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Textbook
Introduction
1. Common stock
2. Preferred stock
3. Debt securities
4. Corporate debt
5. Municipal debt
6. US government debt
7. Investment companies
8. Alternative pooled investments
9. Options
10. Taxes
11. The primary market
12. The secondary market
13. Brokerage accounts
13.1 Fundamentals
13.2 New accounts
13.3 Account registrations
13.3.1 Individual accounts
13.3.2 Joint accounts
13.3.3 Power of attorney
13.3.4 Discretionary accounts
13.3.5 Custodial accounts
13.3.6 Guardianship accounts
13.3.7 Trust accounts
13.3.8 Business accounts
13.3.9 Prime brokerage accounts
13.4 Margin accounts
13.5 Options accounts
13.6 Other account specifications
14. Retirement & education plans
15. Rules & ethics
Wrapping up
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13.3.3 Power of attorney
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13. Brokerage accounts
13.3. Account registrations

Power of attorney

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If an account owner wants to give a third party the legal authority to act on their behalf, they can grant a power of attorney (POA). You may also hear this called trading authorization. A POA allows someone other than the account owner(s) to take certain actions in the account. For the SIE exam, you’ll want to know the main types of POA and what each one permits.

Limited POA allows the third party to perform transactions in the account. That means they can buy and sell securities on the account owner’s behalf, but they can’t request withdrawals from the account. Full POA allows the third party to buy and sell securities and request withdrawals.

If the POA is non-durable, it ends if the account owner becomes incapacitated. Incapacitation can include a medical coma or mental incompetency. No matter the cause, a non-durable POA is revoked if the owner becomes incapacitated. A durable POA continues even if the account owner becomes incapacitated and remains in effect.

A POA always ends if the account owner dies. At that point, the executor of the estate takes over responsibility for the assets. A POA can also be revoked at any time by the account owner.

Key points

Power of attorney (POA)

  • Allows a third party to act on behalf of account owner(s)
  • Referred to as trading authorization
  • Ceases at account owner’s death
  • Can be revoked at any time

Limited POA

  • Third party can place trades in the account
  • Third party cannot request withdrawals

Full POA

  • Third party can place trades
  • Third party can request withdrawals

Non-durable POA

  • Ceases at account owner incapacitation

Durable POA

  • Survives account owner incapacitation

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