So, as you undoubtedly recall, in its typical reactive approach to regulation, FINRA has expressed concern – after having concerns expressed to it by others (none of whom are actually from the securities industry, of course) – about (1) the high number of registered reps working in the industry with spotty disciplinary records, and (2)
broker-dealer
Let The Sun Shine On FINRA’s Office Of Disciplinary Affairs
Back in the old days, back when it was still NASD and it bore some reasonable semblance of a true self-regulatory organization, the important decisions relating to the Enforcement process – the decision to issue a complaint, the decision to settle a case, and the decision in litigated matters that actually went to hearing –…
FINRA’s Annual Report: I Wish It Was Fake News
This past week, FINRA very, very quietly released its Annual Report for 2016. Too quietly, as they say in the movies. No press release. No press conference. No media attention at all, hardly. As President Trump just asked about State Election Commissioners who refused to respond to a request from his Election Fraud taskforce for…
The Unassailable FINRA Rule 8210
My dissatisfaction with FINRA’s Rule 8210 and, more specifically, the aggressive manner with which FINRA wields that rule, has been the subject of several prior blogs. I happy to report that my partner, Michael Gross, has drunk the Kool-Aid, and joined me in tilting at this windmill. – Alan
The first paragraph of a paper…
What Else Is New? FINRA Skates Despite “Massive” Failure To Produce Documents
Let’s play pretend. Can you imagine what FINRA would do to a respondent broker-dealer in an Enforcement action that announced on Day Five of the hearing – i.e., during the “final phase” of the hearing – that – whoops! – it had forgotten to produce certain documents that it should have produced eight months before…
Rogue Brokers: The Numbers Do Not Tell The Whole Story
Not too long ago, I blogged a couple of times about the amount of attention that is suddenly being paid to the number of registered representatives with disciplinary histories working for FINRA member firms, i.e., the so-called recidivists (who used to be called “rogue reps”). Among the complaints I voiced was the fact that while…
FINRA Provides The Blueprint For Monitoring Outside Business Activities
Outside business activities are in the news. In Reg Notice 17-20, FINRA announced that it was seeking comments in an effort to learn whether or not the existing rules governing OBAs are effective. (The comment period is open until late June, so if you have strong feelings on the subject, now is the time…
How The Fiduciary Rule May Impact Outside Business Activities
Because fixed annuities and fixed life insurance are not securities, many broker-dealers treat the sales of these products by their registered reps as outside business activities. In that event, there is no obligation by the BD to supervise those sales, and they can be run directly with the issuing company and not through the broker-dealer. …
Where’s The Beef? The SEC Complains That Filing A SAR Isn’t Enough If It Skimps On Details
Many of my clients chafe at the AML rule, given the cost of compliance and the even higher cost of defending an Enforcement action if the regulators conclude that red flags were somehow missed, or spotted but not dealt with adequately, or soon enough, or both, or spotting the red flags, responding to them, but…
Does FINRA Give Credit For Self-Reporting Problems? It Says It Does, But….
I read a fascinating piece the other day in BankInvestmentConsultant about FINRA’s Enforcement program, specifically about the notion of broker-dealers self-reporting problems, and whether that was a smart thing to do. Some of the quotes attributed to FINRA senior Enforcement management are really interesting, so I wanted to share them with you in the event…