About a-team Marketing Services

A-Team Insight Blogs

SEC Charges 26 Financial Firms for Record-Keeping Failures, Resulting in $392.75 Million in Penalties

Subscribe to our newsletter

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has taken enforcement action against 26 broker-dealers, investment advisers, and dually-registered firms for widespread violations in maintaining and preserving electronic communications. The charges highlight longstanding failures by these firms to comply with federal record-keeping requirements.

The implicated firms admitted to the facts outlined in the SEC orders, acknowledging that their conduct breached record-keeping provisions under federal securities laws. Collectively, the firms have agreed to pay $392.75 million in civil penalties and are in the process of implementing measures to enhance their compliance policies. Three firms that voluntarily self-reported their infractions will face significantly reduced penalties.

“As today’s enforcement actions against more than two dozen firms reflect, we remain committed to ensuring compliance with the books and records requirements of the federal securities laws, which are essential to investor protection and well-functioning markets,” said Gurbir S. Grewal, Director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement. “Among this group of firms, there are several that differentiated themselves by self-reporting prior to the staff’s investigation, demonstrating once again the real benefits of proactive cooperation.”

The SEC’s investigations revealed pervasive use of unapproved communication methods, referred to as off-channel communications, across the firms. These off-channel communications included records that should have been preserved under securities laws but were not, impeding the SEC’s ability to conduct effective investigations. The violations were found to involve personnel at various levels, from senior managers to supervisors.

The firms were charged with breaches of record-keeping provisions under the Securities Exchange Act and the Investment Advisers Act, in addition to failures in supervising their personnel to prevent such violations. Alongside financial penalties, the firms were ordered to cease and desist from further breaches and received formal censures.

Reacting to the announcement, Matt Smith, CEO of integrated surveillance solutions provider SteelEye, commented: “The SEC’s recent hefty fines dispel any notion of a softer stance on off-channel communications breaches. Its crackdown remains in full force. The SEC is clearly expanding its focus beyond large tier-one banks, continuing to target investment advisers and broker-dealers. With fines posing a growing threat to firms of all sizes, it’s crucial they invest in the necessary measures, embracing smarter, more efficient approaches to supervision to navigate the evolving regulatory environment more effectively. Only then will they be able to keep pace with the SEC’s unforgiving scrutiny.”

Oliver Blower, CEO of London-based communications surveillance specialist VoxSmart, added: “It has been eerily quiet on the watchdog front of late, particularly when it comes to instant messaging record-keeping penalties. But this barrage of fines offers a stark reminder that the regulator will continue waging its battle on off-channel communications for the foreseeable. While this will alarm US firms ill-equipped to monitor staff use of platforms like WhatsApp, financial institutions operating beyond the SEC’s reach should also pay close attention. Overseas regulators certainly will be, and we expect a domino effect as watchdogs worldwide follow suit.”

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Upcoming Webinar: Practical considerations for regulatory change management

Date: 18 September 2024 Time: 10:00am ET / 3:00pm London / 4:00pm CET Duration: 50 minutes Regulatory change management has become a norm across financial markets but a challenge for financial institutions that must monitor, manage and adapt to ensure compliance with both minor and major adjustments to obligations. This year is particularly troublesome, with...

BLOG

Managing Cognitive Dissonance in Regulatory Compliance with Corlytics

This past 18 months has been a time of significant growth for RegTech consolidator Corlytics. RegTech Insight recently spoke with founder and CEO John Byrne to delve into the Corlytics backstory and learn more about the company’s development. Corlytics is Byrne’s fourth company. He describes how, after the 2018 financial crisis, experiences at his prior...

EVENT

RegTech Summit New York

Now in its 8th year, the RegTech Summit in New York will bring together the regtech ecosystem to explore how the North American capital markets financial industry can leverage technology to drive innovation, cut costs and support regulatory change.

GUIDE

Regulatory Data Handbook – Fifth Edition

In response to the popularity of the A-Team Regulatory Data Handbook, we have published a fifth edition outlining the essentials of regulations that are likely to have an impact on data and data management at your organisation. New to this edition is a section on RegTech, covering drivers behind the development of innovative regulatory technology,...