Client Insights
Broker-Dealer and Investment Adviser Alert – Sec is on the Hunt for Anti-Whistleblower Provisions in Client and Representative Agreements.
The SEC has repeatedly warned firms to avoid clauses that stifle whistleblower speech in client and financial adviser agreements. Most recently, the SEC sanctioned a New Jersey broker-dealer and 2 affiliated investment advisory firms for having some clients sign confidentiality agreements that impeded the clients’ ability to communicate with the SEC about possible securities law violations. The Order requires the firms to pay a total of $240,000 in civil penalties and to cease and desist from further violations.
Best Practices—Firms should review their client and FA agreements to make sure that they do not limit whistleblower speech in any way. Moreover, firms should have a provision that states that clients are in no way restricted from voluntarily contacting the staff or other regulators about potential securities law violations. Failure to do so can leave a regulatory mark on the firm’s record.
The SEC’s Order can be found here.
https://www.sec.gov/files/litigation/admin/2024/34-100908.pdf
Investment Advisers: Be Prepared for New AML and CIP Requirements.
In coordinated actions, the SEC and FinCEN have proposed changes to the definition of "financial institutions" covered by the BSA to include RIA and ERAs, and to add customer identification program (CIP) requirements for advisory firms. Pointing to the more than $115 trillion RIA space as an entry point for terrorists and other bad actors, the SEC/FinCEN have stated that they are trying to close out this loophole in the compliance regime.
If enacted, RIAs would be subject to the BSA's AML regime, just like other financial institutions, and would be required to maintain CIPs that, at a minimum, implement reasonable procedures to require customer identity verification. Notably, RIAs can rely on their clearing firm's CIP program provided that the clearing firm certifies on an annual basis that it has implemented its AML/CIP programs, and meets other requirements. Alternatively, RIAs would have to directly implement their own CIP program.
Timing: The public comment periods for the proposed rules have passed. It is now in the government's hands to respond and refine the proposals. If the agencies adopt the rules, they would go into effect 60 days after publication in the federal register, with a compliance date 6 months later.
Here is a link to the joint SEC/FinCEN press release.
https://www.sec.gov/newsroom/press-releases/2024-54
-
SAC Capital’s Steven Cohen – Innocent Man or Elusive Fish?
According to the Wall Street Journal, Steven Cohen, the founder and principal owner of SAC Capital Advisors LP (“SAC”), will likely not face criminal charges relating to certain trades SAC…
-
Government Finally Brings Charges (Lite) Against SAC Capital Founder Steven Cohen
On July 19, 2013, with the statute of limitations for securities fraud charges set to run out at the end of July, the federal government finally decided how it would…
-
On July 17, 2013, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that an ex-employee of a regulated entity, who internally reported alleged violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA)…
-
Bitcoin is a “Security” According to Federal Judge
On August 6, 2013, a federal magistrate judge in the Eastern District of Texas ruled that Bitcoin, the virtual online currency, is a security under the federal securities laws, thereby…
-
On October 2, 2013, the Securities Division of the Massachusetts Secretary of State (“Securities Division”) entered into a consent order with Citigroup in which Citigroup admitted to the facts alleged…
-
On April 6, 2011, a jury convicted Kevin Loughrin of bank fraud and a number of other crimes relating to a scheme that he and an accomplice hatched in Utah…
-
On September 30, a federal judge dismissed a putative class action against New Energy Systems (“New Energy”), a lithium battery company with Chinese operations, finding that plaintiffs had failed to…
-
On October 2, 2014, a federal appeals court revived an investor class action that had been dismissed by the trial court for failure to plead loss causation. The case is Public…
-
SEC Awards Whistleblower-Executive A Half-Million Dollars For “Reporting Out.”
The SEC has doled out over $50 million in awards to 15 individuals since it inaugurated the Dodd-Frank mandated whistleblower program 3 years ago. That program permits whistleblower awards of…
-
Employers Beware – SEC Charges Company for Stifling Whistleblower Activity
Employers conducting internal investigations often have employees sign agreements requiring them to acknowledge the confidential nature of employee interviews. Less common are agreements that prohibit employees from discussing the interview…