https://www.brokeandbroker.com/6905/financial-professionals-coalition/ The Financial Professionals Coalition was founded out of a sense that as Wall Street evolves, the ripple effect puts enormous personal and professional stresses on the industry's small-firms and their employees. The Financial Professionals Coalition is a resource for the 1.2 million-plus folks who work at banks, broker-dealers, hedge funds, mutual funds, RIAs, and the rest of the industry's emanations. The Coalition is designed to serve as a clearinghouse of resources in order to help industry professionals navigate their careers, and to provide such services on a diverse and inclusive basis. Our goal is to help you get answers; but, also, to help you come up with the questions that you need to ask. JOIN US!
It's one of those cases that everyone is talking about -- and, frankly, it's hard not to laugh despite the fact that there's nothing funny going on with the fraud. As savvy industry reporter Tobias Salinger could only do, consider his titillating opening paragraph, and you tell me that you're not going to have to read the full article:
Over three months in 2021, one of a pair of identical twins who are both financial advisors asked a client to approve $156,000 in wire transfers out of their line of credit, the SEC said.
[B]etween April 2015 and July 2019, the defendant conspired with others to sell and trade sports trading cards, including 1986 Fleer Michael Jordan rookie cards, with victims he found via the Internet and through online selling platforms. The defendant misrepresented that the sports trading cards he was offering were graded by a professional authentication company, when in reality the trading cards were not authentic. The defendant defrauded his victims of over $800,000 in cash and authentic sports trading cards that were traded for the counterfeits.
Operators And Attorney Of Global Multi-Million-Dollar Cryptocurrency Ponzi Scheme "AirBit Club" Plead Guilty (DOJ Release) https://www.justice.gov/usao-sdny/pr/operators-and-attorney-global-multi-million-dollar-cryptocurrency-ponzi-scheme-airbit In the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Pablo Renato Rodriguez, Gutemberg Dos Santos, Scott Hughes, Cecilia Millan, Karina Chairez and Jackie Aguilar pled guilty to charges including wire fraud conspiracy, money laundering conspiracy, and bank fraud conspiracy. Defendants were ordered to forfeit their fraudulent proceeds of Airbit Club, which include seized or restrained assets consisting of U.S. currency, Bitcoin, and real estate currently valued at approximately $100 million. As alleged in part in the DOJ Release:
RODRIGUEZ, DOS SANTOS, HUGHES, MILLAN, CHAIREZ, and AGUILAR participated in a coordinated scheme in which victim-investors (the “Victims”) were induced to invest in AirBit Club based on the false promise of guaranteed profits in exchange for cash investments in club “memberships” (the “AirBit Club Scheme” or the “Scheme”). Beginning in late 2015, AirBit Club, through its founders, RODRIGUEZ and DOS SANTOS, as well as its promoters (the “Promoters”), including MILLAN, CHAIREZ, and AGUILAR, marketed AirBit Club as a multilevel marketing club in the cryptocurrency industry. Promoters falsely promised Victims that AirBit Club earned returns on cryptocurrency mining and trading and that Victims would earn passive, guaranteed daily returns on any membership purchased.
RODRIGUEZ, DOS SANTOS, HUGHES, MILLAN, CHAIREZ, and AGUILAR traveled throughout the United States and around the world to places in Latin America, Asia, and Eastern Europe, where they hosted lavish expos and small community presentations aimed at convincing Victims to purchase AirBit Club memberships. In furtherance of the AirBit Club Scheme, the Victims were fraudulently induced to buy memberships in cash, including in the Southern District of New York. Following a Victim’s investment, a Promoter provided the Victim with access to an online AirBit Club portal to view the purported returns on memberships (the “Online Portal”). While Victims saw “profits” accumulate on their Online Portal, those representations were false; no Bitcoin mining or trading on behalf of Victims in fact took place. Instead, RODRIGUEZ, DOS SANTOS, MILLAN, and AGUILAR enriched themselves and spent Victim money on cars, jewelry, and luxury homes, and financed more extravagant expos to recruit more Victims.
HUGHES, an attorney licensed to practice law in California, had previously represented RODRIGUEZ and DOS SANTOS in a Securities and Exchange Commission investigation related to another investment scheme known as Vizinova. He then aided RODRIGUEZ and DOS SANTOS in perpetrating the AirBit Club Scheme by, among other things, helping to remove negative information about AirBit Club and Vizinova from the internet.
In many instances, as early as 2016, Victims who attempted to withdraw money from the AirBit Club Online Portal and complained to a Promoter were met with excuses, delays, and hidden fees amounting to more than 50% of the Victim’s requested withdrawal, if they were able to make any withdrawal at all. In one instance, AGUILAR told one Victim of the AirBit Club Scheme who was complaining about her inability to withdraw AirBit Club returns that she should “bring new blood” into the AirBit Club Scheme in order to receive her returns.
In April 2020, another victim received a notice on the AirBit Club Online Portal that his account was closed – and principal investment lost – due to “execution of financial sustainability Reserve, policy #34 of the Airbit Club Terms and Conditions, due to the economic and financial crisis caused by (Covid-19).”
RODRIGUEZ, DOS SANTOS, HUGHES, CHAIREZ, and MILLAN sought to conceal the AirBit Club Scheme, as well as their respective control of the proceeds of that Scheme, by requesting that Victims purchase memberships in cash, using third-party cryptocurrency brokers, and by laundering the Scheme’s proceeds through several domestic and foreign bank accounts, including an attorney trust account managed by HUGHES (the “Hughes Trust Account”). The Hughes Trust Account was ostensibly intended to maintain custody of HUGHES’s law practice’s client funds. Instead, the Hughes Trust Account was used by RODRIGUEZ, DOS SANTOS, HUGHES, CHAIREZ, and MILLAN to conceal the nature and origin of the AirBit Club Scheme’s illicit proceeds. Through that account, HUGHES directed Victim funds to the personal expenses of RODRIGUEZ, DOS SANTOS, CHAIREZ, MILLAN, and himself, and funded promotional events and sponsorships designed to further promote the AirBit Club Scheme.
Green United, LLC, its founder Wright W.Thurston, and promoter Kristoffer A. Krohn with violating Sections 5(a) and 5(c) of the Securities Act ;
Green United with violating Section 17(a) of the Securities Act and Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 of the Securities Exchange Act;
Thurston with violating Sections 17(a)(1) and (3) of the Securities Act and Section 10(b) and Rules 10b-5(a) and (c) of the Exchange Act; and
Krohn with violating Sections 17(a)(2) and (3) of the Securities Act and Section 15(a)(1) of the Exchange Act.
The Complaint names as Relief Defendants: True North United Investments, LLC and Block Brothers, LLC. As alleged in part in the SEC Release:
[F]rom April 2018 until at least December 2022, Thurston and Green United, LLC, d/b/a "Green" or "Set Power Free," raised at least $18 million in the unregistered offer and sale of investments they called "Green Boxes" or "Green Nodes," leading investors to believe that those products mined a digital token they called GREEN on a purported "Green Blockchain." As alleged in the complaint, investors were led to believe that and that the value of GREEN could increase if Green United succeeded in creating a "public global decentralized power grid." In reality, as alleged in the complaint, the Green Boxes purchased by investors did not mine GREEN, but rather mined Bitcoin, which was not transferred to investors. Likewise, Green Nodes did not mine GREEN but, as alleged in the complaint, were a basic software that in no way generated GREEN. As alleged in the complaint, Thurston created the total supply of GREEN tokens in October 2018 through a smart contract on the Ethereum blockchain, and Green United distributed those GREEN tokens to investors wallets at Thurston's direction in order, as alleged, to create the appearance that GREEN was being mined. Additionally, the complaint alleges that from April through October 2018, SEC recidivist Krohn, whom Thurston recruited and paid commissions to promote and sell Green Boxes and whom the SEC alleges acted as an unregistered securities broker, made numerous misrepresentations to investors about the present value of the GREEN token and returns on investment that investors could anticipate.
The CFTC charged the defendants with taking the opposite side of thousands of brokerage customer block trade orders without the customers’ prior consent. Weinmann took the opposite side of Coquest customer orders on behalf of accounts at Buttonwood and Weva that he controlled and in which he had a financial interest. He did this on more than 2,000 occasions between May 2015 and September 2019 without the customers’ knowledge or consent. Through this scheme, Weinmann was able to obtain block trade prices for his accounts that may not have been available if he was openly participating as a trader in the block trade market. Weinmann obtained profits for the Buttonwood and Weva accounts, at Coquest customers’ expense, by trading against the customers at prices that were less favorable to the customers than the prices he knew or should have known to be available in the market. Weinmann also deceived or attempted to deceive Coquest customers into believing he was reporting bids and offers made by third-party trading counterparties, when in fact Weinmann was making the bids or offers on behalf of the Buttonwood or Weva accounts. The order also states this activity constituted fraudulent misappropriation of the customers’ material nonpublic information. The order further states Weinmann and Vassallo each failed to diligently supervise the handling of commodity interest accounts and activities relating to Coquest’s and Buttonwood’s business.
Series 7 Exam: can I take it without a sponsor ? (YouTube Video from Capital Advantage Tutoring / Kenneth Finnen) Finally! Someone posted a video about the thorny issue of what you can do when you don't have a Series 7 sponsor -- and, more important, Ken Finnen's warns about all the pitfalls of rushing into this issue and not knowing about the minefield that you just entered. Really great content from a Co-Founder of the Financial Professionals Coalition.
The $3.4 Million Tip: (FINRA Blog / FINRA Departments of Member Supervision and Enforcement) https://www.finra.org/media-center/blog/santa-rosa-bonds I will be the first to criticize FINRA and Wall Street's misguided approach to so-called self-regulation. As I am often viewed as among the leading critics of FINRA and self regulation, I believe that imposes upon me an obligation to avoid hypocrisy and give credit when credit is due (even if it's to the Devil). In offering tough but fair coverage of industry regulation, let me take this moment to compliment FINRA for getting something right, and doing so in a fashion that furthers the best goals of what self regulation should be able to accomplish. In that spirit, let me stand aside and offer FINRA's own words from this recent online posting:
A call to FINRA’s Senior Helpline resulted in $3.4 million returned to approximately 300 customers.
In 1996, the Santa Rosa Bay Bridge Authority in Milton, Fla. issued bonds to raise capital for the construction of a bridge. Fast forward about 25 years to February 2021: A customer contacted FINRA’s Senior Helpline, concerned that he had been overcharged for his purchase of the Santa Rosa bridge bonds. He also told FINRA that he asked his brokerage firm about the overcharge, and that the firm had not provided an adequate response.
The bonds he and other customers purchased were “capital appreciation bonds”—meaning that all payments were intended to be made at maturity. But the bridge bonds fell into technical default in 2011. When the issuer started making accelerated principal payments to bondholders in 2013, the bonds started to trade at a lower price to take into account the reduced outstanding principal. This reduction is known as a “factor.”
Unlike the markets for other types of bonds, the municipal bond market does not have a robust infrastructure for informing market participants when municipal bonds trade with factors. Instead, investors and market participants rely on the trustee (as agent for the issuer) and data vendors for this information. For the Santa Rosa bonds, brokerage firms relied on inaccurate factors provided by data vendors, leading to many customers being overcharged for their bond purchases.
When investigating the customer complaint, FINRA’s Fixed Income Specialist Team observed that the Santa Rosa bonds were trading with a factor and discovered that the customer’s brokerage firm applied an incorrect factor. The Specialist Team contacted the firm, which agreed to pay the customer approximately $24,000—the amount of the overcharge plus interest.
FINRA did not stop there. The Specialist Team, aided by their Enforcement colleagues, analyzed records dating from 2013 through 2021 and found that the application of the inaccurate factor was a widespread problem. FINRA reached out to 30 brokerage firms involved with Santa Rosa bond transactions and presented the findings, which resulted in the firms reimbursing their customers for the overcharges.
With the firms’ cooperation, FINRA succeeded in getting more than $3.4 million returned to approximately 300 customers. The cross-team efforts demonstrate the important difference FINRA’s response to a single customer complaint can make and highlights FINRA’s commitment to its investor protection mission.
= = = 3/7/2023
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Baton Rouge Man Sentenced to 57 Months in Federal Prison for Fraudulent Investment Scheme (DOJ Release) https://www.justice.gov/usao-mdla/pr/baton-rouge-man-sentenced-57-months-federal-prison-fraudulent-investment-scheme In the United States District Court for the Middle District of Louisiana, Monty Matthews, 52, pled guilty to wire fraud, interstate communication of an extortionate threat, and attempted escape; and he was sentenced to 57 months in prison plus three years of supervised release, and ordered to pay $1,066,853 restitution. The Court considered the "impact of Matthews’ criminal conduct on victims aged 60 and older; that resulted in the loss of over $1,000,000 of the victims’ retirement savings, which all went to Matthews; and the fact that the victims were left with virtually no retirement savings. Judge deGravelles also commented on injuries to FBI agents resulting from Matthews’ attempt to escape custody." As alleged in part in the DOJ Release
[I]n August 2017, Matthews advised two victims that he could make investments on their behalf and with very high rates of return. Matthews acted as the victims’ investment team lead, and demanded that they needed to maintain an investment account with him exceeding $550,000. Based on Matthews’ false assurances and representations regarding what were, in fact, non-existent investment opportunities, along with his threat to injure the victims if they did not continue to make payments, the victims made over 4,000 cash drops to Matthews. In addition, on March 23, 2022, Matthews was in in the custody of two special agents with the Federal Bureau of Investigation due to a lawful arrest relating to federal felony charges. Matthews attempted to escape from custody, but agents were able to prevent him from fleeing.
Cape Coral Caretakers Plead Guilty To Stealing More Than Half A Million Dollars From Elderly Victim (DOJ Release) https://www.justice.gov/usao-mdfl/pr/cape-coral-caretakers-plead-guilty-stealing-more-half-million-dollars-elderly-victim In the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida, Diane Durbon and Brittany Lukasik pled guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud; and, additionally, Lukasik pled guilty to filing a false tax return. As part of their guilty pleas, Durbon and Lukasik have agreed to forfeit a 2016 Nissan Rogue, 2020 Kia Sorento, real property in Cape Coral, and approximately $542,760.23, which are traceable to proceeds of the offenses. As alleged in part in the DOJ Release:
[D]urbon and her daughter, Lukasik, a registered nurse, were first hired in approximately 2016 to be caretakers for T.H., the 92-year-old victim. In October 2017, Durbon began unlawfully accessing T.H.’s investment accounts. To unlawfully gain access to the investment accounts, Durbon would place T.H. on the phone to answer various account security questions. Video surveillance cameras that Durbon had installed inside T.H.’s home captured Durbon putting a script that contained answers to account security questions in front of T.H. before and during each phone call.
After being given authorization to speak to the investment account representative on T.H.’s behalf, Durbon would move funds from T.H.’s investment accounts into a Prime Money Market Account (PMMA) that also functioned as a checking account. After transferring the funds, checks were unlawfully issued to Lukasik, ranging in amounts from $1,000 to $9,600, which were deposited into bank accounts that Lukasik controlled and maintained. Between November 2017 and July 2019, approximately $231,659 in checks were issued to Lukasik from T.H.’s PMMA account.
Beginning in approximately November 2018, Durbon also unlawfully gained access to T.H.’s annuity policy, similarly to how she had unlawfully gained access to T.H.’s investment accounts. In January 2019, Durbon faxed a fraudulent Annuity Withdrawal form which misrepresented that T.H. wanted to cash out her annuity policy. This caused the annuity company to issue a check to T.H. in the amount of $244,521.09. The check was deposited into one of T.H.’s checking accounts. After the check was deposited, approximately 92 checks, totaling $372,092.98, were issued to Lukasik from T.H.’s checking account between February 2019 and March 2020. The checks were deposited into bank accounts that Lukasik controlled and maintained. Moreover, Lukasik failed to report receipt of any of T.H.’s funds in her 2019 tax return.
In total, between January 2019 and March 2020, approximately $542,760.23 in fraudulently obtained funds were deposited into Lukasik’s accounts. After the funds were deposited, Lukasik and Durbon used the funds to pay off debt and make a variety of purchases. Those purchases included paying $26,354.05 for a 2018 Nissan Rogue, $17,735.17 to pay off a car loan, more than $29,000 to pay student loan debt, and more than $100,000 in credit card payments. Lukasik and Durbon also used the funds to purchase a duplex in Cape Coral, and more than $100,000 of the fraudulently obtained proceeds were used to buy electronics, furniture, and to remodel the duplex.
Man Sentenced to 30 Months in Federal Prison for Defrauding Investors of 2 Companies, Evading Taxes (DOJ Release) https://www.justice.gov/usao-ct/pr/man-sentenced-30-months-federal-prison-defrauding-investors-2-companies-evading-taxes In the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut, Brian Hughes, 58, pled guilty to one count of wire fraud, one count of making an illegal monetary transaction, and one count of tax evasion; and he was sentenced to 30 months in prison plus three years of supervised release, and ordered to pay $2,991,880 in restitution. As alleged in part in the DOJ Release:
[I]n March 2015, Hughes founded Handcrafted Brands, LLC (“HCB”), for the purpose of raising money to purchase Salute American Vodka, (“Salute”) an alcoholic beverage company. Hughes subsequently solicited and received funds from dozens of investors ostensibly for the purchase and subsequent development of Salute. Hughes used the first investment he received, in the amount $150,000, to pay his taxes and his American Express credit card expenses. Although HCB purchased Salute in June 2016 for $450,000, Hughes continued to solicit investments from investors and used hundreds of thousands dollars in invested funds for expenses unrelated to Salute. He also used funds to pay off an earlier investor under the guise of a return on a prior investment made by the earlier investor, which is commonly known as a “lulling” payment.
Hughes also solicited investments purportedly on behalf of another company, which is identified in court documents as “Company-1.” In fact, Hughes had no official relationship with Company-1 and could not raise capital on its behalf. Hughes spent the money he received for this investment on personal expenses, to pay earlier investors, and on business related to Salute.
Finally, Hughes evaded the assessment of his tax obligations for the 2015 through 2018 tax years by substantially underreporting his income to the IRS, resulting in a tax loss of $470,880.
Central Florida Man Pleads Guilty To Committing Almost $20 Million In Fraud (DOJ Release) https://www.justice.gov/usao-mdfl/pr/central-florida-man-pleads-guilty-committing-almost-20-million-fraud In the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida, Nikesh Ajay Patel pled guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, three counts of wire fraud, one count of conspiracy to commit money laundering, and eight counts of money laundering. As alleged in part in the DOJ Release:
[P]atel, a Central Florida resident, was charged in 2014 by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the Northern District of Illinois for a $179 million fraud scheme. He was arrested and released on bond. For the next several years, Patel claimed that he was cooperating with authorities and using his business skills to get funds to repay some of what he owed. In fact, Patel had devised a new scheme that netted him almost $20 million.
Patel’s new fraud scheme involved three parts. First, Patel fabricated fraudulent loan documents that falsely represented that a bank in Miami had authorized loans to be made to convert hotels in rural areas into assisted living facilities. Although the bank in Miami exists, it had never made any of the loans. The person who was listed as signing the loans (“Ron Elias”) was a fictitious identity used by Patel to perpetrate his conspiracy and scheme. Second, Patel applied to the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) to guarantee the fake loans pursuant to its Business and Industry Guaranteed Loan Program. Third, after the USDA agreed to guarantee the fake loans, Patel sold the guaranteed portion of the fake loans to the Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation, also known as Farmer Mac. Patel executed the scheme on three occasions, receiving almost $20 million in proceeds. Patel used a portion of the funds from that scheme to pay some of his restitution, but he was saving much of it to flee the United States.
Patel’s sentencing in the Northern District of Illinois was set for January 9, 2018. Three days before that, he was arrested at the airport in Kissimmee. Patel had chartered a flight to Ecuador, where he intended to request political asylum and live off the proceeds that he had obtained from his new scheme. Instead, Patel’s bond was revoked and the U.S. Marshals Service transported him to the Northern District of Illinois. On March 6, 2018, Patel was sentenced to 25 years in federal prison for his case in the Northern District of Illinois.
Four Individuals Arrested for Investment Fraud Scheme Targeting Hawaii Residents (DOJ Release) https://www.justice.gov/usao-hi/pr/four-individuals-arrested-investment-fraud-scheme-targeting-hawaii-residents In the United States District Court for the District of Hawaii, an Indictment was filed charging Haitem Taylor Abid Dhaene, Latifa Zanki Dhaene, Tim Dhaene, and Sofyane Abid Dhaene with wire fraud. As alleged in part in the DOJ Release;
[I]n January 2022, the family of four arrived in Los Angeles, California, on Belgian passports and moved to Hawaii in or about September 2022. The indictment further alleges that, between October 2022 and February 2023, they solicited multiple persons in Hawaii to invest money, based on false promises that the money would be placed in high return investment contracts supposedly guaranteed by a mainland wealth management firm and its partner. HAITEM DHAENE represented he was a partner in the mainland firm, when, according to the indictment, he was not a partner, and the wealth management firm did not know about his claimed association or the purported investment contracts.
Among other things, the indictment alleges the defendants falsely claimed to have formed a private equity investment group; that they provided an investment contract promising a return of 315% per annum; and that the contract bore the name and forged signature of a mainland wealth advisor. As a result of these promises, various individuals gave the four defendants approximately $309,000, including $294,000 withdrawn from an individual’s 401k retirement account.
The Joint Claimants promptly provided significant information to another agency, which shared it with the Commission staff, alerting Commission staff to the fraudulent conduct, and prompting the opening of the investigation. Thereafter, the Joint Claimants submitted a TCR and provided continuing helpful assistance to the Commission staff, including meeting with them and providing additional important information and documents concerning their allegations.
Thank you, Beth [Zorc], for that introduction and thank you to the Institute of International Bankers for this opportunity to provide closing remarks to your 2023 Annual Washington Conference. For the last two days, you have been addressed by top U.S. financial regulators, including the chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the acting Comptroller of the Currency, and the chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, on issues ranging from banking regulation, the economy, and financial crimes to cybersecurity, digital assets, and taxes. It is a privilege to close out your conference with thoughts on the capital markets. My remarks reflect solely my individual views as a Commissioner and do not necessarily reflect the views of the full U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) or my fellow Commissioners.
The SEC’s current regulatory agenda is ambitious, with such an extensive list of proposals not seen since the 2008 financial crisis and the enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act.[1] Many of these changes will impact portions of your operations that conduct business in the United States or provide services to U.S. citizens. The agenda’s sheer scale raises good questions on what securities regulators should focus on, and why.
I would like to share with you today my regulatory approach to the securities markets, which itself is drawn, of course, from the work of many others.[2] There is a lot at stake here. Efficient capital formation can bring massive benefits to a nation. The promise of more efficiently allocated cross-border flows of capital resources into investment projects can result in superior risk/return tradeoffs and better portfolio diversification. It can also result in higher economic growth and increased prosperity.
In regulating the capital markets, one goal ought to be creating a set of rules and norms that offer investors a reasonable degree of well-founded confidence, not false confidence, that both the material risks and potential returns associated with their investments are disclosed. This goal is at the core of both investor protection and capital formation.
The notion that investor protection and capital formation are symbiotically related dates back to a famous economic paper published in 1970 by George Akerlof, entitled The Market for “Lemons”: Quality Uncertainty and the Market Mechanism.[3] Professor Akerlof won the 2001 Nobel Prize for this seminal work, which highlights the manner in which asymmetries of information can undermine the powers of the market. In his article, he asks a simple question: why do new cars lose so much value the instant you drive them off of the lot? The explanation, he offered, was the asymmetry of information between the potential buyer and seller. If the new car turns out to have a lot of mechanical defects, we colloquially refer to it as a “lemon” in the United States. If someone has purchased a new car, and soon thereafter makes an attempt to sell it, a potential buyer is likely concerned that the car is a “lemon,” and, in light of this expectation, the buyer is likely to reduce how much he or she is willing to pay. Typically, a new car loses a substantial amount of its original market value. From an economic perspective, this is puzzling: it is the same car as it was a few moments before, with the same likelihood of delivering value across time, and yet we have this precipitous drop. As Professor Akerlof noted, this is due to the asymmetry of information—that is, the seller likely knows the quality of the item offered and the buyer does not.
In some instances, the Lemons Problem can result in the destruction of a market. If potential sellers with quality cars decide to refrain from the market—because they do not want to sell their car for less than its perceived worth—then the probability of purchasing a lemon among the remaining cars increases. This, in turn, leads to a higher discount demanded by buyers, which may result in a further removal of quality cars from the market, until this negative feedback loop effectively causes market failure.
The same Lemons Problem can apply to the securities markets. There may be honest firms with new entrepreneurial ideas trying to raise capital, but there are also bad actors who want to take the investors’ money and run. The firms raising capital know whether they are fraudsters, but potential investors do not. If the potential investors cannot discriminate between which firms are honest and which ones are frauds, then they will demand a higher return to compensate them for the risk they may be giving their money to a fraudster. From the entrepreneurs’ perspective, this increases the cost of capital.
As a rational person will not invest in a project unless the cost of capital is lower than the expected rate of return, an increase in cost of capital reduces investment in the economy, which lowers economic growth. If there are too many fraudsters in the securities markets, then the market may no longer be a viable means of raising capital. As the cost of capital increases through the presence of fraudsters, some honest entrepreneurs will withdraw from the market altogether, which will increase the likelihood of encountering a bad actor. As Professor Bernard Black explains: “Discounted share prices mean that an honest issuer can’t receive fair value for its shares, and has an incentive to use other forms of financing. But discounted prices won’t discourage dishonest issuers.”[4]
The key to addressing the Lemons Problem is to remove a sufficient quantum of fraudsters from the market. This will lower the cost of capital, resulting in more investment, greater economic growth, and more prosperity.[5]
Specifically, there are four essential investor fears that securities regulators must address if they are to overcome the Lemons Problem: first is the investor fear of being uninformed about the investment being offered; second is potential abuse by market intermediaries, as investors enter, participate in and exit from securities markets; third is the fear of inefficient market prices, including due to market manipulation and insider trading; and fourth is the fear of intermediary failures that may leave investors unable to access their wealth.
First, how does a jurisdiction ensure that investors can place some degree of confidence in the information from corporate issuers raising capital? There are five basic regulatory tools: (1) mandatory financial reporting, so investors know what to expect; (2) standardized accounting, so financial results can be compared; (3) auditing, so investors can have some assurance; (4) oversight of auditing, to ensure auditors are doing their jobs; and (5) effective enforcement, so the investors know that the bad actors are being filtered out and removed.
Second, regarding abuse by securities markets intermediaries, the list of harms is long, ranging from misleading statements to churning to front running to unauthorized trading and theft. Regulatory tools include: (1) registration requirements; (2) recordkeeping rules; (3) supervisory rules, so an entity can be held accountable for abuses by its agents; (4) disclosure rules; (5) rules prescribing specific types of conduct, such as sales practice, best execution, principal trading, and other obligations; and, finally, (6) regulatory examinations and enforcement.
The third fear is market abuses, including insider trading and market manipulation. Trading by insiders, or their “tipees,” on material non-public information is a “zero-sum game”; for every dollar an insider gains, or avoids losing, that is a dollar that an investor loses. If insiders are allowed to profit by trading on material non-public information, investors will avoid that market and drive up the cost of capital.[6]
The same is true of market manipulation, which is conduct designed to deceive investors by controlling or artificially affecting the price of securities. There are many ways to engage in market manipulation, ranging from the promulgation of misleading statements to purposefully moving prices through the volume of trading, including via matched or so-called wash sales. The classic manipulation is the pump-and-dump. The regulatory toolset to prevent these activities is well known: antifraud rules, market surveillance, and effective enforcement.
The fourth fear is failures by intermediaries. Investors want access to their wealth. If a failure by a broker-dealer or exchange, for example, results in a multi-year bankruptcy process or other legal entanglements, they are not going to want to hold their wealth through that intermediary. If there are serious cyber-threats that might debilitate the market—again, investors will turn away. The regulatory tools in this space include transparency and disclosure, inspections and enforcement, business continuity planning, appropriate cyber safeguards, capital rules, margin requirements, rules governing custody of client assets, clearing-house rules, and circuit breakers.
The final essential ingredient of a healthy capital market is that the regulatory framework itself must be cost effective. If the regulatory burdens designed to address the Four Fears are excessively burdensome, and not justified by the benefits associated with those regulations, then the capital market will fail to live up to its potential in terms of economic growth and prosperity.
How do we assure cost effectiveness? Cost benefit analysis—both on a prospective and retrospective basis—is crucial. While such an analysis is hard to do—and there are many benefits, costs, and unintended consequences that are difficult to gauge accurately—laying out and presenting the costs and benefits, as best we can, results in a more efficient regulatory framework. Another important tool is the public comment process on rulemaking, so regulators can learn from interested persons. Of course, the public comment process only works as intended when industry participants and stakeholders have sufficient time to analyze a proposal. At the same time, regulators must be cognizant of effects on competition as a regulatory framework can unnecessarily increase market power, which may increase transactional costs and damage a market’s potential.
Globally, one needs to ask whether it is possible to effectively address the Lemons Problem across borders. Investors might be interested in diversifying their portfolio of investments beyond their home country, and gaining not only new investment opportunities, but also ones that are less correlated. However, they will not do so unless there is some degree of confidence that their investments will not be siphoned away by fraudsters. Thus, if we are to work across borders, we need agreements and often assistance from foreign regulatory authorities and they need that same assistance from us.
In the international context, there is the added complexity of different rule sets in different jurisdictions. Beyond the market failures induced by the Lemons Problem, this can introduce other elements that interfere with efficient capital formation. There are a number of areas that may benefit from attention and effort among securities regulators.
First, there should be cross-border clarity on regulatory scope as entities that might operate internationally need to know which rules apply to them and which do not. It is vitally important that regulators ensure that the legal perimeter and regulatory scoping are as clear and assessable as possible. Legal ambiguity can be the death of healthy cross-border activity.
Second, conflicts of law across jurisdictions need to be addressed. If the regulation in one jurisdiction says you must do X, and the regulation in a second jurisdiction says you may not do X, then you cannot lawfully operate across those jurisdictions. Some conflicts of law may even be relatively peripheral from a securities regulatory perspective, arising out of trade, competition, or privacy laws that are enforced by non-financial regulators.
Third, duplicative regulation increases the costs of cross-border securities activity without corresponding benefits if they address regulatory issues in an unnecessarily redundant manner. In order to permit a healthy flow of cross-border activities in financial markets, countries do not need to have exactly the same rule book. If one jurisdiction has a different regulatory approach to an issue, then, so long as the regulatory outcome is qualitatively comparable and transparent, a jurisdiction might choose to recognize the compliance of a foreign-based entity with another jurisdiction’s regulations as satisfactory, and thus ease restrictions on cross-border flows of activity associated therewith. This kind of regulatory collaboration goes by a number of different names—ranging from mutual recognition to substituted compliance.[7]
Fourth is identifying gaps in a foreign regulatory framework that the home jurisdiction believes are of key importance. While a jurisdiction might choose to recognize some aspects of a foreign regulatory framework, it does not have to embrace the whole of that framework to facilitate cross-border activity. In other words, an all-or-nothing approach may not make sense in facilitating cross-border activity. Rather, there will be more success in lowering the cost of beneficial cross-border activity, while maintaining appropriate investor protection, if we embrace a more open-ended, evidence-based approach that examines the actual regulatory differences and similarities, as well as the pertinent compliance mechanisms.
One more thought: healthy competition among jurisdictions when crafting regulations is not necessarily a bad thing. Some argue that globalized capital markets run a risk of a regulatory “race to the bottom.” In other words, capital and market activity will flow to the jurisdictions with the lowest regulatory requirements, and, thus, flow to where there may be a higher degree of fraud to the detriment of investors. This line of argument forgets the Lemons Problem. If regulation is inadequate in a jurisdiction, the Lemons Problem suggests that the cost of capital will be higher than it would otherwise be. And who wants to raise capital in a jurisdiction where they have to pay a higher cost of capital? Indeed, the Lemons Problem suggests that healthy jurisdictional competition may result in a “race to optimality”—that is, there is likely to be more capital market activity in jurisdictions where there is cost-effective and high-quality regulation, including examination and enforcement.
The economic benefits to be gained from increased regulatory cooperation across borders that facilitates a more globalized capital market cannot be overstated. This goal becomes even more important among similarly-minded societies during times when the ideas of free enterprise, democracy, and personal liberty are under threat. However, this requires some degree of trust and resource-intensive collaboration among regulators across borders. The international entities represented in this organization are vital to informing such a process, and I look forward to continuing to learn from you.
Thank you.
[1] See SEC Agency Rule List, available at: https://www.reginfo.gov/public/do/eAgendaMain?operation=OPERATION_GET_AGENCY_RULE_LIST ¤tPub=true&agencyCode&showStage=active&agencyCd=3235
[2] For an excellent overview of the basic regulatory ingredients to building and maintaining a successful securities market, which I draw on, see, e.g., Ziven Scott Birdwell, The Key Elements for Developing A Securities Market To Drive Economic Growth: A Roadmap for Emerging Markets, Georgia Journal of International and Comparative Law (Spring 2011).
[3] Akerlof, George A., The Market for “Lemons”: Quality Uncertainty and the Market Mechanism, Quarterly Journal of Economics, Vol. 84, No. 3 (Aug. 1970).
[4] Bernard Black, The Core Institutions That Support Strong Securities Markets, 55 Bus. Law, 1567 (2000).
[5] John C. Coffee, Jr., Law and the Market: The Impact of Enforcement, 156 U. Pa. L. Rev. 229, 230 (2007) (“[H]igher enforcement intensity gives the U.S. economy a lower cost of capital and higher securities valuations”).
[6] See, e.g., Utpal Bhattacharya, Hazem Daouk, The World Price of Insider Trading, 57 J. Fin. 75 (2008) (after controlling for risk factors, a liquidity factor and shareholder rights, finds cost of equity is reduced by 5% through enforcement of insider trading laws).
[7] For a discussion of the evolution of this concept, see Howell E. Jackson, Substituted Compliance: The Emergence, Challenges, and Evolution of a New Regulatory Paradigm, Journal of Financial Regulation Vol. 1, Issue 2, pages 169-205 (2015). For an example of the application of the concept, see Rule 3a71-6 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (“Exchange Act”) which permits the SEC to determine that registered non-U.S. major security-based swap participants may satisfy certain requirements promulgated under Exchange Act section 15F by complying with comparable non-U.S. requirements.
= = = 3/6/2023
Blackbook Capital Versus FINRA: A Decade of Battle (BrokeAndBroker.com Blog) https://www.brokeandbroker.com/6913/blackbook-finra-dnj-sec/ Way way back in 2014, a FINRA member firm entered into an Acceptance, Waiver and Consent regulatory settlement involving alleged misconduct in 2010 and 2011. By 2016, the firm seemed to have run into some difficulties and FINRA expelled it. Down but apparently not out, the expelled member firm sued FINRA in federal court in 2019. In 2020, the expelled firm petitioned the Securities and Exchange Commission with discrimination allegations against FINRA. In 2021, the court dismissed the lawsuit. In 2023, the SEC dismissed the application for review. So much for that last decade. What's next? Who knows -- let's just wait and see.
[I]n July 2011, Rio Tinto hired a French investment banker and close friend of a former senior Guinean government official as a consultant to help the company retain its mining rights in the Simandou mountain region in Guinea. The consultant began working on behalf of Rio Tinto without a written agreement defining the scope of his services or deliverables. Eventually the mining rights were retained, and the consultant was paid $10.5 million for his services, which Rio Tinto never verified. The SEC’s investigation uncovered that the consultant, acting as Rio Tinto’s agent, offered and attempted to make an improper payment of at least $822,000 to a Guinean government official in connection with the consultant’s efforts to help Rio Tinto retain its mining rights. Furthermore, none of the payments to the consultant was accurately reflected in Rio Tinto’s books and records, and the company failed to have sufficient internal accounting controls in place to detect or prevent the misconduct. The mine has not been developed by Rio Tinto.
[A]t all relevant times, the Company operated a number of gaming brands, including the PokerStars online poker website. The order finds that between May 26, 2015 and May 15, 2020, while the Company's shares were registered with the SEC, the Company paid approximately $8.9 million to consultants in Russia in support of the Company's operations and its efforts to have poker legalized in that country. The SEC's order further finds that, during this time period, the Company failed to both devise and maintain a sufficient system of internal accounting controls over its operations in Russia with respect to third-party consultants, and to consistently make and keep accurate books and records regarding its consultant payments in Russia. According to the order, contemporaneous emails indicate that those payments covered, among other things, (i) reimbursement for New Year's gifts to individuals including Russian government officials, which relevant Company policies prohibited, and (ii) reimbursement of a consultant's payments to Roskomnadzor, the Russian state agency responsible for administering internet censorship filters.
[F]rom at least October 2018 through September 2022, BKCoin raised approximately $100 million from at least 55 investors to invest in crypto assets, but BKCoin and Kang instead used some of the money to make Ponzi-like payments and for personal use.
According to the SEC’s complaint, filed under seal on February 23, 2023, and unsealed today, BKCoin and Kang assured investors that their money would be used primarily to trade crypto assets and represented that BKCoin would generate returns for investors through separately managed accounts and five private funds. As the complaint alleges, the defendants disregarded the structure of the funds, commingled investor assets, and used more than $3.6 million to make Ponzi-like payments to fund investors. The complaint also alleges that Kang misappropriated at least $371,000 of investor money to, among other things, pay for vacations, sporting events tickets, and a New York City apartment. According to the complaint, Kang attempted to conceal the unauthorized use of investor money by providing altered documents with inflated bank account balances to the third-party administrator for certain of the funds. The complaint further alleges that BKCoin materially misrepresented to some investors that BKCoin, or one of the funds, received an audit opinion from a “top four auditor,” when in fact neither BKCoin nor any of the funds received an audit opinion at any time.
FINRA Fines and Suspends Rep For Receiving Unemployment Benefits In the Matter of Joseph Louis Menotti, Respondent (FINRA AWC 2022075173701) https://www.finra.org/sites/default/files/fda_documents/2022075173701 %20Joseph%20Louis%20Menotti%20CRD%207089872%20AWC%20gg.pdf For the purpose of proposing a settlement of rule violations alleged by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority ("FINRA"), without admitting or denying the findings, prior to a regulatory hearing, and without an adjudication of any issue, Joseph Louis Menotti submitted a Letter of Acceptance, Waiver and Consent ("AWC"), which FINRA accepted. The AWC asserts that Joseph Louis Menotti was first registered in. In accordance with the terms of the AWC, FINRA imposed upon Joseph Louis Menotti a $10,000 fine and a nine-month suspension from associating with any FINRA member in all capacities. As alleged in part in the AWC:
In 2020, as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, the federal government established Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA) for individuals who were ineligible for regular unemployment benefits and were unable to work due to the pandemic. The PUA program generally prohibited PUA benefits to individuals who were teleworking with pay.
In May 2020, Menotti applied for PUA benefits through the Michigan Unemployment Insurance Agency (Michigan UIA), despite the fact that he was earning a salary while teleworking.
Between May and July 2020, Menotti submitted 18 certifications claiming PUA benefits for each week from March 8, 2020, through July 11, 2020. In each certification, Menotti recklessly misrepresented that he did not work full time during the week he requested benefits. In 17 certifications, Menotti also recklessly misrepresented that he did not "do any type of work" or "have any earnings" during the week he requested benefits. In fact, during this period, Menotti was employed full-time by Edward Jones as a registered representative and received a salary.
Based on Menotti's misrepresentations, the Michigan UIA approved Menotti's application for PUA benefits. Menotti received more than $11,000 in PUA benefits to which he was not entitled. Menotti has repaid $1,570 to the Michigan UIA.
In April 2022, Edward Jones commenced an investigation of Menotti's receipt of PUA benefits and terminated Menotti's employment in May 2022. The Michigan UIA also determined that Menotti had not been eligible to receive PUA benefits and that he was improperly paid more than $11,000 in benefits.
Based on the foregoing, Menotti violated FINRA Rule 2010.
FINRA Arbitration Panel Dismisses Something Involving Something Against Wells Fargo by Prominent Whistleblower Analyst In the Matter of the Arbitration Between David William Maris, Claimant, v. Wells Fargo Securities, LLC, Respondent (FINRA Arbitration Award 20-03466) https://www.finra.org/sites/default/files/aao_documents/20-03466.pdf In a FINRA Arbitration Statement of Claim filed in October 2020, associated person Claimant Maris asserted "breach of contract, breach of implied contract, quantum meruit-unjust enrichment, promissory estoppel, and violation of Whistleblower Protection under Dodd-Frank." Claimant sought at least $1.4 million in compensatory damages, at least $2 million back-pay, interest, costs, and fees.The FINRA Award asserts that at the "hearing, Claimant added a claim for damages for retention of Claimant’s Models." Respondent Wells Fargo generally denied the allegations and asserted various affirmative defenses. The FINRA Arbitration Panel denied Claimant's request for monetary damages but ordered Respondent Wells Fargo to return to Claimant Maris "as promised" the referenced "Claimant's Models."
Bill Singer's Comment: Ummm . . . what the hell was that about?
Oddly, painfully, in prose that seems oh-so-carefully chosen, the FINRA Panel "denied" "Claimant's request for monetary damages . . . [and] Any and all claims for relief not specifically addressed herein . . ." It's nice that the arbitrators opted not to award any monetary damages but, y'know, like maybe, if y'all got nothin' else pressin', you might just take a sec here and tell us what happened to the substantive claims made by Maris? I mean, seriously, what claims of his did you dismiss and why? Further exacerbating any understanding of what was and was not dismissed, we have this in the Award:
On February 10, 2021, Respondent filed a Motion to Dismiss Count Five (violation of Whistleblower Protection under Dodd-Frank) of Claimant’s Statement of Claim pursuant to Rule 13504(a)(6)(A) of the Code of Arbitration Procedure (“Code”) (“Motion to Dismiss”). On March 29, 2021, Claimant filed a Response opposing the Motion to Dismiss. The parties waived the requirement to hold a hearing on the Motion to Dismiss. On April 23, 2021, the Panel’s Order granting the Motion to Dismiss was served on the parties.
So . . . in April 2021, the Panel dismissed the Whistleblower Protection count and, here we are, almost two years later, and what exactly was left of the case and how/why did the arbitrators adjudicate as they did? Hey, don't ask me. I have no damn idea because the Award is as terse and non-substantive as could be.
As of March 6, 2023, FINRA's online BrokerCheck discloses that Maris was first registered in 1996 but seems to have ceased being registered upon his January 2020 departure from Wells Fargo Securities. BrokerCheck indicates that since 2013, Maris was employed as an "Analyst:" and, notably, he has no disclosures on the online FINRA database.
Although there is no reference in the FINRA Award or BrokerCheck beyond what is noted above, see: