2019 Report on FINRA Examination Findings and Observations
    
        
In October 2019, the Financial Industry
Regulatory Authority (FINRA) released
its 2019 Report on Examination Findings
and Observations (2019 Report). The
2019 Report contains effective practices
that may help firms improve compliance
and risk management programs.
Noteworthy findings include:
    - Digital communications
    
        - Firms are required to create
        and preserve originals of all
        correspondence related to
        “business as such,” pursuant to
        Exchange Rule 17a-3, Exchange
        Rule 17a-4, FINRA Rule 3110(b)
        (4) and FINRA Rule Series 4510.
- The 2019 Report noted that some
        firms encountered challenges
        complying with supervision and
        recordkeeping requirements for
        various digital communication
        tools, technologies and services.
- The 2019 Report also
        identified a number of practices
        implemented by firms that
        were effective in managing
        registered representatives’
        use of digital channels.
        These practices included: (1)
        establishing comprehensive
        governance; (2) defining and
        controlling permissible digital
        channels; (3) managing video
        content; (4) training; and (5)
        disciplining misuse of digital
        communications.
 
- Anti-money laundering
    
        - The Bank Secrecy Act (BSA)
        requires that firms monitor, detect
        and report suspicious activity to
        the US Treasury’s Financial Crimes
        Enforcement Network (FinCEN).
        FINRA Rule 3310 (Anti-Money
        Laundering (AML) Compliance
        Program) requires that members
        develop and implement a written
        AML program reasonably designed
        to comply with the requirements
        of the BSA and regulations
        promulgated thereunder. FINRA
        also notes that FinCEN’s Customer
        Due Diligence rule requires that
        firms identify beneficial owners of
        legal entity customers, understand
        the nature and purpose of customer
        accounts, conduct ongoing
        monitoring of customer accounts
        to identify and report suspicious
        transactions, and — on a risk basis
        — update customer information.
- The 2019 Report identified a
        number of issues relating to firms’
        AML programs. These included:
- The failure to tailor transaction
        monitoring to the risks of the
        firm’s business or to adjust
        programs to take into account
        new sources of revenue/higherrisk
        customers with increased
        activity levels.
- The failure to adequately monitor
        trading for suspicious activity
        reporting purposes, including
        inadequate delegation of such
        monitoring, e.g. to the securities
        trading desk.
- The failure to adequately
        identify and investigate red flags
        associated with third-party wire
        transfers that were either out of
        the ordinary for the customer
        or appeared designed to deter
        verification of the transfer
        instruction.
- Overreliance by introducing
        firms on their clearing firms
        for transaction monitoring and
        suspicious activity reporting
        with the result that the
        introducing broker failed to
        meet its obligation to monitor for
        suspicious activity attempted or
        conducted through the firm.
 
- Observations on cybersecurity
    
        - The 2019 Report stated that
        cybersecurity attacks continued
        to increase in both number and
        level of sophistication.
- While recognizing that there
        is no one-size-fits-all approach
        for all members, the 2019
        Report highlighted a number of
        effective practices that firms have
        implemented to strengthen their
        cybersecurity risk-management
        programs, including: (1) branch
        controls; (2) documented policies
        on vendor and third-party
        management; (3) incident response
        planning; (4) data protection
        controls; (5) system patching; (6)
        access controls; (7) management
        of asset inventory; (8) data loss
        prevention controls; (9) training
        and awareness; and (10) change
        management processes.
 
SEC Proposes amendments to enhance retail investor protections
    
        
On September 26, 2019, the US
Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC) voted to propose amendments
to Exchange Act Rule 15c2-11 (the
Rule), which sets out requirements with
which a broker-dealer must comply
before it can publish quotations for
securities in the over-the-counter (OTC)
market. The SEC characterizes the
proposed amendments as designed
to modernize the Rule and enhance
investor protection by requiring that
current and publicly available issuer
information be accessible to investors
before a broker-dealer can begin
quoting that security.
Currently, the Rule requires that a
broker-dealer review basic information
about an issuer before quoting
securities to investors in the OTC
market. Once quoting begins, the
Rule’s exceptions permit broker-dealers
to continue to publish quotations
notwithstanding that current
information about the issuer is no
longer available to the public or the
broker-dealer. The SEC is concerned
that today’s market participants can
take advantage of these exceptions to
disadvantage retail investors.
The proposed amendments would limit
use of these exceptions where required
issuer information is no longer current
or available to the public. At the same
time, the proposed amendments would
add new quotation exceptions with
respect to certain OTC securities where
there is less concern regarding fraud
and manipulation.
Highlights of proposed
amendments
The proposed amendments would
facilitate the availability of current
issuer information by:
    - Mandating that documents and
    information that broker-dealers are
    required to obtain and review be
    current and publicly available.
- Conditioning use of the piggyback
    exception, which allows brokerdealers
    to publish quotations
    for a security in reliance on the
    quotations of a broker-dealer who
    initially performed the required
    information review, on required
    issuer information being both
    current and publicly available.
- Similarly, conditioning the
    unsolicited quotation exception,
    where used on behalf of company
    insiders, on required issuer
    information being both current and
    publicly available.
The proposed amendments would
further limit the piggyback exception by:
    - Limiting the exception only to
    bid and ask quotations that are
    published at specified prices.
- Eliminating the exception during
    the first 60 calendar days after
    the termination of an SEC trading
    suspension under Section 12(k) of
    the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
- Eliminating the exception for
    securities of “shell companies”.
At the same time, the proposed
amendments would add new quotation
exceptions for situations that raise
less concern regarding fraud and
manipulation. These new exceptions
would apply:
    - To securities of well-capitalized
    issuers whose securities are actively
    traded.
- Where the broker-dealer publishing
    the quotation was named as an
    underwriter in the security’s
    registration statement or offering
    circular.
- Where a regulated third party
    complies with the Rule’s required
    review and makes known to others
    the quotation of a broker-dealer
    relying on the exception.
- In reliance on publicly available
    determinations by regulated third
    parties that the requirements of
    certain exceptions have been met.
SEC fines rise to 30-year high
    
        
The SEC brought 526 enforcement
actions in the past fiscal year, which
ended September 30, 2019. According
to SEC data, the tally was lifted by 95
cases against investment advisers for
inadequately disclosing their practice
of selling more expensive funds to retail
clients.
The SEC’s civil caseload produced
monetary sanctions totaling US$4.3
billion, the highest tally in nominal
dollars since at least 1987, according
to data from Georgetown University
law professor Urska Velikonja. A higher
share of the SEC’s largest cases in
2019 were against private companies
or individual defendants, according
to Ms. Velikonja, whose research
focuses on SEC enforcement. The total
shows the SEC’s focus on protecting
less sophisticated traders, as opposed
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to scouring for bigger cases where
institutional or wealthy investors were
defrauded, can still yield big fines.
It isn’t known how much of that money
will be collected. Among the 10 largest
fines this year, 55 percent of the total
sanctions came from cases in which
individuals and “shell companies” are
responsible for paying the judgments.
According to agency data, the SEC
collects about 57 percent of its
enforcement sanctions, but has created
a dedicated unit to go after scofflaws
skipping out on fines. The SEC levied
fines totaling US$12.1 billion during
the past three years under the Trump
administration, compared with
US$12.4 billion from 2014 through
2016.
The largest fine obtained last year,
US$892 million, stemmed from the
SEC’s lawsuit against the defunct
Woodbridge Group of Companies
LLC, which authorities say fleeced
8,400 people through sham realestate
investments. The SEC also
obtained a US$100 million fine against
Woodbridge owner Robert Shapiro,
who was sentenced to 25 years in
prison in a parallel criminal case.
The number of new SEC investigations
has been falling. The SEC opened 869
enforcement investigations in 2018,
compared with 965 in 2017 and 1,063
during 2016, according to agency
budget reports. “That is a reflection of
trying to be judicious in what we are
opening, and that is a reflection that we
are operating with reduced resources
and we are trying to be smarter,” said
Steven Peikin, co-director of the SEC’s
enforcement division.
The SEC in 2019 returned to using
industry-wide enforcement campaigns
to target entrenched misconduct. More
than 90 investment advisers who
steered clients into higher-fee mutual
funds without adequately disclosing
their practice were required to repay
US$135 million to customers. The
companies included Wells Fargo &
Co. and Raymond James Financial
Services Advisors Inc. In some cases,
the misconduct occurred more than
four years ago. The SEC says last year’s
investment-adviser cases were different
because the regulator’s work earned
money back for investors and saved
them from paying extra fees in the
future.
Separately, the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission (CFTC), the
regulator of US derivatives markets,
claimed enforcement sanctions last
year of US$1.3 billion, the highest level
since 2015. The agency’s total heavily
depended on a single lawsuit that
obtained US$978 million in restitution
for investors. The CFTC filed the suit
in 2009 against brokerage firm WG
Trading Co., and its executives, for
stealing hundreds of millions of dollars
in client assets. The executives, Paul
Greenwood and Stephen Walsh, went to
prison after pleading guilty. The agency
filed 69 new cases, consistent with its
annual average over the past five years.
The CFTC’s enforcement output this
year included 12 cases against futures
traders at banks, such as JPMorgan
Chase & Co., accused of spoofing, a
type of market manipulation.
    
    CFTC commissioners raise concerns over agency’s interpretation of SEC rules in record spoofing settlement
    
        
On November 7, 2019, the US CFTC
settled charges against proprietary
trading firm Tower Research Capital
(Tower) regarding nearly two years
of spoofing in equity index futures.
The settlement included penalties
of US$67.4 million, the largest total
monetary relief levied in a spoofing
case. Tower also entered into a
simultaneous resolution with the
Justice Department to settle criminal
charges. Spoofing is a form of market
manipulation in the commodity
markets in which the trader bids
or places orders with no intent
of executing them. Later they are
cancelled. The practice can distort the
pricing in the markets and cause injury
to other traders who are deceived.
The Dodd-Frank Act, in view of this,
gave the CFTC additional enforcement
authority in this area.
In a dissent, Commissioner Dan
Berkovitz agreed with the basic
findings of the case but questioned the
CFTC’s decision to grant Tower a waiver
from “bad actor” disqualification
under rules of the US SEC. “The
CFTC has neither the legal authority
nor the expertise” to make such a
determination regarding the securities
markets,” Berkovitz said. “These
matters are the core responsibility of
the SEC, not the CFTC.” Commissioner
Rostin Behnam concurred with the
judgment against Tower, but he
offered similar criticism and “extreme
reservations” about the disqualification
in a statement of his own.
The Tower case is the latest in a string
of enforcement actions regarding
spoofing. It is also evidence of recently
appointed CFTC Chairman Heath
Tarbert’s commitment to “be tough
on those who break the rules,” as he
said in a statement announcing the
settlement.
    
    Seventeen additional advisers charged with recommending higher cost fund share classes
    
        
The SEC ordered the payment of over
US$125 million in disgorgement
and interest against 79 investment
advisers who self-reported that they
recommended share classes that paid
back 12b-1 fees when lower-cost share
classes were available. Combined with
the group of settlements back in March,
the SEC has brought 95 total cases and
Global asset management quarterly
ordered over US$135 million returned
to investors pursuant to its Share Class
Selection Disclosure Initiative. The
largest restitution order of the most
recent 16 cases exceeded US$2.9
million. The SEC also settled an action
against a firm that did not self-report,
resulting in a US$300,000 fine, in
addition to ordering over US$900,000
in restitution. The cases allege that
the firms did not sufficiently disclose
the conflict of interest arising by
recommending a share class that paid
back revenue sharing to the adviser, its
affiliates, or their personnel.
    
    SEC proposes expedited exemptive reviews for registered funds
    
        
The SEC has proposed a new rule for
the expedited review of exemptive
applications under the Investment
Company Act of 1940. Under the
proposal, an applicant could request
expedited review if the application is
substantially identical to two other
applications granted within the prior
two years. If the staff agrees that
expedited review is permitted, the
staff will issue the notice within 45
days of filing. Additionally, the SEC
has proposed a rule requiring that the
staff take some action (e.g. providing
comments) within 90 days of filing
any exemptive application. The SEC
acknowledges that lengthy reviews
delay transactions, prevent firms
from rapidly adapting to changing
market conditions and slow product
development. The 30-day comment
period for this proposed rule ends
November 17, 2019.
    
    New York State expands Securities Enforcement Statute
    
        
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo
signed a law that reinstates the 6-year
statute of limitations for the Martin
Act, a statute that prohibits deceptive
practices in securities transactions. A
recent court case, seemingly counter
to prior precedent, had limited the
statute to three years. The New York
State Attorney General Letitia James
stressed the importance of the Martin
Act because “the federal government
continues to abdicate its role of
protecting investors and consumers.”
Governor Cuomo explained that New
York State is “enhancing one of the
state’s most powerful tools to prosecute
financial fraud so we can hold more
bad actors accountable, protect
investors and achieve a fairer New York
for all.”
Depending upon circumstances, choice
of law decisions may be affected by
the advantages and disadvantages of a
longer or shorter statute of limitations.
The New York statute of limitations is 6
years, whereas the state of limitations
for the Securities Act of 1933 is 3
years, and the statute of limitations for
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
is 2 years after the fraud has been
discovered, and not more than 5 years
after the fraud has occurred.
    
    Clayton scolds foreign securities regulators
    
        
Jay Clayton, Chairman of the US SEC,
criticized foreign securities regulators
around the world for inconsistent and
ineffective enforcement of anti-bribery
laws. Clayton fears that a two-tier
system is in place that adversely affects
the US’s diligent adherence to antibribery
laws and improperly rewards
countries that do not enforce antibribery
laws. Only 23 of 44 countries
that agreed to make corruption of
public officials a crime have concluded
an enforcement action.
Clayton also said market regulators
are examining the growth of corporate
debt and how investors are managing
the associated risk. More than a decade
of low interest rates have encouraged
companies to issue more debt, while
investors looking for better returns
have pushed into riskier bank loans
and lower-rated bonds that pay
higher returns. Clayton surmised that
regulators would have to examine the
effects of this leverage as bond prices
continue to rise, fueled by concerns of
an economic slowdown.
    
    Chief compliance officer, a former SEC staffer, indicted for stealing confidential investigation information
    
        
The US Attorney for the Eastern District of New York has indicted the former Chief Compliance Officer of a private equity firm for
obstructing justice and illegally accessing confidential government information. According to the indictment and press accounts, the
defendant misused his position and access as an SEC employee to obtain information about a pending investigation of the private equity
firm while negotiating his new position. The firm itself is being investigated for sales practice violations. The defendant faces more than 20
years in prison.
    
    10 2017 PCAOB inspection reports summary
    
        
2017 global network firms inspections overview
The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB) recently released the public portion of the 2017 inspection reports with
respect to the US affiliate of all six global network accounting firms. The table below summarizes the results of the 2017 inspections of
these firms. For comparison, a similar table showing results of the 2016 inspections follows
    
        
            | 2017 Inspections of US Affiliates of global networks (Reports publicly available in 2019) | 
    
    
        
            | Firm | Report Date | Engagements
            Inspected | Deficiencies | Percentage | 
        
            | Deloitte & Touche | December 20, 2018 | 55 | 55 | 20% | 
        
            | Ernst & Young | September 12, 2019 | 55 | 17 | 31% | 
        
            | KPMG | January 24, 2019 | 52 | 26 | 50% | 
        
            | PwC | February 28, 2019 | 55 | 13 | 24% | 
        
            | 2017 Big Four Subtotals | 217 | 67 |  | 
        
            | 2017 Big Four Average | 54 | 17 | 31% | 
        
            | BDO | June 20, 2019 | 23 | 9 | 39% | 
        
            | Grant Thorton | March 21, 2019 | 34 | 6 | 18% | 
        
            | 2017 Global Firm Totals |  | 274 | 82 |  | 
        
            | 2017 Global Network Firm Average | 46 | 14 | 30% | 
    
    
        
            | 2016 Inspections of US Affiliates of global networks (Reports publicly available in 2017/18) | 
    
    
        
            | Firm | Report Date | Engagements
            Inspected | Deficiencies | Percentage | 
        
            | Deloitte & Touche | November 28, 2017 | 55 | 13 | 24% | 
        
            | Ernst & Young | December 19, 2017 | 55 | 15 | 27% | 
        
            | KPMG | January 15, 2019 | 51 | 22 | 43% | 
        
            | PwC | December 17, 2019 | 56 | 11 | 20% | 
        
            | 2017 Big Four Subtotals | 217 | 61 |  | 
        
            | 2017 Big Four Average | 54 | 15 | 28% | 
        
            | BDO | July 12, 2018 | 24 | 16 | 75% | 
        
            | Grant Thorton | December 19, 2017 | 34 | 8 | 24% | 
        
            | 2017 Global Firm Totals |  | 275 | 85 |  | 
        
            | 2017 Global Network Firm Average | 46 | 14 | 30% | 
    
The PCAOB found an increase in
deficiencies from the 2016 to 2017
inspections, from 61 to 67, among the
Big Four. In several cases, the PCAOB
found that firms had not obtained
sufficient appropriate audit evidence to
support its opinion.
    
    SEC allows testing of distributed ledger system for securities settlement
    
        
The SEC’s Division of Trading and
Markets has provided limited period
no-action relief to beta test a service
that will allow securities clearance
using a distributed ledger system.
The 24-month relief would allow
the applicant to operate a securities
settlement service whereby securities
and cash would be represented by
digitized securities entitlements that
would be exchanged in accordance
with the underlying securities
transactions. Without no-action relief,
the applicant would have to register as
a clearing agency. The SEC is allowing
limited testing of the system without
registration, so long as the applicant
follows strict guidelines that limit use
of the system and volume.
    
    SEC proposes new investment adviser advertising rule
    
        
The SEC has proposed a new
investment adviser advertising
rule that broadens the definition
of “advertising,” more specifically
regulating performance information,
and allowing certain testimonials
and endorsements. Revised Rule
206(4)-1 would broadly include
any communication, distributed by
any means, that promotes advisory
services or a pooled fund and prohibits
any misleading or unsubstantiated
statements. The new rule would require
all retail-directed advertisements
to include one, five and ten-year
periods when presenting investment
performance information. Advisers
would be able to use testimonials so
long as the adviser fully discloses
whether the person is a client and
whether compensation has been
provided to that person. The new
rule would require approval, in
writing, by a designated employee,
before dissemination. The SEC said
it may rescind current no-action
letters. The SEC proposed a new
solicitation rule that would require
additional disclosure about the
solicitor, but eliminate the current
rule’s requirement to collect client
acknowledgements. Both rules require
at least a 60-day comment period
ending on December 3, 2019.
    
    ILPA publishes Model Limited Partnership Agreement for the first time for private equity funds
    
        
On October 30, 2019, the Institutional
Limited Partners Association (ILPA)
released the first publicly available
Model Limited Partnership Agreement
(LPA) for the private equity industry.
The legal template, which is available
for complimentary, industry-wide use,
conforms to ILPA Principles 3.0 and
sets a new standard for alignment of
interests between general (GP) and
limited partners (LP). The Model LPA
also addresses a persistent and shared
need of GPs and LPs to reduce the
complexity, cost and resources required
to negotiate the terms of investment in
private equity funds.
“The industry has to date lacked freely
accessible model documents that can
serve as a baseline for reasonable
legal terms and conditions associated
with private equity funds,” said Steve
Nelson, CEO, ILPA. “Consequently, the
hundreds of LPAs developed each year
are the product of bespoke efforts and
one-off negotiations that come with
excessive cost to both GPs and LPs. We
encourage all industry stakeholders to
review the ILPA Model LPA and use it
as a basis for a more effective process,
with the confidence that the provisions
therein are supported by the LP
community.”
The model LPA is available on the
ILPA website at no cost.
    
    SEC finds pervasive regulatory failures by registered funds and boards
    
        
The SEC’s Office of Compliance
Inspections and Examinations (OCIE)
warned the registered fund industry
about rampant regulatory violations
involving compliance programs,
disclosure, advisory contract approvals,
and Codes of Ethics. In a recent Risk
Alert detailing common deficiencies
and weaknesses, based on 300
examinations over the last two years,
OCIE chided the industry for weak
compliance programs, including:
    - Policies and procedures that failed
    to prevent violations of investment
    guidelines or to ensure fulsome
    disclosure in fund marketing
    materials.
    
- Breakdowns in providing the
    Board with adequate fair valuation
    information and broker quotes.
    
- Weak service provider and subadviser
    oversight.
    
- Inadequate annual reviews.
OCIE also criticized the information
used to approve advisory contracts
and shareholder disclosure in offering
documents. OCIE warned that funds
need to enhance their Codes of Ethics
including reporting and how to define
“access persons.”