGH
06 TPEG maintained written supervisory procedures that were inadequate, failing to provide guidance on identifying reportable complaints or distinguishing between broker-dealer and unregulated-affiliate liability. MED
🏛️
Regulatory Failures
How oversight broke down
01 TPEG violated FINRA Rule 2210(d)(1)(B), which explicitly prohibits false, exaggerated, unwarranted, promissory, or misleading statements in any communication with the public. HIGH
02 TPEG violated FINRA Rule 2210(d)(1)(F), which bars firms from predicting or projecting investment performance or implying that past performance will recur in future returns. HIGH
03 TPEG violated FINRA Rule 4530(d), which requires firms to report statistical and summary information about written customer complaints to FINRA by the 15th day of the month following each calendar quarter. HIGH
04 TPEG violated FINRA Rule 3110, which requires member firms to establish, maintain, and enforce a supervisory system and written procedures reasonably designed to achieve compliance with securities laws. HIGH
05 TPEG violated Article V, Section 2(c) of FINRA’s By-Laws by failing to keep Form U4 filings current within 30 days of learning of facts giving rise to amendment obligations. MED
06 FINRA’s own cycle examination was the mechanism that uncovered these violations, meaning TPEG’s internal controls provided zero corrective function for over six years. HIGH
💰
Profit Over People
Revenue prioritized over ethics
01 TPEG sold over 200 private placement offerings during the violation period, generating sales commissions on each deal while using misleading materials to attract investor capital. HIGH
02 TPEG’s affiliate, the issuer of the private placements, stood to benefit directly from capital raised through TPEG’s misleading sales materials, creating a financial conflict of interest at the core of the misconduct. HIGH
03 By projecting a target IRR of 31.1% and a 296% cash multiple, TPEG made a speculative real estate venture appear far more certain and lucrative than any honest analysis could support. HIGH
04 Aggregated IRR and Cash Multiple metrics were specifically chosen to obscure underperforming individual deals within a blended average, prioritizing the appearance of strong returns over accurate disclosure. MED
📉
Economic Fallout
Financial harm to investors
01 Investors made capital commitments to illiquid private placement offerings based on performance projections that FINRA found to be in violation of its core rules against misleading communications. HIGH
02 Private placements are high-risk, illiquid investments with no guaranteed secondary market. Investors who committed capital based on fabricated projections may face significant and permanent losses. HIGH
03 The 15 buried customer complaints represent real investors who raised grievances about their investments and were denied the regulatory protection that timely complaint reporting is designed to provide. HIGH
04 The $175,000 fine represents a fraction of the firm’s revenue across 200+ private placement deals, making it a cost of doing business rather than a genuine deterrent. MED
⚖️
Corporate Accountability Failures
Weak penalties, no individual liability
01 TPEG accepted the settlement without admitting or denying the findings, meaning the firm faces no legal acknowledgment of wrongdoing despite six years of documented rule violations. HIGH
02 No individual executives, principals, or registered representatives were named in this enforcement action, allowing those who designed and approved the misleading materials to face zero personal consequences. HIGH
03 The $175,000 fine was levied on a firm that sold over 200 private placements, meaning FINRA’s penalty does not even begin to approximate investor harm or the revenue generated through the misconduct period. HIGH
04 TPEG’s use of an unregulated affiliate as a shield, attributing complaints to the issuer entity rather than the broker-dealer, exploited structural complexity to avoid regulatory accountability. HIGH
05 FINRA’s enforcement settlement bars TPEG from denying the findings publicly or taking inconsistent positions in future proceedings, but the firm remains in operation with a fully active FINRA membership. MED
🕸️
Profiting from Complexity
Affiliate structure used to obscure accountability
01 TPEG is a FINRA-registered broker-dealer that sells offerings issued by its own unregulated affiliate, a structure that creates a built-in compliance gap between sales conduct and issuer accountability. HIGH
02 TPEG treated complaints as directed at its non-registered affiliate issuer unless the customer expressly named “TPEG Securities” by name, using a technicality to avoid its own regulatory reporting obligations. HIGH
03 TPEG classified complaints against its own registered representatives as complaints against the unregulated affiliate because those representatives were also employed by the affiliate, using dual employment as a shield. HIGH
04 This structural ambiguity was never the result of genuine legal uncertainty. FINRA found the firm’s interpretation was simply wrong, and the obligations were clear under the plain text of its rules. MED
🕐 Timeline of Events
2008
TPEG Securities, LLC becomes a FINRA member, operating from Southlake, Texas, with approximately 30 registered representatives primarily selling private placement offerings issued by its affiliated company.
Sept 2018
TPEG begins distributing sales communications containing aggregated IRR and Cash Multiple metrics from prior closed deals. The violation period begins. Investor complaints begin to accumulate without being properly reported to FINRA.
2018–2024
TPEG sells over 200 private placement offerings using sales materials that project future investment performance and feature misleading aggregated metrics. At least 15 written customer complaints are received and misclassified. Three Form U4 amendments for registered representatives go unfiled.
Q1 2022
TPEG sends investors a communication specifically projecting a target IRR of 31.1% and a cash multiple of approximately 296% on a specific multi-acquisition deal. This becomes a key documented example of the projected performance violation.
May 2024
The violation period ends. FINRA’s cycle examination of TPEG is underway and the firm stops sending investor communications containing aggregated performance metrics or projected investment performance.
Jan 21, 2026
Daniel S. Meader, Managing Partner of TPEG Securities, signs the Letter of Acceptance, Waiver, and Consent (AWC), agreeing to a $175,000 fine and formal censure without admitting or denying FINRA’s findings.
Jan 26, 2026
FINRA accepts the AWC. The censure and $175,000 fine become effective. The action is added to TPEG’s permanent disciplinary record and made available through FINRA’s public disclosure program.
💬 Direct Quotes from the Enforcement Record
QUOTE 1 The fabricated 31% return promise Core Allegations
“The three acquisitions are expected to close during Q1 of 2022 and projections support a target IRR of 31.1%+ and a cash multiple of ~296% over a four-year hold period.”
This is the exact language TPEG used in an investor communication. FINRA found this to be a direct violation of the rule prohibiting performance projections. Investors who committed capital based on this promise were relying on a number regulators say should never have been stated.
QUOTE 2 Masking individual deal performance Regulatory Failures
“The inclusion of aggregated sponsor performance metrics violated FINRA Rule 2210(d)(1)(B) because such metrics mask the performance of the individual closed deals and were not representative of any specific investment return.”
FINRA’s own language makes clear that blended metrics are not a gray area. They obscure the truth. TPEG used averages to hide which deals underperformed, giving investors a rosier picture than the underlying facts supported.
QUOTE 3 Burying investor grievances Accountability Failures
“TPEG mistakenly believed that the grievances about private placement transactions it sold to customers related to the issuer, rather than TPEG. Because the customer grievances concerned investments sold by TPEG, the firm was required to report them.”
FINRA rejected TPEG’s justification outright. The firm’s own obligation was clear. Fifteen investors filed written grievances and were denied the regulatory protection that timely reporting would have triggered.
QUOTE 4 Using dual employment as a shield Profiting from Complexity
“Where certain complaints named a TPEG registered representative, the firm treated those as complaints against its non-registered affiliate issuer because the representatives were also employed by the affiliate.”
TPEG’s representatives wore two hats, and the firm exploited that to avoid reporting complaints about them. An investor who named a specific broker in a grievance still had that complaint quietly redirected away from the regulatory record.
QUOTE 5 Supervisory procedures that guided no one Regulatory Failures
“Although TPEG’s written supervisory procedures discussed customer complaints generally, the procedures did not provide reasonable guidance to registered representatives on how to identify customer complaints, how to discern whether a customer complaint concerned the non-regulated issuer or the broker-dealer, or the reportability criteria for complaints.”
TPEG had a written manual, but the manual was useless. Procedures that fail to answer the most basic questions about who is responsible for what are not compliance systems. They are cover.
QUOTE 6 Why accurate Form U4s matter Regulatory Failures
“Filing timely and accurate Form U4s ensures that both FINRA and the investing public have current and reliable information about registered representatives.”
FINRA states plainly that the public relies on this information. When TPEG failed to update three representatives’ records, investors lost access to information that could have changed their decision to invest.
💬 Commentary
What exactly did TPEG tell investors that was misleading?
TPEG told investors that specific deals were expected to generate returns of 31.1% or higher, along with cash multiples of nearly 296%. These are not general statements of optimism. They were specific, quantified projections presented in formal offering communications. FINRA rules exist precisely because specific performance promises are exactly what drives investor decision-making. Telling someone a deal will return 31% over four years is not a caveat-laden sales pitch. It is a promise, and making that promise without factual basis is a form of deception that steers money into risky investments under false pretenses.
Why is hiding aggregated performance metrics a problem?
Averaged or aggregated metrics are a classic tool for making a bad track record look good. If a firm closed ten deals and five of them lost money, blending those returns into a single number makes the overall figure look acceptable while hiding the fact that half the deals failed. TPEG used this exact method. Investors were given a headline number that was not representative of any actual investment they were being asked to fund. The regulatory prohibition on this practice exists because it is, in practical effect, a lie constructed out of selectively presented math.
What happens to the investors who filed complaints that TPEG buried?
FINRA’s complaint reporting system exists in part to trigger investigations that protect investors. When TPEG suppressed 15 complaints, it deprived those investors of a regulatory mechanism designed to intervene when things go wrong. Those investors’ grievances did not produce any supervisory review, any pattern analysis, or any early warning to other investors. This enforcement action does not automatically resolve the underlying investor claims. If you believe you were harmed by TPEG’s private placement sales practices, consult a securities attorney and consider filing a complaint with FINRA directly through BrokerCheck.
Is this enforcement action serious?
A censure and a $175,000 fine is the bare minimum of serious. It is real and it is permanent on TPEG’s disciplinary record. But it is also not proportionate to six years of violations across 200-plus investment offerings, with 15 suppressed complaints and three falsified regulatory filings. No individual was charged. The firm did not admit wrongdoing. It paid a fine that represents a small fraction of the revenue generated during the violation period and returned to business. This is accountability in its weakest form: documented and disclosed, but not transformative.
Why were no individual executives or brokers held personally responsible?
This is one of the most important structural failures in securities enforcement. When only the firm is fined, the people who made the actual decisions, who approved the marketing materials, who decided which complaints to classify as non-reportable, face no personal consequences whatsoever. The $175,000 comes out of firm revenue. No one’s personal assets are touched. No one’s registration is suspended. This pattern is pervasive in financial industry enforcement and it is a primary reason why firms keep committing the same violations. When the penalty falls on the institution and not the decision-makers, rational actors inside that institution have little reason to change their behavior.
What can I do to prevent this from happening again?
Several concrete actions can make a real difference. First, use FINRA’s BrokerCheck (finra.org/brokercheck) to research any broker or firm before investing. TPEG’s disciplinary record is now permanently listed there. Second, treat any private placement material that includes projected returns as a red flag requiring independent verification. Third, if you are an investor who received misleading materials from TPEG, file a complaint with FINRA and consider a consultation with a securities attorney about whether you have a claim for damages. Fourth, contact your congressional representatives and demand stronger enforcement: specifically, rules requiring individual liability for supervisory failures in registered firms. Securities fraud is not victimless, and the people who commit it should face consequences that match the harm they cause.
What is a private placement and why are investors in them especially vulnerable?
A private placement is a securities offering sold directly to select investors rather than through a public stock exchange. They are exempt from many of the disclosure requirements that govern publicly traded stocks. They are typically illiquid, meaning investors cannot simply sell their stake when they need cash. They carry higher risk than most publicly traded securities and are supposed to be sold only to accredited investors with the sophistication and financial cushion to absorb potential losses. TPEG’s clients invested in real estate and operating company placements. When the sales materials for those investments included fabricated return projections, investors had no independent public market or mandatory disclosure baseline to compare against. They were dependent on TPEG’s representations being honest. They were not.
Does TPEG’s correction of its practices after this action mean investors are now safe?
TPEG states it has updated its written supervisory procedures and stopped sending projected performance communications. That is the minimum required response. But corrective actions taken only after getting caught do not retroactively protect the investors who made decisions based on misleading information over the previous six years. They also do not guarantee future compliance. TPEG has a prior regulatory history visible on BrokerCheck, and this censure is now part of that permanent record. Investors should weigh that record carefully when evaluating any future dealings with this firm.

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