Thomas Turkman recently hired Georgia Viggen, CFA, as a portfolio manager for North South Bank. Although Viggen worked many years for a competitor, West Star Bank, the move was straightforward because she did not have a non-compete agreement with her previous employer. Once Viggen starts working for Turkman, the first thing she does is to bring a trading software package she developed and used at West Star to her new employer. Using public information, Viggen contacts all of her former clients to convince them to move with her to North South. Viggen also convinces one of the analysts she worked with at West Star to join her at her new employer. Viggen most likelyviolated the CFA Institute Code of Ethics and Standards of Professional Conduct concerning her actions involving:
C is correct because the portfolio manager violated Standard Ⅳ (A) Loyalty by taking proprietary trading software from her former employer. Although the manager created the software, it was during a period of time when West Star employed her, so the software is not her property to take with her to her new employer. The member contacted clients using public information, so she did not violate Standard Ⅳ (A) Loyalty. Because Viggen was not obligated to abide by a non-compete agreement that would likely restrict recruitment of former colleagues, Viggen is most likely free to recruit the analyst from her former employer.