FINRA Suspends Robert Cupello for Unsuitable Variable Annuity Exchanges Targeting Seniors

FINRA suspended broker Robert Settimio Cupello (CRD# 1036533) after finding he recommended unsuitable variable annuity exchanges to six senior customers between July 2021 and December 2022. Cupello, registered with Supreme Alliance LLC in Charlotte, North Carolina, failed to conduct reasonable comparative analysis of existing versus proposed living benefit riders, causing customers to lose excess value embedded in their riders. The AWC (No. 2024081939101), finalized February 18, 2026, imposes a two-month suspension and a $5,000 fine.

What Cupello did

Cupello recommended variable annuity 1035 exchanges to six senior customers without a reasonable basis. Each exchange replaced an existing variable annuity contract with a new one that carried longer surrender periods, higher fees, and reduced death benefits. The new contracts generated substantial commissions for Cupello while eliminating guaranteed income features the seniors already held.

FINRA found that Cupello did not conduct a reasonable comparative analysis of the living benefit riders. Several customers were near or in retirement and relied on the guaranteed income features of their existing annuities. By replacing those contracts, Cupello caused customers to lose the excess value embedded in their living benefit riders — value that had accumulated during years of market participation and contract aging.

Key facts from the FINRA settlement

Detail Information
Broker name Robert Settimio Cupello
CRD# 1036533
Firm Supreme Alliance LLC (Charlotte, NC)
AWC number 2024081939101
AWC date February 18, 2026
Violation period July 2021 – December 2022
Rules violated FINRA Rules 2330, 2010
Victims Six senior customers
Suspension March 16 – May 15, 2026 (2 months)
Fine $5,000
Product type Variable annuity 1035 exchanges

Why variable annuity exchanges harm seniors

Variable annuity 1035 exchanges allow investors to swap one annuity contract for another without triggering immediate tax consequences. When used properly, they can lower fees or improve investment options. When misused, they strip away accumulated benefits and reset surrender periods.

Six red flags indicate an unsuitable annuity exchange:

  • Surrender periods lasting 7 to 10 years sold to investors in their 70s and 80s, creating dangerous liquidity mismatches
  • Commission rates of 5 to 8 percent on new contracts, creating a direct financial incentive for the broker
  • Loss of guaranteed living benefit riders that had accumulated value over time
  • Increased mortality and expense charges on the new contract compared to the old one
  • Reduced death benefits that leave beneficiaries with less protection
  • Step-up features eliminated or reduced for customers near or in retirement

In Cupello’s case, each of these red flags was present. The customers gave up guaranteed income features they had paid for over years, only to receive contracts with worse terms and longer lock-up periods.

Cupello’s disciplinary history and BrokerCheck

Robert Cupello has been in the securities industry since 1985 and has been affiliated with 13 different firms throughout his career. His FINRA BrokerCheck report (CRD# 1036533) is publicly accessible. Investors should review any broker’s BrokerCheck report before working with them, particularly for annuity recommendations.

The securities law firm Haselkorn & Thibaut has opened an investigation into Cupello following the FINRA sanctions, offering free case evaluations to affected investors.

Regulatory trend: FINRA targets annuity abuse

Cupello’s suspension is part of a broader FINRA enforcement trend. In 2025 alone, FINRA brought more than 40 Regulation Best Interest cases, exceeding the total from all of 2024. Variable annuity exchanges targeting seniors remain a top enforcement priority. FINRA Rule 2330 specifically governs variable annuity transactions and requires brokers to determine suitability before recommending any exchange.

The two-month suspension length, while shorter than some recent Reg BI penalties, reflects that Cupello cooperated with the investigation. However, the six senior customers affected each lost real value from their annuity contracts — value that cannot be recovered through the regulatory process alone.

Haselkorn & Thibaut fights for investor recovery

Haselkorn & Thibaut is a securities law firm founded by former Wall Street defense attorneys who shifted their practice to represent investors. The firm has recovered over $520 million for clients in securities matters and maintains a 98 percent success rate in resolved nontraded REIT cases. Attorneys are AV Preeminent rated through Martindale-Hubbell, designated as Super Lawyers, and hold a 5.0-star client review average. The firm operates on a contingency basis — no recovery, no fee.

Contact Haselkorn & Thibaut today

Time matters in annuity recovery cases. The earlier you act, the stronger your position. The firm offers a free case evaluation to assess your losses, review your annuity contract, and explain your options under FINRA arbitration.

Offices in Florida, New York, Arizona, Texas, and North Carolina. Former Wall Street defense attorneys with 95+ years of combined experience. No recovery, no fee.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or financial advice. If you believe you have been the victim of investment fraud or unsuitable recommendations, contact a qualified securities attorney.

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