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SEC Increases Rulings For Firms Holding Client Assets - Imposes Further Protective Policies
SEC Increases Rulings For Firms Holding Client Assets - Imposes Further Protective Policies
Wednesday,31/07/2013|20:21GMTby
Andrew Saks McLeod
The handling of client funds is a matter at the heart of regulatory policy currently, further borne out by today's ruling by the SEC that it will adopt more stringent rulings on the handling of client funds placed with broker-dealers.
The United States authorities are very much concerned with the best interests of the consumer, and this ruling is no exception. The new rules, approved by a 3-2 Commission vote, require broker-dealers to file new reports with the Commission that should result in higher levels of compliance with the SEC’s financial responsibility rules.
“These rules will provide important additional safeguards for customer assets held by broker-dealers,” stated Mary Jo White, Chair of the SEC in a public statement today regarding the implementation of the new rulings. “These rules will strengthen the audit requirements for broker-dealers and enhance our oversight of the way they maintain custody of their customers’ assets.”
Broker-dealers are required to begin filing new quarterly reports with the SEC and annual reports with SIPC by the end of 2013. The requirement for broker-dealers to file annual reports with the SEC is effective June 1, 2014.
What Constitutes a Broker-Dealer?
Broker-dealers are generally entities that engage in the business of carrying out securities transactions either for someone else’s account or for their own account. Under the federal securities laws, most entities engaged in these activities (with the notable exception of certain commercial banks) must register with the SEC and be subject to Commission rules. Broker-dealers must be members of at least one self-regulatory organization (SRO) such as the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority or a national securities exchange.
How Are Customer Assets at Broker-Dealers Protected?
Broker-dealers that maintain custody of a customer’s securities and cash are subject to strict requirements under the Exchange Act that are designed to protect and account for these assets.
These requirements include the following categorizations:
Net Capital Rule (Rule 15c3-1) – Requires a broker-dealer to maintain more than a dollar of highly liquid assets for each dollar of liabilities. If the broker-dealer fails, this rule helps to ensure that the broker-dealer has sufficient liquid assets to pay all liabilities to customers.
Customer Protection Rule (Rule 15c3-3) – Broker-dealers sometime use their own funds to conduct trades and other transactions. When engaging in such “proprietary business activities,” this rule prohibits broker-dealers from using customer securities and cash to finance their own business. By segregating customer securities and cash from a firm’s proprietary business activities, the rule increases the likelihood that customer assets will be readily available to be returned to customers if a broker-dealer fails.
Quarterly Security Count Rule (Rule 17a-13) – This rule requires a broker-dealer on a quarterly basis to count, examine, and verify the securities it actually holds for customers and for itself. It must compare that count with the amounts of such securities it should be holding as indicated by its records. If there are differences between the actual amounts held and the amounts that records indicate should be held, the broker-dealer must take capital charges until the differences are resolved.
Account Statement Rule– Each SRO has rules that require a broker-dealer to send a statement – at least quarterly – to each customer reflecting the customer’s securities and cash positions held at the broker-dealer, as well as the activity in the account.
These requirements are designed to protect customer assets held at broker-dealers. However, if a broker-dealer violates these requirements by, for example, misappropriating these assets, the securities and cash may not be available to be returned to customers.
In a situation where a broker-dealer misappropriates funds or converts securities from its customer, the Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC) may step in and initiate a liquidation proceeding, which is the process that determines whether SIPC will pay the customers for any shortfalls in their accounts up to $500,000 per customer (of which $250,000 can be used to make up a cash shortfall.)
Strengthening Audit Requirements
Currently, Section 17 of the Exchange Act and Rule 17a-5 together require a broker-dealer to file an annual report with the SEC and the SRO designated to examine that broker-dealer. The report must contain audited financial statements conducted by an independent public accountant registered with the PCAOB.
Under the rule amendments:
A broker-dealer that has custody of the customers’ assets must file a “compliance report” with the SEC to verify they are adhering to broker-dealer capital requirements, protecting customer assets they hold, and periodically sending account statements to customers. The broker-dealer also must engage a PCAOB-registered independent public accountant to prepare a report based on an examination of certain statements in the broker-dealer’s compliance report.
A broker-dealer that does not have custody of its customers’ assets must file an “exemption report” with the Commission citing its exemption from requirements applicable to carrying broker-dealers. The broker-dealer also must engage a PCAOB-registered independent public accountant to prepare a report based on a review of certain statements in the broker-dealer’s exemption report.
The examination or review of the new reports as well as the examination of the financial statements must be conducted in accordance with PCAOB standards.
A broker-dealer that is a member of SIPC also must file its annual reports with SIPC, so that SIPC can better monitor industry trends and enhance its knowledge of particular firms.
Strengthening Oversight of Broker-Dealer Custody Practices
Currently, Section 17(b) of the Exchange Act requires broker-dealers to submit to routine inspections and examinations by SEC staff and the relevant SRO.
The rule amendments enhance these broker-dealer examinations in two ways:
Firstly, the amendments require a broker-dealer to file a new quarterly report (called Form Custody) that contains information about whether and how it maintains custody of its customers’ securities and cash. The reports will establish a custody profile for the broker-dealer that examiners can use as a starting point to focus their custody examinations.
Second, the amendments require broker-dealers – regardless of whether they have custody of their clients’ assets – to agree to allow SEC or SRO staff to review the work papers of the independent public accountant if it’s requested in writing for purposes of an examination of the broker-dealer. They must allow the accountant to discuss its findings with the examiners.
Relation of Broker-Dealer Custody Rule Amendments to Audits of Investment Advisers
In 2010, the SEC adopted Rule 206(4)-2 under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, indicating what an investment adviser or its affiliate must do if it is a qualified custodian of its client funds and securities. In those situations, the adviser must obtain annually (or receive from its related person as defined by Rule 206(4)(2)) a written internal control report prepared by an accountant registered with, and subject to regular inspection by, the PCAOB. This report must be supported by the accountant’s examination of the qualified custodian’s custody controls.
The SEC has determined that the independent public accountant’s report based on an examination of the compliance report will satisfy the internal control report requirement under Rule 206(4)-2. In this way, the rule changes better align the controls that relate to protection of customer assets of both broker-dealers and investment advisers.
What’s Next?
The effective date for the requirement to file Form Custody and the requirement to file annual reports with SIPC is Dec. 31, 2013. The effective date for the requirements relating to broker-dealer annual reports is June 1, 2014.
The United States authorities are very much concerned with the best interests of the consumer, and this ruling is no exception. The new rules, approved by a 3-2 Commission vote, require broker-dealers to file new reports with the Commission that should result in higher levels of compliance with the SEC’s financial responsibility rules.
“These rules will provide important additional safeguards for customer assets held by broker-dealers,” stated Mary Jo White, Chair of the SEC in a public statement today regarding the implementation of the new rulings. “These rules will strengthen the audit requirements for broker-dealers and enhance our oversight of the way they maintain custody of their customers’ assets.”
Broker-dealers are required to begin filing new quarterly reports with the SEC and annual reports with SIPC by the end of 2013. The requirement for broker-dealers to file annual reports with the SEC is effective June 1, 2014.
What Constitutes a Broker-Dealer?
Broker-dealers are generally entities that engage in the business of carrying out securities transactions either for someone else’s account or for their own account. Under the federal securities laws, most entities engaged in these activities (with the notable exception of certain commercial banks) must register with the SEC and be subject to Commission rules. Broker-dealers must be members of at least one self-regulatory organization (SRO) such as the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority or a national securities exchange.
How Are Customer Assets at Broker-Dealers Protected?
Broker-dealers that maintain custody of a customer’s securities and cash are subject to strict requirements under the Exchange Act that are designed to protect and account for these assets.
These requirements include the following categorizations:
Net Capital Rule (Rule 15c3-1) – Requires a broker-dealer to maintain more than a dollar of highly liquid assets for each dollar of liabilities. If the broker-dealer fails, this rule helps to ensure that the broker-dealer has sufficient liquid assets to pay all liabilities to customers.
Customer Protection Rule (Rule 15c3-3) – Broker-dealers sometime use their own funds to conduct trades and other transactions. When engaging in such “proprietary business activities,” this rule prohibits broker-dealers from using customer securities and cash to finance their own business. By segregating customer securities and cash from a firm’s proprietary business activities, the rule increases the likelihood that customer assets will be readily available to be returned to customers if a broker-dealer fails.
Quarterly Security Count Rule (Rule 17a-13) – This rule requires a broker-dealer on a quarterly basis to count, examine, and verify the securities it actually holds for customers and for itself. It must compare that count with the amounts of such securities it should be holding as indicated by its records. If there are differences between the actual amounts held and the amounts that records indicate should be held, the broker-dealer must take capital charges until the differences are resolved.
Account Statement Rule– Each SRO has rules that require a broker-dealer to send a statement – at least quarterly – to each customer reflecting the customer’s securities and cash positions held at the broker-dealer, as well as the activity in the account.
These requirements are designed to protect customer assets held at broker-dealers. However, if a broker-dealer violates these requirements by, for example, misappropriating these assets, the securities and cash may not be available to be returned to customers.
In a situation where a broker-dealer misappropriates funds or converts securities from its customer, the Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC) may step in and initiate a liquidation proceeding, which is the process that determines whether SIPC will pay the customers for any shortfalls in their accounts up to $500,000 per customer (of which $250,000 can be used to make up a cash shortfall.)
Strengthening Audit Requirements
Currently, Section 17 of the Exchange Act and Rule 17a-5 together require a broker-dealer to file an annual report with the SEC and the SRO designated to examine that broker-dealer. The report must contain audited financial statements conducted by an independent public accountant registered with the PCAOB.
Under the rule amendments:
A broker-dealer that has custody of the customers’ assets must file a “compliance report” with the SEC to verify they are adhering to broker-dealer capital requirements, protecting customer assets they hold, and periodically sending account statements to customers. The broker-dealer also must engage a PCAOB-registered independent public accountant to prepare a report based on an examination of certain statements in the broker-dealer’s compliance report.
A broker-dealer that does not have custody of its customers’ assets must file an “exemption report” with the Commission citing its exemption from requirements applicable to carrying broker-dealers. The broker-dealer also must engage a PCAOB-registered independent public accountant to prepare a report based on a review of certain statements in the broker-dealer’s exemption report.
The examination or review of the new reports as well as the examination of the financial statements must be conducted in accordance with PCAOB standards.
A broker-dealer that is a member of SIPC also must file its annual reports with SIPC, so that SIPC can better monitor industry trends and enhance its knowledge of particular firms.
Strengthening Oversight of Broker-Dealer Custody Practices
Currently, Section 17(b) of the Exchange Act requires broker-dealers to submit to routine inspections and examinations by SEC staff and the relevant SRO.
The rule amendments enhance these broker-dealer examinations in two ways:
Firstly, the amendments require a broker-dealer to file a new quarterly report (called Form Custody) that contains information about whether and how it maintains custody of its customers’ securities and cash. The reports will establish a custody profile for the broker-dealer that examiners can use as a starting point to focus their custody examinations.
Second, the amendments require broker-dealers – regardless of whether they have custody of their clients’ assets – to agree to allow SEC or SRO staff to review the work papers of the independent public accountant if it’s requested in writing for purposes of an examination of the broker-dealer. They must allow the accountant to discuss its findings with the examiners.
Relation of Broker-Dealer Custody Rule Amendments to Audits of Investment Advisers
In 2010, the SEC adopted Rule 206(4)-2 under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, indicating what an investment adviser or its affiliate must do if it is a qualified custodian of its client funds and securities. In those situations, the adviser must obtain annually (or receive from its related person as defined by Rule 206(4)(2)) a written internal control report prepared by an accountant registered with, and subject to regular inspection by, the PCAOB. This report must be supported by the accountant’s examination of the qualified custodian’s custody controls.
The SEC has determined that the independent public accountant’s report based on an examination of the compliance report will satisfy the internal control report requirement under Rule 206(4)-2. In this way, the rule changes better align the controls that relate to protection of customer assets of both broker-dealers and investment advisers.
What’s Next?
The effective date for the requirement to file Form Custody and the requirement to file annual reports with SIPC is Dec. 31, 2013. The effective date for the requirements relating to broker-dealer annual reports is June 1, 2014.
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This session brings one seasoned trader to the stage for an unfiltered account of the position that still defines how they think about markets.
Attendees will walk away with:
-A first-hand account of how a conviction trade is built, from thesis and entry through position management and exit
-Understanding of what turns a market observation into a live position, and what holds it when conditions shift
-Insight into how timing, execution quality, and market structure shaped the final result
-Perspective on what the trade revealed about edge, risk tolerance, and when to hold through a position moving against you
-Clarity on what separates a well-built trade from a well-timed one
Most market post-mortems describe what happened to prices. Few describe what happened in the trading room while the position was open: the entry conviction, the moments that tested it, and the exit decision that closed the book.
This session brings one seasoned trader to the stage for an unfiltered account of the position that still defines how they think about markets.
Attendees will walk away with:
-A first-hand account of how a conviction trade is built, from thesis and entry through position management and exit
-Understanding of what turns a market observation into a live position, and what holds it when conditions shift
-Insight into how timing, execution quality, and market structure shaped the final result
-Perspective on what the trade revealed about edge, risk tolerance, and when to hold through a position moving against you
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Most market post-mortems describe what happened to prices. Few describe what happened in the trading room while the position was open: the entry conviction, the moments that tested it, and the exit decision that closed the book.
This session brings one seasoned trader to the stage for an unfiltered account of the position that still defines how they think about markets.
Attendees will walk away with:
-A first-hand account of how a conviction trade is built, from thesis and entry through position management and exit
-Understanding of what turns a market observation into a live position, and what holds it when conditions shift
-Insight into how timing, execution quality, and market structure shaped the final result
-Perspective on what the trade revealed about edge, risk tolerance, and when to hold through a position moving against you
-Clarity on what separates a well-built trade from a well-timed one
Most market post-mortems describe what happened to prices. Few describe what happened in the trading room while the position was open: the entry conviction, the moments that tested it, and the exit decision that closed the book.
This session brings one seasoned trader to the stage for an unfiltered account of the position that still defines how they think about markets.
Attendees will walk away with:
-A first-hand account of how a conviction trade is built, from thesis and entry through position management and exit
-Understanding of what turns a market observation into a live position, and what holds it when conditions shift
-Insight into how timing, execution quality, and market structure shaped the final result
-Perspective on what the trade revealed about edge, risk tolerance, and when to hold through a position moving against you
-Clarity on what separates a well-built trade from a well-timed one
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This session brings one seasoned trader to the stage for an unfiltered account of the position that still defines how they think about markets.
Attendees will walk away with:
-A first-hand account of how a conviction trade is built, from thesis and entry through position management and exit
-Understanding of what turns a market observation into a live position, and what holds it when conditions shift
-Insight into how timing, execution quality, and market structure shaped the final result
-Perspective on what the trade revealed about edge, risk tolerance, and when to hold through a position moving against you
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-How crypto and blockchain can enable broader participation beyond traditional financial systems
-Addressing access barriers: infrastructure, education, and affordability in underserved communities
-Opportunities for brokers and platforms to tap into the informal trading economy
As crypto and CFD trading continue to expand across Africa, access to advanced tools and market insights remains uneven. This session explores how AI and blockchain can bridge that gap by empowering informal traders and underserved communities to participate more effectively in digital financial markets. The discussion will focus on practical applications of technology to improve accessibility, education, and investment outcomes in both formal and informal sectors.
In this discussion, we will explore:
-The role of AI in democratizing access to trading tools, insights, and strategy development
-How crypto and blockchain can enable broader participation beyond traditional financial systems
-Addressing access barriers: infrastructure, education, and affordability in underserved communities
-Opportunities for brokers and platforms to tap into the informal trading economy
As crypto and CFD trading continue to expand across Africa, access to advanced tools and market insights remains uneven. This session explores how AI and blockchain can bridge that gap by empowering informal traders and underserved communities to participate more effectively in digital financial markets. The discussion will focus on practical applications of technology to improve accessibility, education, and investment outcomes in both formal and informal sectors.
In this discussion, we will explore:
-The role of AI in democratizing access to trading tools, insights, and strategy development
-How crypto and blockchain can enable broader participation beyond traditional financial systems
-Addressing access barriers: infrastructure, education, and affordability in underserved communities
-Opportunities for brokers and platforms to tap into the informal trading economy
As crypto and CFD trading continue to expand across Africa, access to advanced tools and market insights remains uneven. This session explores how AI and blockchain can bridge that gap by empowering informal traders and underserved communities to participate more effectively in digital financial markets. The discussion will focus on practical applications of technology to improve accessibility, education, and investment outcomes in both formal and informal sectors.
In this discussion, we will explore:
-The role of AI in democratizing access to trading tools, insights, and strategy development
-How crypto and blockchain can enable broader participation beyond traditional financial systems
-Addressing access barriers: infrastructure, education, and affordability in underserved communities
-Opportunities for brokers and platforms to tap into the informal trading economy
As crypto and CFD trading continue to expand across Africa, access to advanced tools and market insights remains uneven. This session explores how AI and blockchain can bridge that gap by empowering informal traders and underserved communities to participate more effectively in digital financial markets. The discussion will focus on practical applications of technology to improve accessibility, education, and investment outcomes in both formal and informal sectors.
In this discussion, we will explore:
-The role of AI in democratizing access to trading tools, insights, and strategy development
-How crypto and blockchain can enable broader participation beyond traditional financial systems
-Addressing access barriers: infrastructure, education, and affordability in underserved communities
-Opportunities for brokers and platforms to tap into the informal trading economy