March 12, 2012

Finra Fines and Enforcement Actions are Up

In a March 12th., 2012, article in InvestmentNews.com, Mark Schoeff, Jr., writes that enforcement actions and fines by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. or Finra, jumped sharply in 2011, with the latter rising to $68 million, from $45 million in 2010, a new study shows. The greatest proportion of that figure was penalties for improper advertising.

In 2011, Finra filed 1,488 disciplinary actions, up from 1,310 cases in 2010, according to the Finra sanctions survey released on Monday by Sutherland Asbill & Brennan LLP. The number of brokers barred by Finra rose to 329 in 2011, from 288 in 2010.

Schoeff writes that last year was the third in a row in which Finra substantially boosted enforcement activity, according to the report. The crackdown reflected Finra's effort to ensure that investor rip-offs, such as the multibillion-dollar Ponzi schemes perpetrated by R. Allen Stanford and Bernard Madoff, don't happen again, according to one of the study's authors.

We learn that Finra's chief enforcement officer said the numbers show that the regulator is achieving good production from its staff. The 1,488 cases were pursued by about 320 enforcement professionals.

“What makes me most proud of it is that we're getting through that caseload,” said Brad Bennett, Finra executive vice president. “We're bringing a lot of cases where the market meets the investor.”

The biggest enforcement increase was registered in advertising, according to the Sutherland report, with sanctions zooming to $21.1 million in 2011, from $4.75 million in 2010. Within this area, Finra has been zeroing in on inaccurate or fraudulent internal communications.

“If for example, firms are telling their representatives internally that products are not risky, [Finra is concerned that] representatives will turn around and make these claims to investors,” Mr. Rubin said.

Fines also were increased substantially for short selling and auction rate securities cases. In both areas, however, the pipeline may start to slow down.

The InvestmentNews.com article says that fines more than doubled from 2010 to 2011 — $3.75 million to $7.7 million — for suitability violations. The number of cases filed also doubled — from 53 to 106. A new suitability rule, which is due to be finalized this summer, will help Finra maintain pressure on brokers to offer only products that fit a customer's investment needs, timeline and risk appetite.

“We anticipate this will continue to be a hot area for Finra,” Mr. Rubin said. “The new rule gives Finra additional ammunition.”

Schoeff adds that Finra is looking not just at whether complex structured investments are suitable for a customer but also whether they are reasonably suited for the market.

“If you see products being sold by people who don't understand them to people who don't understand them, that's a supervision and suitability problem,” Mr. Bennett said. “That is a common theme that will underline product cases coming out this year.”

Finra also is placing an emphasis on microcap and private-placement offerings, as well as ensuring that firms do the basics — such as internal compliance — the right way.

“The cost of doing business incorrectly has to be greater than the cost of doing business correctly, or you give a competitive advantage to a non-compliant firm,” Mr. Bennett said.

Securities Lawyer, Lars K. Soreide, of Soreide Law Group, PLLC, has represented clients nationwide. If you or a family member have sustained investment losses due to your stock broker or financial advisor’s recommendations, call for a free consultation on how to potentially recover your losses. To speak with an attorney call 888-760-6552, or visit our website at: www.securitieslawyer.com.
 
Soreide Law Group, PLLC., representing investors nationwide before FINRA the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.
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