Warren R. Cox
Professional summary
Warren Richards Cox is a registered financial advisor currently at UBS FINANCIAL SERVICES INC. located in Rocky River, Ohio.
Warren is registered as an IAR (Investment Advisor Representative) and RR (Registered Representative) and started their career in finance in 1984. Warren has worked at 4 firms and has passed the Series 65, Series 63, SIE, Series 31, Series 7 and Series 8 exams.
Question & Answer
Aliases
Other business activities
CRS (Client Relationship Summary) - RIA

UBS FINANCIAL SERVICES INC. - Registered Investment Advisory firm
Version Date: Sat Jun 01 2024At UBS, we believe transparency about our services and fees is central to our relationship with you. Understanding our services and fees allows you to make informed decisions about how you work with us.
UBS Financial Services Inc. is registered with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) both as a broker-dealer offering brokerage services and as an investment adviser offering investment advisory services.
It is important to understand how brokerage and investment advisory services and fees differ. In addition to this document, there are several free, simple tools and educational materials you can use at investor.gov/CRS to:
Research different firms and financial professionals
Learn more about broker-dealers, investment advisers and investing
Fees and Costs:
The fees you pay depend on whether you choose brokerage services, advisory services or both. You will pay fees and costs regardless of whether you make or lose money on your investments. Fees and costs reduce the return on your investments. Fees and costs are described in detail in the Account and administrative fees section and in each of the investment product sections in Your Relationship with UBS at ubs.com/relationshipwithubs and the Form ADV at ubs.com/formadv.
Advisory services fees and costs
The primary fees and costs are generally “wrap” program fees. These fees are “asset-based,” meaning that the fee is calculated as a percentage of the assets in your advisory account (including uninvested cash held through a sweep program).
The more assets you invest in your account, the more you will pay in fees, and there is therefore an incentive to encourage you to increase your advisory account assets.
The wrap program fee you pay is for our investment advice, most trading costs, and custody and performance reporting, but does not include the investment management fee for a separate investment manager, which is additional. We will disclose these fees to you when you enroll. Not all separate investment managers charge an additional fee to clients.
The wrap program fee you pay will exceed the amount earned on the cash sweep balances in your account as well as any other assets that earn a lower rate than the wrap program fee.
If a separate investment manager uses a broker-dealer other than us to execute a trade (commonly referred to as a “step-out” trade), you will incur additional trading costs. If you custody assets or trade investments at a financial institution other than us, you will pay any additional fees that institution charges.
The wrap program fee is negotiable and is charged each quarter in advance. Learn more about our wrap program fee schedule and billing practices in your advisory agreement and our Wrap Fee Form ADV Brochure (Item 4 and Item 5.C) available at ubs.com/formadv.
Advisory accounts are not charged annual account maintenance fees.
Additional fees include:
Amounts that are included in the expense ratios of certain investments such as mutual funds, ETFs and alternative investments
Wire fees, transfer fees and bank charges
Fees for margin
These fees are explained in the applicable prospectuses and offering documents for the particular investments.
Advisory financial planning services are subject to a fixed fee for developing and delivering a financial plan. We also offer consulting services that have minimum account requirements and are not typically used by individual wealth management clients. These consulting services are provided only by a select group of Financial Advisors having the title of “Institutional Consultant.” Fees for planning and consulting services are set forth in your agreement with us for these services.
Why is it important to understand fees and costs?
You will pay fees and costs whether you make or lose money on your investments. Fees and costs will reduce any amount of money you make on your investments over time. Please make sure you understand what fees and costs you are paying.
For additional information, please see Your Relationship with UBS at ubs.com/relationshipwithubs and the Form ADV at ubs.com/formadv.
Questions to ask your Professional:
- Help me understand how these fees and costs might affect my investments. If I give you $10,000 to invest, how much will go to fees and costs, and how much will be invested for me?
Conflicts of Interest:
When we provide you with a recommendation as your broker-dealer or act as your investment adviser, we have to act in your best interest and not put our interest ahead of yours.
At the same time, the way we make money creates some conflicts with your interests. You should understand and ask us about these conflicts, because they can affect the recommendations and investment advice we provide you. Here are some examples to help you understand what this means:
Proprietary investments and services
Compensation: We earn higher fees, compensation and other benefits when you choose an investment that we (or one of our affiliates) advise, manage or sponsor, such as a mutual fund, alternative investment or structured note, or when you select us or an affiliate as the investment manager.
Incentive: There is an incentive to recommend or to invest your assets in investments and services that we advise, manage or sponsor over products from a third party.
Third-party and affiliate payments
Compensation: We receive payments from third-party product sponsors and managers (or their affiliates) and from our affiliates when we recommend or sell certain products and services to our clients. These include sales charges, selling concessions and other indirect ways of compensating UBS.
Incentive: There is an incentive to recommend that you invest your assets in products and obtain services of third parties and/or our affiliates that pay us over other products and services that do not pay us, or pay us less.
Revenue sharing
Compensation: We receive a share of revenue that managers and sponsors, including our affiliates, earn when you invest in their investment products (primarily mutual funds and variable annuities).
Incentive: There is an incentive to recommend (or to invest your assets in) products of sponsors and managers that share their revenue with us over other products of sponsors or managers that do not share their revenue, or who share less.
Principal trading
Compensation: As principal, we buy securities from you or sell securities to you from our (or our affiliate’s) inventory. We typically earn compensation by marking up the price of the securities we sell to you or by marking down the price of the securities we buy from you.
Incentive: There is an incentive to trade with you on a principal basis and to recommend securities from our inventory.
Sweep program for uninvested cash balances using an affiliated bank
Compensation: Uninvested cash in our sweep program is used to generate revenue for us and our affiliates. These cash balances earn a lower rate of return on that cash than might otherwise be obtained. We also charge the advisory fee on your uninvested cash balances in advisory accounts. The advisory fee exceeds the amount you will earn on those balances
Incentive: There is an incentive to maintain a program where uninvested cash is swept to our affiliate and to keep uninvested cash balances in advisory accounts.
We address our conflicts of interest by maintaining policies and procedures requiring that Financial Advisors act in your best interest, maintaining reasonable supervisory processes and disclosing these conflicts so that you can make fully informed decisions.
For additional information, please see the “Conflicts disclosure” section of Your Relationship with UBS at ubs.com/relationshipwithubs and the Form ADV at ubs.com/formadv.
Questions to ask your Professional:
- How might your conflicts of interest affect me, and how will you address them?
How do your financial professionals make money?
Most of our Financial Advisors receive a percentage of the revenue that they generate from our services, which includes transaction-based fees, investment advisory fees, trails and referral fees. The percentage increases as the level of revenue a Financial Advisor generates for UBS increases (known as production).
Financial Advisors are also eligible to receive financial and recognition awards based on their:
Production
Length of service with UBS
Financial Advisors that move between financial institutions generally receive a significant amount of additional compensation as an incentive to move. At UBS, this additional compensation is based on a combination of the amount of the Financial Advisor’s annual revenue at the prior firm and the level of assets or accounts that transfer to UBS. Financial Advisors in the Wealth Advice Center are paid on a salary-plus-bonus structure. For additional information, see ubs.com/wacdisclosure.
We and our Financial Advisors also receive non-cash compensation from certain product sponsors that can include occasional gifts, meals, tickets and/or other entertainment, sponsorship of educational or training events, including educational events Financial Advisors arrange for clients and prospective clients.
CRS (Client Relationship Summary) - BD

UBS FINANCIAL SERVICES INC. - Broker-Dealer Firm
Version Date: Sat Jun 01 2024At UBS, we believe transparency about our services and fees is central to our relationship with you. Understanding our services and fees allows you to make informed decisions about how you work with us.
UBS Financial Services Inc. is registered with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) both as a broker-dealer offering brokerage services and as an investment adviser offering investment advisory services.
It is important to understand how brokerage and investment advisory services and fees differ. In addition to this document, there are several free, simple tools and educational materials you can use at investor.gov/CRS to:
Research different firms and financial professionals
Learn more about broker-dealers, investment advisers and investing
Fees and Costs:
The fees you pay depend on whether you choose brokerage services, advisory services or both. You will pay fees and costs regardless of whether you make or lose money on your investments. Fees and costs reduce the return on your investments. Fees and costs are described in detail in the Account and administrative fees section and in each of the investment product sections in Your Relationship with UBS at ubs.com/relationshipwithubs and the Form ADV at ubs.com/formadv.
Brokerage services fees and costs
The primary fees and costs are “transaction-based fees,” meaning they are charged each time you buy or sell an investment. Depending on the investment you select, these fees can include:
Up-front commissions (which our Financial Advisors are permitted to discount)
Additional fees include:
Annual account maintenance fees
Administrative fees such as processing and handling fees for trades, wire fees, transfer fees and bank charges
Fees for margin
Other amounts that are included in the expense ratios of certain investments such as mutual funds, ETFs, variable annuities and alternative investments
In certain circumstances, “surrender charges” if you sell an investment before a specified period
Because we are compensated for transactions, there is an incentive to encourage you to trade more frequently and in greater amounts. We also have an incentive to trade with you as principal and recommend securities from our inventory, because we earn compensation by marking up the price of the securities we sell to you or by paying you less for the securities we buy from you.
This compensation is described in the “Fees and Charges” and the “Statement of Credit Practices” sections of our Agreements and Disclosures, which can be found under the Account agreements and disclosures tab at ubs.com/disclosuredocuments. Additional fees and costs are described in Part two of Your Relationship with UBS at ubs.com/relationshipwithubs.
Why is it important to understand fees and costs?
You will pay fees and costs whether you make or lose money on your investments. Fees and costs will reduce any amount of money you make on your investments over time. Please make sure you understand what fees and costs you are paying.
For additional information, please see Your Relationship with UBS at ubs.com/relationshipwithubs and the Form ADV at ubs.com/formadv.
Questions to ask your Professional:
- Help me understand how these fees and costs might affect my investments. If I give you $10,000 to invest, how much will go to fees and costs, and how much will be invested for me?
Conflicts of Interest:
When we provide you with a recommendation as your broker-dealer or act as your investment adviser, we have to act in your best interest and not put our interest ahead of yours.
At the same time, the way we make money creates some conflicts with your interests. You should understand and ask us about these conflicts, because they can affect the recommendations and investment advice we provide you. Here are some examples to help you understand what this means:
Proprietary investments and services
Compensation: We earn higher fees, compensation and other benefits when you choose an investment that we (or one of our affiliates) advise, manage or sponsor, such as a mutual fund, alternative investment or structured note, or when you select us or an affiliate as the investment manager.
Incentive: There is an incentive to recommend or to invest your assets in investments and services that we advise, manage or sponsor over products from a third party.
Third-party and affiliate payments
Compensation: We receive payments from third-party product sponsors and managers (or their affiliates) and from our affiliates when we recommend or sell certain products and services to our clients. These include sales charges, selling concessions and other indirect ways of compensating UBS.
Incentive: There is an incentive to recommend that you invest your assets in products and obtain services of third parties and/or our affiliates that pay us over other products and services that do not pay us, or pay us less.
Revenue sharing
Compensation: We receive a share of revenue that managers and sponsors, including our affiliates, earn when you invest in their investment products (primarily mutual funds and variable annuities).
Incentive: There is an incentive to recommend (or to invest your assets in) products of sponsors and managers that share their revenue with us over other products of sponsors or managers that do not share their revenue, or who share less.
Principal trading
Compensation: As principal, we buy securities from you or sell securities to you from our (or our affiliate’s) inventory. We typically earn compensation by marking up the price of the securities we sell to you or by marking down the price of the securities we buy from you.
Incentive: There is an incentive to trade with you on a principal basis and to recommend securities from our inventory.
Sweep program for uninvested cash balances using an affiliated bank
Compensation: Uninvested cash in our sweep program is used to generate revenue for us and our affiliates. These cash balances earn a lower rate of return on that cash than might otherwise be obtained. We also charge the advisory fee on your uninvested cash balances in advisory accounts. The advisory fee exceeds the amount you will earn on those balances
Incentive: There is an incentive to maintain a program where uninvested cash is swept to our affiliate and to keep uninvested cash balances in advisory accounts.
We address our conflicts of interest by maintaining policies and procedures requiring that Financial Advisors act in your best interest, maintaining reasonable supervisory processes and disclosing these conflicts so that you can make fully informed decisions.
For additional information, please see the “Conflicts disclosure” section of Your Relationship with UBS at ubs.com/relationshipwithubs and the Form ADV at ubs.com/formadv.
Questions to ask your Professional:
- How might your conflicts of interest affect me, and how will you address them?
How do your financial professionals make money?
Most of our Financial Advisors receive a percentage of the revenue that they generate from our services, which includes transaction-based fees, investment advisory fees, trails and referral fees. The percentage increases as the level of revenue a Financial Advisor generates for UBS increases (known as production).
Financial Advisors are also eligible to receive financial and recognition awards based on their:
Production
Length of service with UBS
Financial Advisors that move between financial institutions generally receive a significant amount of additional compensation as an incentive to move. At UBS, this additional compensation is based on a combination of the amount of the Financial Advisor’s annual revenue at the prior firm and the level of assets or accounts that transfer to UBS. Financial Advisors in the Wealth Advice Center are paid on a salary-plus-bonus structure. For additional information, see ubs.com/wacdisclosure.
We and our Financial Advisors also receive non-cash compensation from certain product sponsors that can include occasional gifts, meals, tickets and/or other entertainment, sponsorship of educational or training events, including educational events Financial Advisors arrange for clients and prospective clients.
Certified licenses
Education
Management/Finance
Accounting
Experience
February 9, 2007 - Present
UBS FINANCIAL SERVICES INC.
Office #1: 18500 Lake Road Suite 400, Rocky River, OH 44116February 9, 2007 - Present
UBS FINANCIAL SERVICES INC.
Office #1: 18500 Lake Road Suite 400, Rocky River, OH 44116November 22, 1999 - February 9, 2007
KEYBANC CAPITAL MARKETS INC.
October 4, 1996 - February 9, 2007
KEYBANC CAPITAL MARKETS INC.
October 15, 1990 - October 9, 1996
MORGAN STANLEY DW INC.
July 10, 1984 - October 8, 1990
KEYBANC CAPITAL MARKETS INC.
January 25, 1984 - June 29, 1984
PRESCOTT, BALL & TURBEN, INC.
Primary Firm SEC Registration

UBS FINANCIAL SERVICES INC.
CRD#: 8174 / SEC#: 801-7163, 8-16267
State Registrations and Notice Filings
Listed states reflect where the advisor is authorized to serve clients under state regulations.
Visual representation of state registrations
(10/10/2025)
(2/9/2007)
(2/9/2007)
(11/9/2015)
(2/9/2007)
(10/28/2016)
(2/9/2007)
(2/9/2007)
(10/18/2013)
(2/9/2007)
(2/9/2007)
(1/9/2014)
(2/9/2007)
(2/10/2007)
(5/22/2017)
(2/9/2007)
(2/9/2007)
(12/15/2014)
(2/9/2007)
(2/9/2007)
(5/3/2023)
(1/20/2023)
(2/9/2007)
(2/9/2007)
(2/12/2007)
(12/17/2021)
(2/13/2009)
(3/21/2011)
(11/9/2015)
Exams
Series 8
Date: 7/24/1998
General Securities Sales Supervisor Examination (Options Module & General Module)BOX Exchange LLC
Cboe Exchange, Inc.
FINRA
NYSE American LLC
NYSE Arca, Inc.
NYSE Texas, Inc.
Nasdaq ISE, LLC
Nasdaq PHLX LLC
Nasdaq Stock Market
New York Stock Exchange
Current Firm

UBS FINANCIAL SERVICES INC.
CRD#: 8174 / SEC#: 801-7163, 8-16267
Contact information
SEC notice filing (50 States and Territories)
FINRA licenses (53 States and Territories)
Documents
Direct owners and executive officers
| Name | Position | CRD# |
|---|---|---|
| UBS AMERICAS INC. | OWNER | |
| CAMACHO, MICHAEL ALAN | PRESIDENT | 2907298 |
| FRANCOMANO, LISA M. | CHIEF COMPLIANCE OFFICER FOR THE ADVISORY BUSINESS | 2263875 |
| MATTONE, RALPH | PRINCIPAL FINANCIAL OFFICER | 1840894 |
| MOZER, PETER | MANAGING DIRECTOR | 2523858 |
| MUNFA, LAUREN | CHIEF COMPLIANCE OFFICER | 4431011 |
| SAKAI, KIYE | GENERAL COUNSEL | 7451987 |
| SOMMA, JOSEPH | PRINCIPAL OPERATIONS OFFICER | 2219496 |
Regulatory assets under management
| Total Number of Accounts | 1,134,923 |
| AUM (Assets Under Management) | $ 808,822,670,899 |
Disclosures
| Regulatory Event | 475 |
| Civil Event | 5 |
| Arbitration | 443 |
Accountant surprise examination report
| Filing Date | Form ADV-E Cover | Form ADV-E Report |
|---|---|---|
| 06/26/2025 | ||
| 05/15/2024 | ||
| 12/19/2023 |
Red Flags
Disclosures can be potential red flags, including customer disputes, regulatory fines, employer terminations, bankruptcies, judgments, liens, or certain criminal activities.
Check for any disclosures as part of your thorough research when choosing an advisor.
Company Information
UBS FINANCIAL SERVICES INC.
Senior Vice President–Wealth ManagementCRD#: 8174Rocky River, OH 44116TRUST BUT VERIFY
Monitor Warren Cox
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