Self-Regulatory Organizations; Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc.; Notice of Filing of a Proposed Rule Change To Address Brokers With a Significant History of Misconduct, 20745-20769 [2020-07777]
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 72 / Tuesday, April 14, 2020 / Notices
timestamp granularity for a period of
five years.
Accordingly, it is hereby ordered,
pursuant to Section 36(a)(1) of the
Exchange Act,16 and Rule 608(e) of the
Exchange Act 17 and with respect to the
proposed approaches specifically
described above, that the Participants
are granted a five-year exemption from
the timestamp granularity requirement
set forth in Section 6.8(b) and Section 3
of Appendix D of the CAT NMS Plan of
the CAT NMS Plan, subject to the
conditions described above.
By the Commission.
Vanessa A. Countryman,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020–07789 Filed 4–13–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–88600; File No. SR–FINRA–
2020–011]
Self-Regulatory Organizations;
Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority, Inc.; Notice of Filing of a
Proposed Rule Change To Address
Brokers With a Significant History of
Misconduct
April 8, 2020.
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Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’) 1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on April 3,
2020, Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority, Inc. (‘‘FINRA’’) filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘SEC’’ or ‘‘Commission’’) the proposed
rule change as described in Items I, II,
and III below, which Items have been
prepared by FINRA. The Commission is
publishing this notice to solicit
comments on the proposed rule change
from interested persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
FINRA is proposing to (1) amend the
FINRA Rule 9200 Series (Disciplinary
Proceedings) and the 9300 Series
(Review of Disciplinary Proceeding by
National Adjudicatory Council and
FINRA Board; Application for SEC
Review) to allow a Hearing Officer to
impose conditions or restrictions on the
activities of a respondent member firm
or respondent broker, and require a
respondent broker’s member firm to
adopt heightened supervisory
16 15
U.S.C. 78mm(a)(1).
CFR 242.608(e).
1 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
17 17
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procedures for such broker, when a
disciplinary matter is appealed to the
National Adjudicatory Council (‘‘NAC’’)
or called for NAC review; (2) amend the
FINRA Rule 9520 Series (Eligibility
Proceedings) to require member firms to
adopt heightened supervisory
procedures for statutorily disqualified
brokers during the period a statutory
disqualification eligibility request is
under review by FINRA; (3) amend
FINRA Rule 8312 (FINRA BrokerCheck
Disclosure) to allow the disclosure
through FINRA BrokerCheck of the
status of a member firm as a ‘‘taping
firm’’ under FINRA Rule 3170 (Tape
Recording of Registered Persons by
Certain Firms); and (4) amend the
FINRA Rule 1000 Series (Member
Application and Associated Person
Registration) to require a member firm
to submit a written request to FINRA’s
Department of Member Regulation
(‘‘Member Regulation’’), through the
Membership Application Group (‘‘MAP
Group’’), seeking a materiality
consultation and approval of a
continuing membership application, if
required, when a natural person that
has, in the prior five years, one or more
‘‘final criminal matters’’ or two or more
‘‘specified risk events’’ 3 seeks to
become an owner, control person,
principal or registered person of the
member firm.
The text of the proposed rule change
is available on FINRA’s website at
https://www.finra.org, at the principal
office of FINRA and at the
Commission’s Public Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission,
FINRA included statements concerning
the purpose of and basis for the
proposed rule change and discussed any
comments it received on the proposed
rule change. The text of these statements
may be examined at the places specified
in Item IV below. FINRA has prepared
summaries, set forth in sections A, B,
and C below, of the most significant
aspects of such statements.
3 As explained more below, the proposed
definitions of ‘‘final criminal matter’’ and
‘‘specified risk event’’ generally include final,
adjudicated disclosure events disclosed on a
person’s or firm’s Uniform Registration Forms. For
purposes of the proposed rule change, Uniform
Registration Forms for firms and brokers refer to,
and would be defined as, the Uniform Application
for Broker-Dealer Registration (Form BD), the
Uniform Application for Securities Industry
Registration or Transfer (Form U4), the Uniform
Termination Notice for Securities Industry
Registration (Form U5) and the Uniform
Disciplinary Action Reporting Form (Form U6), as
such may be amended or any successor(s) thereto.
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A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
Overview
FINRA uses a combination of tools to
reduce the risk of harm to investors
from member firms and the brokers they
hire that have a history of misconduct.
These tools include assessments of
applications filed by member firms to
retain or employ an individual subject
to a statutory disqualification, reviews
of membership and continuing
membership applications (‘‘CMAs’’),
disclosure of brokers’ regulatory
backgrounds, supervision requirements,
focused examinations, risk monitoring
and disciplinary actions. These tools,
among others, have been useful in
identifying and addressing a range of
misconduct and serve to further the
Exchange Act goals, reflected in
FINRA’s mission, of investor protection
and market integrity.
In addition, FINRA Rule 3110
(Supervision) requires member firms to
establish and maintain a system to
supervise the activities of each
associated person that is reasonably
designed to achieve compliance with
applicable securities laws and FINRA
rules. The rule also requires member
firms to establish, maintain and enforce
written procedures to supervise the
types of business in which they engage
and the activities of their associated
persons that are reasonably designed to
achieve compliance with applicable
securities laws and FINRA rules.4
Despite these requirements and
FINRA’s ongoing efforts to strengthen
protections for investors and the
markets through its oversight of member
firms and the brokers they employ,
persistent compliance issues continue to
arise in some member firms. Recent
studies, for example, find that some
firms persistently employ brokers who
engage in misconduct, which results in
higher levels of misconduct by these
firms. These studies also provide
evidence that past disciplinary and
other regulatory events associated with
a member firm or individual can be
predictive of similar future events, such
as repeated disciplinary actions,
arbitrations and complaints.5 This risk
4 See
Rule 3110(a) and (b).
example, in 2015 FINRA’s Office of the
Chief Economist (OCE) published a study that
examined the predictability of disciplinary and
other disclosure events associated with investor
harm based on past similar events. The OCE study
showed that past disclosure events, including
regulatory actions, customer arbitrations and
5 For
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cannot always be adequately addressed
by FINRA’s existing rules and programs.
Brokers and member firms with a
history of misconduct can pose a
particular challenge for FINRA’s
existing examination and enforcement
programs. For example, FINRA
examinations of member firms can
identify compliance failures—or
imminent failures—and prescribe
remedies to be taken, but examiners are
not empowered to require a firm to
change or limit its business operations
in a particular manner. While these
constraints on the examination process
protect firms from potentially arbitrary
or overly onerous examination findings,
a firm or individual with a history of
misconduct can take advantage of these
limits to continue ongoing activities that
harm or pose risk of harm to investors
until they result in an enforcement
action.
FINRA disciplinary actions, in turn,
can be brought only after a violation—
and any resulting customer harm—may
have already occurred. In addition,
disciplinary proceedings can take
significant time to develop, prosecute
and conclude, during which time the
respondent in a disciplinary proceeding
is able to continue misconduct,
perpetuating significant risks of
additional harm to customers and
investors. Litigated enforcement actions
brought by FINRA involve a hearing and
often multiple rounds of appeals,
thereby effectively forestalling the
imposition of disciplinary sanctions—
and their potential deterrent effect—for
an extended period. For example, a
FINRA enforcement proceeding could
involve a hearing before a Hearing
Panel, numerous motions, an appeal to
the NAC, and further appeals to the SEC
and federal courts of appeals. Moreover,
even when a FINRA Hearing Panel or
Hearing Officer imposes a significant
sanction, the sanction is stayed during
appeal to the NAC, many sanctions are
automatically stayed on appeal to the
SEC, and they potentially can be stayed
during appeal to the courts. When all
appeals are exhausted, the respondent’s
FINRA registration may have
terminated, limiting FINRA’s
jurisdiction and eliminating the leverage
litigations of brokers, have significant power to
predict future investor harm. See Hammad Qureshi
& Jonathan Sokobin, Do Investors Have Valuable
Information About Brokers? (FINRA Office of the
Chief Economist Working Paper, Aug. 2015). A
subsequent academic research paper presented
evidence that suggests a higher rate of new
disciplinary and other disclosure events is highly
correlated with past disciplinary and other
disclosure events, as far back as nine years prior.
See Mark Egan, Gregor Matvos, & Amit Seru, The
Market for Financial Adviser Misconduct, J. Pol.
Econ. 127, no. 1 (Feb. 2019): 233–295.
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that FINRA has to incent the respondent
to comply with the sanction, including
making restitution to customers.
Similarly, FINRA’s eligibility
proceedings are sometimes not available
or sufficient to address the risks posed
by brokers with a significant history of
past misconduct. Federal law and
regulations define the types of
misconduct that presumptively
disqualify a broker from associating
with a member firm and also govern the
standards and procedures FINRA must
follow when a firm seeks to associate or
continue associating with a broker
subject to a statutory disqualification.
These laws and regulations limit who
FINRA may subject to an eligibility
proceeding and affect how FINRA may
exercise its authority in those
proceedings.
FINRA’s membership proceedings
also do not always protect against the
risks posed when a firm hires brokers
with a significant history of misconduct.
For firms eligible for the safe harbor for
business expansions in IM–1011–1 (Safe
Harbor for Business Expansions), there
are a defined set of expansions
(including, among other things,
increases in the number of associated
persons involved in sales) that are
presumed not to be a material change in
business operations and therefore do not
require the firm to file a CMA.
Thus, notwithstanding the existing
protections afforded by the federal
securities laws and FINRA rules, the
risk of potential customer harm may
persist where a firm or broker has a
significant history of past misconduct.
FINRA is taking steps to strengthen its
tools to respond to brokers with a
significant history of misconduct and
the firms that employ them, several of
which are described below. In addition,
the proposed rule change, as explained
further below, would create several
additional protections to address this
risk.
Additional Steps Undertaken by FINRA
As part of this initiative, FINRA has
undertaken the following:
➢ Published Regulatory Notice 18–15
(Heightened Supervision), which
reiterates the existing obligation of
member firms to implement for such
individuals tailored heightened
supervisory procedures under Rule
3110;
➢ Published Regulatory Notice 18–17
(FINRA Revises the Sanction
Guidelines), which announced revisions
to the FINRA Sanction Guidelines;
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➢ Raised fees for statutory
disqualification applications; 6 and
➢ Revised the qualification
examination waiver guidelines to permit
FINRA to more broadly consider past
misconduct when considering
examination waiver requests.
In addition, to further address issues
created by member firms that have a
significant history of misconduct,
FINRA has issued a Regulatory Notice
seeking comment on proposed new Rule
4111 (Restricted Firm Obligations).7
Proposed Amendments to the FINRA
Rule 9200 Series and FINRA Rule 9300
Series To Enhance Investor Protection
During the Pendency of an Appeal or
Call-for-Review Proceeding
FINRA is proposing amendments to
the Rule 9200 Series (Disciplinary
Proceedings) and Rule 9300 Series
(Review of Disciplinary Proceeding by
National Adjudicatory Council and
FINRA Board; Application for SEC
Review) to bolster investor protection
during the pendency of an appeal from,
or a NAC review of, a Hearing Panel or
Hearing Officer disciplinary decision,
by empowering Hearing Officers to
impose conditions or restrictions on
disciplined respondents and requiring
firms to adopt heightened supervision
plans concerning disciplined individual
respondents. The proposed rule also
would establish a process for an
expedited review by the Review
Subcommittee of the NAC of any
conditions or restrictions imposed.
Currently, the Rule 9200 and Rule
9300 Series permit FINRA to bring
disciplinary actions against member
firms, associated persons of member
firms or persons within FINRA’s
jurisdiction for alleged violations of
FINRA rules, SEC regulations or federal
securities laws. Following the filing of
a complaint, FINRA’s Chief Hearing
Officer will assign a Hearing Officer to
preside over the disciplinary proceeding
and appoint a Hearing Panel, or an
Extended Hearing Panel if applicable,8
to conduct a hearing and issue a written
decision. For each case, the Hearing
Panel or, in the case of default
6 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 83181
(May 7, 2018), 83 FR 22107 (May 11, 2018) (Notice
of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of File No.
SR–FINRA–2018–018).
7 See Regulatory Notice 19–17 (May 2019).
8 References to ‘‘Hearing Panel’’ will refer to both
a Hearing Panel and an Extended Hearing Panel
collectively, unless otherwise noted. A Hearing
Panel consists of a FINRA Hearing Officer and two
panelists, drawn primarily from a pool of current
and former securities industry members of FINRA’s
District and Regional Committees, as well as its
Market Regulation Committee, former members of
FINRA’s NAC and former FINRA Directors or
Governors.
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decisions, the Hearing Officer will issue
a written decision that makes findings
and, if violations occurred, imposes
sanctions. Sanctions can include, among
other things, fines, suspensions, bars
and orders to pay restitution.
Under FINRA’s disciplinary
procedures, any party can appeal a
Hearing Panel or Hearing Officer
decision to the NAC. In addition, any
member of the NAC or the NAC’s
Review Subcommittee, or the General
Counsel in the case of default decisions,
may on their own initiate a review of a
decision. On appeal or review, the NAC
will determine if a Hearing Panel’s or a
Hearing Officer’s findings were factually
supported and legally correct. The NAC
also reviews any sanctions imposed and
considers the FINRA Sanction
Guidelines when doing so. The NAC
prepares a proposed written decision. If
the FINRA Board of Governors does not
call the case for review, the NAC’s
decision becomes final and constitutes
the final disciplinary action of FINRA,
unless the NAC remands the proceeding
to the Hearing Officer or Hearing Panel.
If the FINRA Board of Governors calls
the case for review, the FINRA Board of
Governors’ decision constitutes the final
disciplinary action of FINRA, unless the
Board of Governors remands the
proceeding to the NAC. A respondent in
a FINRA disciplinary proceeding may
appeal a final FINRA disciplinary action
to the SEC, and further to a United
States federal court of appeals.
When a Hearing Panel or Hearing
Officer decision is on appeal or review
before the NAC, any sanctions imposed
by the Hearing Panel or Hearing Officer
decision, including bars and expulsions,
are automatically stayed and not
enforced against the respondent during
the pendency of the appeal or review
proceeding.9 In turn, the filing of an
application for SEC review stays the
effectiveness of any sanction, other than
a bar or an expulsion, imposed in a
decision constituting a final FINRA
disciplinary action.10
Proposed FINRA Rule 9285 (Interim
Orders and Mandatory Heightened
Supervision While on Appeal or
Discretionary Review) would establish
additional investor protections when a
Hearing Panel or Hearing Officer
decision that makes findings that a
respondent violated a statute or rule
provision is appealed to the NAC or
called for NAC review.
9 See FINRA Rules 9311(b), 9312(b). In contrast,
an appeal to the NAC or a call for NAC review does
not stay a decision, or that part of a decision, that
imposes a permanent cease and desist order. See
FINRA Rules 9311(b), 9312(b).
10 See FINRA Rule 9370(a).
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Proposed Rule 9285(a) would provide
that the Hearing Officer that
participated in the underlying
disciplinary proceeding may impose
any conditions or restrictions on the
activities of a respondent during the
appeal as the Hearing Officer considers
reasonably necessary for the purpose of
preventing customer harm. In light of
comments received in response to
Regulatory Notice 18–16, FINRA has
modified the proposal to make the
imposition of possible conditions and
restrictions a separate, second step after
a finding of a violation by a Hearing
Panel or Hearing Officer, and to provide
greater clarity on how the process
would operate.
Unless otherwise ordered by a
Hearing Officer, proposed Rule
9285(a)(1) would allow FINRA’s
Department of Enforcement
(‘‘Enforcement’’), within ten days after
service of a notice of appeal from, or the
notice of a call for NAC review of, a
disciplinary decision of a Hearing
Officer or Hearing Panel, to file a motion
for the imposition of conditions or
restrictions on the activities of a
respondent that are reasonably
necessary for the purpose of preventing
customer harm.11 Proposed Rule
9285(a)(1) also would provide expressly
that the Hearing Officer that
participated in the underlying
disciplinary proceeding would have
jurisdiction to rule on a motion seeking
conditions or restrictions,
notwithstanding the appeal or call for
NAC review. FINRA believes that the
Hearing Officer’s knowledge about the
factual background and the violations,
gained through presiding over the
disciplinary proceeding, would make
the Hearing Officer well qualified to
evaluate the potential for customer harm
and craft, in the first instance and in an
expeditious manner, tailored conditions
and restrictions to minimize that
potential harm. In a change from the
proposal in Regulatory Notice 18–16,
the proposed rule would give the
Hearing Officer who participated in the
underlying proceeding (instead of the
Hearing Panel) the authority to impose
conditions or restrictions that are
reasonably necessary for the purpose of
preventing customer harm, a change
that FINRA believes will enable orders
11 See Rule 9311(a) (generally allowing a party to
file a notice of appeal within 25 days after service
of a decision issued pursuant to Rule 9268 or Rule
9269) and Rule 9312 (generally allowing a call for
review within 45 days after the date of service of
a decision issued pursuant to Rule 9268 and within
25 days after the date of service of a default
decision issued pursuant to Rule 9269).
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imposing conditions or restrictions to be
imposed more expeditiously.
Proposed Rule 9285(a)(2) through
(a)(5), along with proposed Rule
9285(c), would establish the briefing,
timing and other procedural
requirements relating to the imposition
of conditions or restrictions. The
proposed rule would permit
Enforcement to file a motion seeking the
imposition of conditions or restrictions
that are reasonably necessary for the
purpose of preventing customer harm,
and the motion must specify the
conditions and restrictions that are
sought to be imposed and explain why
they are necessary. A respondent would
have the right to file an opposition or
other response to the motion within ten
days after service of the motion, unless
otherwise ordered by the Hearing
Officer, and must explain why no
conditions or restrictions should be
imposed or specify alternative
conditions and restrictions that are
sought to be imposed and explain why
they are reasonably necessary for the
purpose of preventing customer harm.
Enforcement would have no automatic
right to file a reply. The Hearing Officer
would decide the motion on the papers
and without oral argument, unless an
oral argument is specifically ordered. In
addition, the Hearing Officer would be
required to issue a written order ruling
upon the motion in an expeditious
manner and no later than 20 days after
any opposition or permitted reply is
filed. In an enhancement from the
proposal in Regulatory Notice 18–16,
proposed Rule 9285(a)(5) also would
require that the Office of Hearing
Officers provide a copy of the order to
each FINRA member with which the
respondent is associated.
If the Hearing Officer grants a motion
for conditions or restrictions, its order
should describe the activities that the
respondent shall refrain from taking and
any conditions imposed. The Hearing
Officer would be guided by the limiting
principle—set forth in proposed Rule
9285(a)(5)—that the Hearing Officer
shall have the authority to impose any
conditions or restrictions that the
Hearing Officer considers reasonably
necessary for the purpose of preventing
customer harm. As FINRA explained in
Regulatory Notice 18–16, the conditions
and restrictions imposed should target
the misconduct demonstrated in the
disciplinary proceeding and be tailored
to the specific risks posed by the
member firm or broker. Conditions or
restrictions could include, for example,
prohibiting a member firm or broker
from offering private placements in
cases of misrepresentations and
omissions made to customers, or
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prohibiting penny stock liquidations in
cases involving violations of the penny
stock rules. A condition could also
include posting a bond to cover harm to
customers before the sanction imposed
becomes final or precluding a broker
from acting in a specified capacity.
FINRA believes authorizing Hearing
Officers to impose conditions or
restrictions during the period an appeal
or review proceeding is pending would
allow FINRA to target the demonstrated
bad conduct of a respondent during the
pendency of the appeal or review and
add an interim layer of investor
protection while the disciplinary
proceeding remains pending.12
Proposed Rule 9285(b), along with
proposed Rule 9285(c), would establish
an expedited process for the review of
a Hearing Officer’s order imposing
conditions or restrictions. Specifically,
proposed Rule 9285(b)(1) would permit
a respondent that is subject to a Hearing
Officer order imposing conditions or
restrictions to file, within ten days after
service of that order, a motion with the
Review Subcommittee to modify or
remove any or all of the conditions or
restrictions. Proposed Rule 9285(b)(2)
would provide, among other things, that
the respondent has the burden to show
that the conditions or restrictions are
not reasonably necessary for the
purpose of preventing customer harm.13
Proposed Rule 9285(b)(3) would give
Enforcement five days from service of
the respondent’s motion to file an
opposition or other response, unless
otherwise ordered by the Review
Subcommittee. Proposed Rule
12 The examples of conditions and restrictions set
forth above are intended to provide guidance
concerning the kinds of conditions and restrictions
that could be imposed. FINRA expects that
requiring Enforcement to file a motion specifying
the conditions or restrictions sought also will help
focus adjudicators on options that are available, and
allow for the flexibility needed to address the risk
posed by different factual scenarios. If helpful to
adjudicators and parties, FINRA also would publish
additional guidance on the kinds of restrictions or
conditions that could be imposed.
13 In Regulatory Notice 18–16, FINRA originally
proposed that the respondent would also be
required to demonstrate that Hearing Officer
‘‘committed an error by ordering the conditions or
restrictions imposed.’’ FINRA believes that it is
more appropriate for the burden in proposed Rule
9285(b)(2) to mirror what Enforcement must show
when seeking conditions or restrictions and the
Hearing Officer’s authority to impose conditions
and restrictions.
Notwithstanding that FINRA no longer proposes
including the ‘‘committed an error’’ standard in the
proposed rule, FINRA intends that the Review
Subcommittee would essentially conduct a de novo
review when considering a respondent’s motion to
modify or remove conditions or restrictions. An
exception would be for a Hearing Officer’s
credibility determinations, which are entitled to
considerable weight and deference, and can be
overturned only where the record contains
substantial evidence for doing so.
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9285(b)(4) would provide that the
respondent may not file a reply.
Proposed Rule 9285(b)(5) would provide
that the NAC’s Review Subcommittee
would decide the motion based on the
papers and without oral argument,
unless an oral argument is specifically
ordered by the Review Subcommittee,
and make that decision in an
expeditious manner and no later than 30
days after the filing of the opposition.
The rule would provide that the Review
Subcommittee could approve, modify or
remove any and all of the conditions or
restrictions. It also would require that
FINRA’s Office of General Counsel
provide a copy of the Review
Subcommittee’s order to each FINRA
member with which the respondent is
associated. Proposed Rule 9285(b)(6)
would provide that the filing of a
motion pursuant to Rule 9285(b) would
stay the effectiveness of the conditions
and restrictions ordered by the Hearing
Officer until the Review Subcommittee
rules on the motion.
Proposed Rule 9285(d) would provide
that conditions or restrictions imposed
by a Hearing Officer that are not subject
to a stay or imposed by the Review
Subcommittee shall remain in effect
until FINRA’s final decision takes effect.
Thus, the conditions or restrictions
would remain in effect until there is a
final FINRA disciplinary action and all
appeals are exhausted.
The remainder of proposed Rule 9285
sets requirements for member firms,
during an appeal or NAC review
proceeding, to establish mandatory
heightened supervision plans for
disciplined respondents. Specifically,
when a Hearing Panel or Hearing Officer
disciplinary decision finding that a
respondent violated a statute or rule
provision is appealed or called for NAC
review, proposed Rule 9285(e) would
require any member with which the
respondent is associated to adopt a
written plan of heightened supervision
of the respondent. The plan of
heightened supervision would be
required to comply with FINRA Rule
3110,14 be reasonably designed and
tailored to include specific supervisory
policies and procedures that address the
violations found by the Hearing Panel or
Hearing Officer, and be reasonably
designed to prevent or detect a
reoccurrence of those violations. The
14 Rule 3110 requires member firms to establish
and maintain a system to supervise the activities of
each associated person that is reasonably designed
to achieve compliance with applicable securities
laws and FINRA rules. See also Regulatory Notice
18–15 (Guidance on Implementing Effective
Heightened Supervisory Procedures for Associated
Persons with a History of Misconduct), at p.2 & n.2
(April 2018).
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plan of heightened supervision would
be required to, at a minimum, designate
an appropriately registered principal
responsible for carrying out the plan of
heightened supervision. Proposed Rule
9285(d) also would require that the plan
of heightened supervision be signed by
the designated principal and include an
acknowledgement that the principal is
responsible for implementing and
maintaining the plan. The plan of
heightened supervision would be
required to remain in place until
FINRA’s final decision takes effect.
Thus, the plan of heightened
supervision would be required to
remain in place until there is a final
FINRA disciplinary action and all
appeals are exhausted.15
Proposed Rule 9285(d) would require
the member to file the written plan of
heightened supervision with FINRA’s
Office of General Counsel and serve a
copy on Enforcement and the
respondent, within ten days of any party
filing an appeal from the Hearing
Panel’s or Hearing Officer’s decision or
of the case being called for NAC review.
Similarly, if the respondent becomes
associated with another member firm
while the Hearing Panel’s or Hearing
Officer’s decision is on appeal to, or
review before, the NAC, that firm would
be required, within ten days of the
respondent becoming associated with it,
to file a copy of a plan of heightened
supervision with FINRA’s Office of
General Counsel and serve a copy on
Enforcement and the respondent.
In a change from Regulatory Notice
18–16, FINRA has modified the
heightened supervision plan
requirements to account for the
possibility that a firm could be required
pursuant to proposed Rule 9285(e) to
adopt a mandatory heightened
supervision plan before any conditions
or restrictions imposed pursuant to
proposed Rule 9285 take effect.
Proposed Rule 9285(e)(1) would require
that a member that has adopted a
written plan of heightened supervision
for a respondent would be required to
file and serve an amended plan that
takes into account any conditions or
restrictions imposed pursuant to
proposed Rule 9285, within ten days of
the conditions or restrictions becoming
effective.
Proposed Rule 9285 would apply to
disciplinary proceedings initiated on or
15 Although proposed Rule 9285(d) would not
require heightened supervision plans after FINRA’s
final decision takes effect, the supervisory
obligations of member firms regarding associated
persons with a history of past misconduct would
continue to apply. See Regulatory Notice 18–15
(April 2018).
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after the effective date of the proposed
rule.
Along with proposed Rule 9285,
FINRA is proposing corresponding
amendments to five existing rules:
FINRA Rules 9235 (Hearing Officer
Authority), 9311 (Appeal by Any Party;
Cross-Appeal), 9312 (Review Proceeding
Initiated by Adjudicatory Council), 9321
(Transmission of Record), and 9556
(Failure to Comply with Temporary and
Permanent Cease and Desist Orders).
The proposed amendments to Rule
9235 would provide that the Hearing
Officer has the authority to rule on a
motion pursuant to Rule 9285 for
conditions or restrictions.
The proposed amendments to Rules
9311 and 9312 would ensure that the
stay provisions in those rules do not
affect a motion for conditions or
restrictions.16 Currently, Rule 9311(b)
provides, in pertinent part, that an
appeal to the NAC from a decision
issued pursuant to Rule 9268 or Rule
9269 shall operate as a stay of that
decision until the NAC issues a decision
pursuant to Rule 9349 or, in cases called
for discretionary review by the FINRA
Board, until a decision is issued
pursuant to Rule 9351. Rule 9312(b)
contains similar stay provisions for
decisions that are called for review.
Rules 9311(b) and 9312(b) would be
amended to expressly state that,
notwithstanding the stay of sanctions
under Rules 9311 and 9312, the Hearing
Officer may impose such conditions and
restrictions on the activities of a
respondent as the Hearing Officer
considers reasonably necessary for the
purpose of preventing customer harm,
in accordance in proposed Rule 9285(a),
and that the Review Subcommittee shall
consider any motion filed pursuant to
Rule 9285(b) to modify or remove any
or all of the conditions or restrictions.
Other proposed amendments to Rule
9311 and 9312 would ensure that a
member firm is notified of events that
would require it to adopt a written plan
of heightened supervision pursuant to
proposed Rule 9285.17 Proposed Rule
9311(g) would require the Office of
Hearing Officers, when an appeal is
filed from a decision finding that a
Respondent violated a statute or rule
provision, to promptly notify each
FINRA member with which the
Respondent is associated that an appeal
has been filed. Similarly, proposed Rule
16 The proposed amendments to Rule 9312
discussed in this paragraph reflect an enhancement
to the proposal in Regulatory Notice 18–16 (April
2018).
17 The proposed amendments to Rules 9311 and
9312 discussed in this paragraph are an
enhancement from the proposal in Regulatory
Notice 18–16 (April 2018).
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9312(c)(3) would require the Office of
General Counsel, when a decision
finding that a Respondent violated a
statute or rule provision is called for
review, to promptly notify each FINRA
member with which the Respondent is
associated of the call for review.
The proposed amendments to Rule
9321 would govern the record related to
a motion for conditions or restrictions.18
Rule 9321 currently governs the process
for the Office of Hearing Officers to
transmit the record of a disciplinary
proceeding to the NAC. The proposed
amendments to Rule 9321 would set
forth provisions for how the Office of
Hearing Officers would transmit to the
NAC the supplemental record of a
proceeding concerning a motion to
impose conditions or restrictions.
Rule 9556 currently governs
expedited proceedings for failures to
comply with temporary and permanent
cease and desist orders. The proposed
amendments to Rule 9556 would grant
FINRA staff the authority to bring an
expedited proceeding against a
respondent that fails to comply with
conditions and restrictions imposed
pursuant to proposed Rule 9285 and
create the process for the expedited
proceeding. Specifically, proposed Rule
9556(a)(2) would permit FINRA staff to
issue a notice to a respondent stating
that the failure to comply with the
conditions or restrictions imposed
under Rule 9285 within seven days of
service of the notice will result in a
suspension or cancellation of
membership or a suspension or bar from
associating with any member. Proposed
Rule 9556(c)(2) would govern the
contents of the notice. It would require
that the notice explicitly identify the
conditions or restrictions that are
alleged to have been violated and
contain a statement of facts specifying
the alleged violation. It also would
require that the notice state or explain—
just as the rule currently requires for a
notice of a failure to comply with
temporary and permanent cease and
desist orders—when the FINRA action
will take effect, what the respondent
must do to avoid such action, that the
respondent may file a written request
for a hearing with the Office of Hearing
Officers pursuant to Rule 9559, the
deadline for requesting a hearing and
the Hearing Officer’s or Hearing Panel’s
authority.
18 The proposed amendments to Rule 9321 reflect
an enhancement to the proposal in Regulatory
Notice 18–16 (April 2018).
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Proposed Amendments to the FINRA
Rule 9520 Series To Require Interim
Plans of Heightened Supervision of a
Disqualified Person During the Period
When FINRA is Reviewing an Eligibility
Application
FINRA is proposing to amend FINRA
Rule 9522 (Initiation of Eligibility
Proceeding; Member Regulation
Consideration) in the FINRA Rule 9520
Series (Eligibility Proceedings) to
require a member firm that files an
application to continue associating with
a disqualified person under Rule
9522(a)(3) or 9522(b)(1)(B) to also
include an interim plan of heightened
supervision that would be in effect
throughout the entirety of the
application review process.19 The
proposed amendments would delineate
the circumstances under which a
statutorily disqualified individual may
remain associated with a FINRA
member while FINRA is reviewing the
application.
As background, brokers who have
engaged in the types of misconduct
specified in the Exchange Act’s
statutory disqualification provisions
must undergo special review by FINRA
before they are permitted to re-enter or
continue working in the securities
industry. In conducting its review,
FINRA seeks to exclude brokers who
pose a risk of recidivism from reentering or continuing in the securities
business, subject to the limits developed
in SEC case law.
As a general framework, the Exchange
Act sets out the types of misconduct
that presumptively exclude brokers
from engaging in the securities business,
identified as statutory
disqualifications.20 These statutory
disqualifications are the result of actions
against a broker taken by a regulator or
court based on a finding of serious
misconduct that calls into question the
integrity of the broker, and include,
among other things, any felony and
certain misdemeanors for a period of ten
years from the date of conviction;
expulsions or bars (and current
suspensions) from membership or
participation in a self-regulatory
organization; bars (and current
suspensions) ordered by the SEC,
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission or other appropriate
regulatory agency or authority; willful
violations of the federal securities and
19 In Regulatory Notice 18–16 (April 2018),
FINRA originally proposed the amendments
discussed in this section as amendments to FINRA
Rule 9523.
20 Section 3(a)(39) of the Exchange Act defines the
circumstances when a person is subject to a
‘‘statutory disqualification.’’
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commodities laws or MSRB rules;
permanent or temporary injunctions
from acting in certain capacities; and
certain final orders of a state securities
commission.
The Exchange Act and SEC rules
thereunder establish a framework
within which FINRA evaluates whether
to allow an individual who is subject to
a statutory disqualification to associate
with a member firm.21 A member firm
that seeks to employ or continue the
employment of a disqualified individual
must file an application seeking
approval from FINRA (‘‘SD
Application’’).22 The Rule 9520 Series
sets forth rules governing eligibility
proceedings, in which FINRA evaluates
whether to allow a member, person
associated with a member, potential
member or potential associated person
subject to a statutory disqualification to
enter or remain in the securities
industry. A member firm’s SD
Application to associate with, or
continue associating with, a disqualified
person is subject to careful scrutiny by
FINRA to review whether the
individual’s association with the
member firm is in the public interest
and does not create an unreasonable risk
or harm to the market or investors. To
determine whether the SD Application
will be approved or denied, FINRA
takes into account factors that include
the nature and gravity of the
disqualifying event; the length of time
that has elapsed since the disqualifying
event and any intervening misconduct
occurring since; the regulatory history of
the disqualified individual, the firm and
individuals who will act as supervisors;
the potential for future regulatory
problems; the precise nature of the
securities-related activities proposed in
the SD Application; and any proposed
plan of heightened supervision.23
21 See 15 U.S.C. 78o-3(g)(2) (‘‘A registered
securities association may, and in cases in which
the Commission, by order, directs as necessary or
appropriate in the public interest or for the
protection of investors shall, deny membership to
any registered broker or dealer, and bar from
becoming associated with a member any person,
who is subject to a statutory disqualification.’’); see
also 17 CFR 240.19h–1.
22 See General Information on FINRA’s Eligibility
Requirements, https://www.finra.org/industry/
general-information-finras-eligibility-requirements.
23 FINRA’s review of many SD Applications also
is governed by the standards set forth in Paul
Edward Van Dusen, 47 S.E.C. 668 (1981), and
Arthur H. Ross, 50 S.E.C. 1082 (1992). These
standards provide that in situations where an
individual’s misconduct has already been
addressed by the SEC or FINRA, and certain
sanctions have been imposed for such misconduct,
FINRA should not consider the individual’s
underlying misconduct when it evaluates an SD
Application. In Van Dusen, the SEC stated that
when the period of time specified in the sanction
has passed, in the absence of ‘‘new information
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If FINRA recommends approval of the
SD Application, the recommendation is
submitted either directly to the SEC for
its review or to the NAC and ultimately
to the SEC for their reviews and
approvals, as applicable. If FINRA
recommends denial of the SD
Application, the member firm has the
right to a hearing before a panel of the
Statutory Disqualification Committee
and the opportunity to demonstrate why
the SD Application should be
approved.24 If the NAC denies the SD
Application, the member firm can
appeal the decision to the SEC and,
thereafter, a federal court of appeals.25
Currently, as part of an SD
Application, a member firm will
propose a written plan of heightened
supervision of the statutorily
disqualified person that would become
effective upon approval by FINRA of the
SD Application to associate with the
statutorily disqualified person.26 A
heightened supervisory plan must be
acceptable to FINRA, and FINRA will
reject any plan that is not specifically
tailored to address the individual’s prior
reflecting adversely on [the applicant’s] ability to
function in his proposed employment in a manner
consonant with the public interest,’’ it is
inconsistent with the remedial purposes of the
Exchange Act and unfair to deny an application for
re-entry. 47 S.E.C. at 671. The SEC also noted in
Van Dusen, however, that an applicant’s re-entry is
not ‘‘to be granted automatically’’ after the
expiration of a given time period. Id. Instead, the
SEC instructed FINRA to consider other factors,
such as: (1) ‘‘other misconduct in which the
applicant may have engaged’’; (2) ‘‘the nature and
disciplinary history of a prospective employer’’;
and (3) ‘‘the supervision to be accorded the
applicant.’’ Id. Further, in Ross, the SEC established
a narrow exception to the rule that FINRA confine
its analysis to ‘‘new information.’’ 50 S.E.C. at 1085.
The S.E.C. stated that FINRA could consider the
conduct underlying a disqualifying order if an
applicant’s later misconduct was so similar that it
formed a ‘‘significant pattern.’’ Id. at 1085 n.10.
24 The hearing panel considers evidence and
other matters in the record and makes a written
recommendation on the SD Application to the
Statutory Disqualification Committee. See Rule
9524(a)(10). The Statutory Disqualification
Committee, in turn, recommends a decision to the
NAC, which issues a written decision to the
member firm that filed the SD Application. See
Rules 9524(a)(10), 9524(b).
25 Approximately 73.5 percent of the SD
Applications filed during 2013–2018 were either
denied by FINRA, withdrawn because the applicant
expected FINRA would recommend denial of its
application, or closed because the SD Application
was not required by operation of law.
Approximately 12.5 percent were approved. FINRA
approval sometimes resulted from legal principles,
including those embodied in the Exchange Act and
in case law, as noted above, which limits FINRA’s
discretion to deny an application. The remaining 14
percent of the SD Applications are pending.
26 See General Information on FINRA’s Eligibility
Requirements, https://www.finra.org/industry/
general-information-finras-eligibility-requirements
(explaining that ‘‘in virtually every application that
the NAC approves, it will do so subject to the
applicant member’s agreement to implement a
special supervisory plan’’).
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misconduct and mitigate the risk of
future misconduct. In this regard,
FINRA’s primary consideration is a
heightened supervisory plan carefully
constructed to best ensure investor
protection.
Despite the fact that FINRA will
generally not approve an SD
Application that lacks an acceptable
plan of heightened supervision, there is
currently no requirement under FINRA
rules that firms place statutorily
disqualified individuals whom they
employ on interim heightened
supervision while an SD Application is
pending. However, the proposed
amendments to Rule 9522 would
establish this requirement, consistent
with existing FINRA guidance.27
Specifically, proposed Rule 9522(f)
would require that an application to
continue associating with a statutorily
disqualified person must include an
interim plan of heightened supervision
and a written representation from the
member firm that the statutorily
disqualified person is currently subject
to that plan. The proposed rule would
require that the interim plan of
heightened supervision comply with
Rule 3110 and be reasonably designed
and tailored to include specific
supervisory policies and procedures
that address any regulatory concerns
related to the nature of the
disqualification, the nature of the firm’s
business, and the disqualified person’s
current and proposed activities during
the review process. The proposed rule
also would require that the SD
Application identify an appropriately
registered principal responsible for
carrying out the interim plan of
heightened supervision, and that the
responsible principal sign the plan and
acknowledge his or her responsibility
for implementing and maintaining it.
The interim plan of heightened
supervision would be in effect
throughout the entirety of the SD
Application review process, which
would conclude only upon the final
resolution of the eligibility proceeding.
Proposed Rule 9522(g) would
authorize Member Regulation to reject
an SD Application filed pursuant to
27 FINRA has reminded member firms of their
obligation to tailor the firm’s supervisory systems
to account for brokers with a history of industry or
regulatory-related incidents, including disciplinary
actions. And specifically as to disqualified persons,
FINRA has stated that a firm’s continuing to
associate with a person who becomes disqualified
while associated with the firm raises significant
investor protection concerns, and that such a firm
should evaluate the facts and circumstances to
make a determination of whether adopting and
implementing an interim plan of heightened
supervision during the pendency of an SD
Application would be appropriate. See Regulatory
Notice 18–15 (April 2018).
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Rule 9522(a)(3) or Rule 9522(b)(1)(B)
that seeks the continued association of
a disqualified person if it determines
that the application is substantially
incomplete—either because it does not
include a reasonably designed interim
plan of heightened supervision or
because it does not include a written
representation that the disqualified
person is currently subject to that plan.
The sponsoring firm would have ten
days after service of the notice of
delinquency, or such other time as
prescribed by Member Regulation, to
remedy the SD Application.
Under proposed Rule 9522(h), if an
applicant firm fails to remedy an SD
Application that is substantially
incomplete, Member Regulation would
provide written notice of its
determination to reject the SD
Application and its reasons for so doing,
and FINRA would refund the
application fee, less $1,000, which
FINRA would retain as a processing fee.
Upon such rejection of the SD
Application, the applicant firm would
be required to promptly terminate
association with the disqualified
person.28
The proposed amendments to Rule
9522 would apply to SD Applications
that are filed on or after the effective
date of the proposed rule amendments.
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Proposed Amendments to FINRA Rule
8312
Rule 8312 (FINRA BrokerCheck
Disclosure) governs the information
FINRA releases to the public through its
BrokerCheck system.29 BrokerCheck
helps investors make informed choices
about the brokers and member firms
with which they conduct business by
providing extensive registration and
disciplinary history to investors at no
charge. FINRA requires member firms to
inform their customers of the
availability of BrokerCheck.30
Rule 8312(b) currently requires that
FINRA release information about,
among other things, whether a
particular member firm is subject to the
28 As part of its examination program, FINRA
would generally examine for compliance with
interim plans of heightened supervision established
pursuant to proposed Rule 9522(f).
29 The BrokerCheck website address is
brokercheck.finra.org.
30 See FINRA Rule 2210(d)(8) (requiring that each
of a member’s websites include a readily apparent
reference and hyperlink to BrokerCheck on the
initial web page that the member intends to be
viewed by retail investors and any other web page
that includes a professional profile of one or more
registered persons who conduct business with retail
investors); FINRA Rule 2267 (requiring members to
provide to customers the FINRA BrokerCheck
Hotline Number and a statement as to the
availability to the customer of an investor brochure
that includes information describing BrokerCheck).
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provisions of FINRA Rule 3170 (Tape
Recording of Registered Persons by
Certain Firms) (the ‘‘Taping Rule’’), but
only in response to telephonic inquiries
via the BrokerCheck toll-free telephone
listing. The Taping Rule is designed to
ensure that a member firm with a
significant number of registered persons
that previously were employed by
‘‘disciplined firms’’ 31 has specific
supervisory procedures in place to
prevent fraudulent and improper sales
practices or other customer harm.32
Under the Taping Rule, a member with
a specified percentage of registered
persons who have been associated with
disciplined firms in a registered
capacity in the last three years is
designated as a ‘‘taping firm.’’ 33
A member firm that either is notified
by FINRA or otherwise has actual
knowledge that it is a taping firm must
establish, maintain and enforce special
written procedures for supervising the
telemarketing activities of all its
31 Rule 3170(a)(2) defines a ‘‘disciplined firm’’ to
mean:
(A) A member that, in connection with sales
practices involving the offer, purchase, or sale of
any security, has been expelled from membership
or participation in any securities industry selfregulatory organization or is subject to an order of
the SEC revoking its registration as a broker-dealer;
(B) a futures commission merchant or introducing
broker that has been formally charged by either the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission or a
registered futures association with deceptive
telemarketing practices or promotional material
relating to security futures, those charges have been
resolved, and the futures commission merchant or
introducing broker has been closed down and
permanently barred from the futures industry as a
result of those charges; or
(C) a futures commission merchant or introducing
broker that, in connection with sales practices
involving the offer, purchase, or sale of security
futures is subject to an order of the SEC revoking
its registration as a broker or dealer.
32 To assist member firms in complying with Rule
3170, FINRA publishes on its website a list of
Disciplined Firms Under FINRA Taping Rule,
which identifies firms that meet the definition of
‘‘disciplined firm’’ and that were disciplined within
the last three years. As of March 31, 2020, that list
identified seven firms as ‘‘disciplined firms.’’ See
https://www.finra.org/rules-guidance/oversightenforcement/disciplinary-actions/disciplined-firmsunder-taping-rule.
33 Rule 3170(a)(5)(A) defines a ‘‘taping firm’’ to
mean:
(i) A member with at least five but fewer than ten
registered persons, where 40% or more of its
registered persons have been associated with one or
more disciplined firms in a registered capacity
within the last three years;
(ii) A member with at least ten but fewer than
twenty registered persons, where four or more of its
registered persons have been associated with one or
more disciplined firms in a registered capacity
within the last three years;
(iii) A member with at least twenty registered
persons where 20% or more of its registered
persons have been associated with one or more
disciplined firms in a registered capacity within the
last three years.
As of March 31, 2020, there is one firm that is
designated as a taping firm.
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registered persons. Those procedures
must include procedures for recording
all telephone conversations between the
taping firm’s registered persons and
both existing and potential customers,
and for reviewing the recordings to
ensure compliance with applicable
securities laws and regulations and
applicable FINRA rules. The Taping
Rule also requires taping firms to retain
all the recordings for a period of not less
than three years and file quarterly
reports with FINRA.34
To provide enhanced disclosure to the
public of information as to whether a
member firm is subject to the Taping
Rule, FINRA is proposing to delete the
requirement in Rule 8312(b) that FINRA
provide that information only in
response to telephonic inquiries via the
BrokerCheck toll-free telephone listing.
As a result, proposed Rule 8312(b)
would permit FINRA to release through
BrokerCheck information as to whether
a particular member firm is subject to
the Taping Rule.35 FINRA believes that
broadening the disclosure through
BrokerCheck of the status of a member
firm as a taping firm will help inform
more investors of the heightened
procedures required of the firm, which
may incent the investors to research
more carefully the background of a
broker associated with the taping firm.
Proposed Amendments to the FINRA
Rule 1000 Series to Impose Additional
Obligations on Member Firms That
Associate With Persons With a
Significant History of Past
Misconduct 36
Current MAP Process
FINRA is proposing amendments to
the FINRA Rule 1000 Series (Member
Application and Associated Person
Registration)—specifically the rules that
govern membership proceedings (‘‘MAP
Rules’’)—to impose additional
obligations on member firms when a
natural person that has, in the prior five
years, either one or more ‘‘final criminal
matters’’ or two or more ‘‘specified risk
events’’ seeks to become an owner,
34 Rule 3170 provides member firms that trigger
application of the taping requirement a one-time
opportunity to adjust their staffing levels to fall
below the prescribed threshold levels and thus
avoid application of the Taping Rule. See Rule
3170(c).
35 See Rule 8312(a) (requiring that ‘‘[i]n response
to a written inquiry, electronic inquiry, or
telephonic inquiry via a toll-free telephonic
listing,’’ FINRA shall release through BrokerCheck
information regarding, in pertinent part, a current
or former FINRA member).
36 The text of FINRA Rules 1011, 1017 and CAB
Rule 111 incorporates the changes approved by the
SEC in Securities Exchange Act Release No. 88482
(March 26, 2020), 85 FR 18299 (April 1, 2020)
(Order Approving File No. SR–FINRA–2019–030)
(‘‘MAP Rules Amendment Release’’).
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control person, principal or registered
person of the member.
Reviewing CMAs is one of the ways
FINRA seeks to address the risks posed
by brokers with a significant history of
misconduct. Rule 1017 specifies the
changes in a member’s ownership,
control or business operations that
require a CMA and FINRA’s approval.37
Among the events that require a CMA
are a ‘‘material change in business
operations,’’ which is defined to
include: (1) Removing or modifying a
membership agreement restriction; (2)
market making, underwriting or acting
as a dealer for the first time; and (3)
adding business activities that require a
higher minimum net capital under SEA
Rule 15c3–1.38 In addition, a CMA is
required for business expansions to
increase the number of ‘‘associated
persons involved in sales,’’ offices, or
markets made that are a material change
in business operations.39 However, IM–
1011–1 (Safe Harbor for Business
Expansions) creates a safe harbor for
incremental increases in these three
categories of business expansions.
37 See Rule 1017(a). The events that require a
member to file a CMA for approval before effecting
the proposed event are:
(1) A merger of the member with another
member, unless both members are members of the
New York Stock Exchange, Inc. (‘‘NYSE’’) or the
surviving entity will continue to be a member of the
NYSE;
(2) a direct or indirect acquisition by the member
of another member, unless the acquiring member is
a member of the NYSE;
(3) direct or indirect acquisitions or transfers of
25 percent or more in the aggregate of the member’s
assets or any asset, business or line of operation that
generates revenues composing 25 percent or more
in the aggregate of the member’s earnings measured
on a rolling 36-month basis, unless both the seller
and acquirer are members of the NYSE;
(4) a change in the equity ownership or
partnership capital of the member that results in
one person or entity directly or indirectly owning
or controlling 25 percent or more of the equity or
partnership capital; or
(5) a material change in business operations as
defined in Rule 1011.
In addition, Rule 1017(a)(6) mandates a member
firm to seek a materiality consultation in two
situations in which specified pending arbitration
claims, unpaid arbitration awards, or unpaid
arbitration settlements are involved. See MAP Rules
Amendment Release.
38 See Rules 1011(l), 1017(a)(5). Rule 1011(l) sets
forth a non-exhaustive list of events that are
material changes in business operations. FINRA
also has provided guidance on additional criteria
member firms should take into consideration when
assessing the materiality of a proposed change. See
Notice to Members 00–73 (October 2000). A
member may file an application for approval of a
material change in business operations at any time,
but the member may not effect such change until
the conclusion of the proceeding, unless Member
Regulation and the member otherwise agree. See
Rule 1017(c)(3).
39 See Rule 1017(b)(2)(C) (‘‘If the application
requests approval of an increase in Associated
Persons involved in sales, offices, or markets made,
the application shall set forth the increases in such
areas during the preceding 12 months.’’).
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Under this safe harbor provision, a
member, subject to specified conditions
and thresholds, may undergo such
business expansions without filing a
CMA.40 One such expansion is an
increase, within the parameters set forth
in IM–1011–1, in the number of
‘‘associated persons involved in
sales.’’ 41
In determining whether to approve a
CMA, Member Regulation, through the
MAP Group (collectively, ‘‘the
Department’’), evaluates whether the
applicant and its associated persons
meet each of the standards for
admission in FINRA Rule 1014(a) and
whether the applicant would continue
to meet those standards upon approval
of the CMA.42 The Department evaluates
an applicant’s financial, operational,
supervisory and compliance systems to
ensure that each applicant meets these
standards for admission.
One of the standards, Rule 1014(a)(3),
requires an applicant to demonstrate
that it and its associated persons are
capable of complying with the federal
securities laws and FINRA rules,
including observing high standards of
commercial honor and just and
equitable principles of trade. When the
Department evaluates the Rule
1014(a)(3) standard, it takes into
consideration, among other things,
whether persons associated with an
applicant are the subject of disciplinary
actions taken against them by industry
authorities, criminal actions, civil
actions, arbitrations, customer
complaints, remedial actions or other
industry-related matters that could pose
a threat to public investors.43 Some of
these matters are considered whether
they are adjudicated, settled or
pending.44 Some of these events are so
material that, when they exist, a
40 The safe harbor is unavailable to a member that
has a membership agreement that contains a
specific restriction as to one or more of the three
areas of expansion or to a member that has a
‘‘disciplinary history’’ as defined in IM–1011–1.
The safe harbor also is not available to any member
that is seeking to add one or more ‘‘associated
persons involved in sales’’ and one or more of those
associated persons has a ‘‘covered pending
arbitration claim,’’ an unpaid arbitration award or
unpaid settlement related to an arbitration. See
MAP Rules Amendment Release.
41 For eligible firms, IM–1011–1 permits a firm
that has one to ten ‘‘associated persons involved in
sales’’ to increase that number by ten persons
within a one-year period, and a firm that has 11 or
more ‘‘associated persons involved in sales’’ to
increase that number by ten persons or 30 percent,
whichever is greater, within a one-year period. See
IM–1011–1.
42 See Rule 1017(h)(1) and (h)(1)(A).
43 See Rule 1014(a)(3).
44 See Rule 1014(a)(3).
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presumption exists that the CMA should
be denied.45
Although firms with a ‘‘disciplinary
history’’ as defined by IM–1011–1 are
not eligible to use the safe harbor, none
of the safe harbor’s parameters relates to
the history of a member firm’s
associated persons. Given the recent
studies that provide evidence of the
predictability of future regulatoryrelated events for brokers with a history
of past regulatory-related events, FINRA
is concerned about instances where a
member on-boards associated persons
with a significant history of misconduct
and does so within the safe-harbor
parameters, thus avoiding prior
consultation or review by FINRA.
FINRA believes there are instances in
which a member firm’s hiring of an
associated person with a significant
history of misconduct—and other
associations with such persons—would
reflect a material change in business
operations.
➢Proposed Rule 1017(a)(7) To Require
Materiality Consultations
The proposed amendments to the
MAP Rules would seek to address this
concern. Proposed Rule 1017(a)(7)
would require that a member firm,
notwithstanding Rule 1017(a)(3),46
(a)(4),47 (a)(5) 48 and (a)(6) 49 and IM–
1011–1,50 file a CMA when a natural
person seeking to become an owner,
control person, principal or registered
person of a member has, in the prior five
years, one or more ‘‘final criminal
matters’’ or two or more ‘‘specified risk
events’’—as further explained below—
unless the member has submitted a
45 See Rule 1017(h) (‘‘Where the Department
determines that the Applicant or its Associated
Person are the subject of any of the events set forth
in Rule 1014(a)(3)(A) and (C) through (E), a
presumption exists that the application should be
denied.’’).
46 Rule 1017(a)(3) requires a member to file a
CMA for approval of direct or indirect acquisitions
or transfers of 25 percent or more in the aggregate
of the member’s assets or any asset, business or line
of operation that generates revenues composing 25
percent or more in the aggregate of the member’s
earnings measured on a rolling 36-month basis,
unless both the seller and acquirer are members of
the New York Stock Exchange, Inc. The reference
to Rule 1017(a)(3) in proposed Rule 1017(a)(7)
reflects a change from the proposal in Regulatory
Notice 18–16.
47 Rule 1017(a)(4) requires a member to file a
CMA for approval of a change in the equity
ownership or partnership capital of the member
that results in one person or entity directly or
indirectly owning or controlling 25 percent or more
of the equity or partnership capital.
48 Rule 1017(a)(5) requires a member to file a
CMA for approval of a ‘‘material change in business
operations.’’
49 See MAP Rules Amendment Release.
50 The reference to IM–1011–1 in proposed Rule
1017(a)(7) reflects a change from the proposal in
Regulatory Notice 18–16.
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written request to the Department
seeking a materiality consultation for
the contemplated activity. Rule
1017(a)(7) would further provide,
however, that Rule 1017(a)(7) would not
apply when the member is required to
file an SD Application or written
request for relief pursuant to Rule 9522
for approval of the same contemplated
association.51 Proposed Rule 1017(a)(7)
also would contain requirements for the
request seeking a materiality
consultation and the Department’s
review and determination, including a
description of the possible outcomes of
FINRA’s determination on a materiality
consultation.
Proposed Rule 1017(a)(7) also would
establish that the safe harbor for
business expansions in IM–1011–1
would not be available to the member
firm when a materiality consultation is
required under proposed Rule
1017(a)(7). In a corresponding change,
proposed IM–1011–3 (Business
Expansions and Persons with Specified
Risk Events) would provide that the safe
harbor for business expansions in IM–
1011–1 would not be available to any
member that is seeking to add a natural
person who has, in the prior five years,
one or more ‘‘final criminal matters’’ or
two or more ‘‘specified risk events’’ and
seeks to become an owner, control
person, principal or registered person of
the member. Proposed IM–1011–3
would further provide, in those
circumstances, that if the member is not
otherwise required to file a CMA, the
member must comply with the
requirements of proposed Rule
1017(a)(7).52 Proposed Rule 1017(a)(7)
and proposed IM–1011–3 would not
apply when a person is already a
principal at a member firm and seeks to
add an additional principal registration
at that same firm. In that instance, the
proposed rule amendments would not
require a materiality consultation.
Currently, FINRA has a voluntary
materiality consultation process.53 As
51 In that event, the member firm would be
required to obtain FINRA’s approval to associate or
continue associating with the disqualified person
pursuant to the FINRA Rule 9520 Series, but it
would not also be required to request a materiality
consultation or file a CMA pursuant to proposed
Rule 1017(a)(7). The Member Regulation staff that
considers the SD Application may consult with the
MAP Group, as appropriate.
52 FINRA has modified the language in proposed
Rule 1017(a)(7) and IM–1011–3 from the versions
that were proposed in Regulatory Notice 18–16.
FINRA has done so for clarity and to align the
structure of these proposed rules to the changes to
the MAP Rules approved in the MAP Rules
Amendment Release.
53 See The Materiality Consultation Process for
Continuing Membership Applications, https://
www.finra.org/rules-guidance/guidance/materialityconsultation-process; see also Regulatory Notice
18–23 (July 2018).
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explained above, a member is required
to file a CMA when it plans to undergo
an event specified under Rule 1017 (e.g.,
acquisition or transfer of the member’s
assets, a business expansion). Before
taking this step, a member has the
option of seeking guidance, or a
materiality consultation, from FINRA on
whether or not such proposed event
would require a CMA.54 The materiality
consultation process is voluntary, and
FINRA has published guidelines about
this process on FINRA.org.55 A request
for a materiality consultation, for which
there is no fee, is a written request from
a member for FINRA’s determination on
whether a contemplated change in
business operations or activities is
material and would therefore require a
CMA. The characterization of a
proposed change as material depends on
an assessment of all the relevant facts
and circumstances. Through this
consultation, FINRA may communicate
with the member to obtain further
documents and information regarding
the contemplated change and its
anticipated impact on the member.
Where FINRA determines that a
contemplated change is material, FINRA
will instruct the member to file a CMA
if it intends to proceed with such
change. Ultimately, the member is
responsible for compliance with Rule
1017. If FINRA determines during the
materiality consultation that the
contemplated business change is
material, then the member potentially
could be subject to disciplinary action
for failure to file a CMA under Rule
1017.56
The proposed rule change would
establish an additional category of
mandatory materiality consultations.57
54 See IM–1011–1 (stating, ‘‘[f]or any expansion
beyond these [safe harbor] limits, a member should
contact its district office prior to implementing the
change to determine whether the proposed
expansion requires an application under Rule
1017’’); see also Notice to Members 00–73 (October
2000) (stating that ‘‘[a] member may, but is not
required to, contact the District Office to obtain
guidance on’’ whether a change and expansion that
falls outside of the safe harbor provisions is
material).
55 See The Materiality Consultation Process for
Continuing Membership Applications, https://
www.finra.org/rules-guidance/guidance/materialityconsultation-process.
56 See Notice to Members 00–73 (October 2000).
57 FINRA Rule 1017(a)(6) will mandate
materiality consultations if a member is
contemplating: (i) To add one or more ‘‘associated
persons involved in sales’’ and one or more of those
associated persons has a ‘‘covered pending
arbitration claim,’’ an unpaid arbitration award or
an unpaid settlement related to an arbitration; or (ii)
any direct or indirect acquisition or transfer of a
member’s assets or any asset, business or line of
operation where the transferring member or an
associated person of the transferring member has a
covered pending arbitration claim, an unpaid
arbitration award or an unpaid settlement related to
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The materiality consultations required
by proposed Rule 1017(a)(7) would
focus on, and the submitting member
firm would need to provide information
relating to, the conduct underlying the
individual’s ‘‘final criminal matters’’
and ‘‘specified risk events,’’ as well as
other matters relating to the subject
person, such as disciplinary actions
taken by FINRA or other industry
authorities, adverse examination
findings, customer complaints, pending
or unadjudicated matters, terminations
for cause or other incidents that could
indicate a threat to public investors. The
Department’s assessment in the
materiality consultation would
consider, among other things, whether
the events are customer-related; whether
the events represent discrete actions or
are based on the same underlying
conduct; the anticipated activities of the
person; the disciplinary history,
experience and background of the
proposed supervisor, if applicable; the
disciplinary history, supervisory
practices, standards, systems and
internal controls of the member firm
and whether they are reasonably
designed to achieve compliance with
applicable securities laws and
regulations and FINRA rules; whether
the member firm employs or intends to
employ in any capacity multiple
persons with one or more ‘‘final
criminal matters’’ or two or more
‘‘specified risk events’’ in the prior five
years; and any other investor protection
concern raised by seeking to make the
person an owner, control person,
principal or registered person of the
member firm.
➢Proposed Definitions of ‘‘Final
Criminal Matter’’ and ‘‘Specified Risk
Event’’
The terms ‘‘final criminal matter’’ and
‘‘specified risk event’’ would be defined
in proposed amendments to Rule 1011
(Definitions). Proposed Rule 1011(h)
would define the term ‘‘final criminal
matter’’ to mean a final criminal matter
that resulted in a conviction of, or guilty
plea or nolo contendere (no contest) by,
a person that is disclosed, or was
required to be disclosed, on the
applicable Uniform Registration
an arbitration, and the member is not otherwise
required to file a CMA. See MAP Rules Amendment
Release. In a separate proposal, FINRA is proposing
to mandate materiality consultations under other
circumstances. See Regulatory Notice 18–23 (July
2018) (seeking comment on a proposal to the MAP
rules that would, among other things, codify the
materiality consultation process and mandate a
consultation under specified circumstances such as
where an applicant seeks to engage in, for the first
time, retail foreign currency exchange activities,
variable life settlement sales to retail customers,
options activities or municipal securities activities).
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Forms.58 Proposed Rule 1011(p) would
define ‘‘specified risk event’’ to mean
any one of the following events that are
disclosed, or are or were required to be
disclosed, on the applicable Uniform
Registration Forms: (1) A final
investment-related,59 consumerinitiated customer arbitration award or
civil judgment against the person for a
dollar amount at or above $15,000 in
which the person was a named party; (2)
a final investment-related, consumerinitiated customer arbitration settlement
or civil litigation settlement for a dollar
amount at or above $15,000 in which
the person was a named party; (3) a final
investment-related civil action where
(A) the total monetary sanctions
(including civil and administrative
penalties or fines, disgorgement,
monetary penalties other than fines, or
restitution) were ordered for a dollar
amount at or above $15,000, or (B) the
sanction against the person was a bar,
expulsion, revocation, or suspension;
and (4) a final regulatory action where
(A) the total monetary sanctions
(including civil and administrative
penalties or fines, disgorgement,
monetary penalties other than fines, or
restitution) were ordered for a dollar
amount at or above $15,000, or (B) the
sanction against the person was a bar
(permanently or temporarily),
expulsion, rescission, revocation or
suspension from associating with a
member.
The proposed definitions and criteria
would provide transparency regarding
how the proposed rules would be
applied, as they are based on disclosure
events required to be reported on the
Uniform Registration Forms. Firms, in
general, would be able to identify the
specific set of disclosure events that
would count towards the proposed
criteria and, using available data,
determine independently whether a
proposed association with an individual
would require a materiality
consultation.60
58 Proposed Rule 1011(r) would define ‘‘Uniform
Registration Forms’’ to mean the Uniform
Application for Broker-Dealer Registration (Form
BD), the Uniform Application for Securities
Industry Registration or Transfer (Form U4), the
Uniform Termination Notice for Securities Industry
Registration (Form U5) and the Uniform
Disciplinary Action Reporting Form (Form U6), as
such may be amended or any successor(s) thereto.
59 The Form U4 Explanation of Terms defines the
term ‘‘investment-related’’ as pertaining to
securities, commodities, banking, insurance, or real
estate (including, but not limited to, acting as or
being associated with a broker-dealer, issuer,
investment company, investment adviser, futures
sponsor, bank, or savings association).
60 The exceptions are that the Uniform
Registration Forms do not provide information
about customer awards or judgments against, or
customer settlements with, control affiliates who
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In addition, as explained more below
in the Economic Impact Assessment,
FINRA developed the proposed criteria
and definitions with significant
attention to the economic trade-off
between including individuals who are
less likely to subsequently pose risk of
harm to customers, and not including
individuals who are more likely to
subsequently pose risk of harm to
customers.
FINRA believes the proposed
amendments to the Rule 1000 Series
would further promote investor
protection by applying stronger
standards for continuing membership
with FINRA and for changes to a current
member firm’s ownership, control or
business operations.
If the Commission approves the
proposed rule change, FINRA will
announce the effective date of the
proposed rule change in a Regulatory
Notice to be published no later than 90
days following Commission approval.
The effective date will be no later than
180 days following publication of the
Regulatory Notice announcing
Commission approval.61
2. Statutory Basis
FINRA believes that the proposed rule
change is consistent with the provisions
of Section 15A(b)(6) of the Act,62 which
requires, among other things, that
FINRA rules must be designed to
prevent fraudulent and manipulative
acts and practices, to promote just and
equitable principles of trade, and, in
general, to protect investors and the
public interest. The proposed rule
change is designed to protect investors
and the public interest by strengthening
the tools available to FINRA to address
the risks posed by brokers with a
significant history of misconduct and
the firms that employ them. Allowing
Hearing Officers to impose tailored
conditions and restrictions on
respondents after the finding of a
violation, and requiring firms to place
disciplined respondent brokers with
have not filed a Form U4. For those events, firms
would have to gather that information directly from
the person.
61 FINRA notes that the proposed rule change
would impact all members, including members that
are funding portals or have elected to be treated as
capital acquisition brokers (‘‘CABs’’), given that the
funding portal rule set incorporates the Rule 9200
Series and Rule 9300 Series and Rule 9556 by
reference, and the CAB rule set incorporates Rules
1011, 1017 and 8312 and the Rule 9200 Series, Rule
9300 Series and Rule 9500 Series by reference. In
addition, FINRA is proposing corresponding
amendments to CAB Rule 111, to reflect that a CAB
would be subject to IM–1011–3, and amendments
to Funding Portal Rule 900(b) to require heightened
supervision during the time an eligibility request is
pending.
62 15 U.S.C. 78o–3(b)(6).
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whom they associate under mandatory
heightened supervision during the
pendency of an appeal or a review
proceeding, would create strong
measures of deterrence while an appeal
or review proceeding is pending and
while the sanctions imposed have not
yet taken effect. Likewise, requiring
firms to place disqualified persons on
interim plan of heightened supervision
while an SD Application is pending
would require that a fundamental
investor protection measure—almost
always required at firms that FINRA, as
part of the eligibility proceedings
process, permits to associate with
disqualified persons—be established at
an earlier point in time and thereby
limit the potential for harm to the
public. Broadening the disclosure
through BrokerCheck of the status of a
member firm as a taping firm, beyond
only telephonic BrokerCheck inquiries,
will inform more investors of the
heightened procedures required of the
taping firm, and thereby incent
investors to research carefully the
background of a broker associated with
the taping firm. Finally, requiring
member firms to seek materiality
consultations when a person seeking to
become an owner, control person,
principal or registered person has a
significant history of misconduct will
give FINRA an opportunity to assess
whether the proposed association is
material and warrants closer regulatory
scrutiny and, further, may create
incentives for changes in behavior by
both brokers and the firms that employ
them. In situations where the proposed
association of a person with a
significant history of misconduct would
require a CMA, FINRA would then be
able to assess, if the firm still seeks to
proceed, whether the member firm
would continue to meet all the Rule
1014 membership standards if the
proposed association were approved
and prevent the proposed association if
it would not continue to meet those
standards.63
As such, the proposed rule change
will help address concerns regarding
brokers with a significant history of
misconduct in situations where risks for
potential further harm to investors may
exist, particularly when such
individuals concentrate at a firm or are
able to move readily from firm to firm.
The proposed additional obligations on
such brokers and the increased scrutiny
by the firms that employ them, should
create incentives for brokers and firms
to change activities and behaviors to
mitigate FINRA’s concerns.
63 See
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B. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on Competition
FINRA does not believe that the
proposed rule change will result in any
burden on competition that is not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purposes of the Act.
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Economic Impact Assessment
FINRA has undertaken an economic
impact assessment, as set forth below, to
analyze the regulatory need for the
proposed rulemaking, its potential
economic impacts, including
anticipated benefits and costs, and the
alternatives FINRA considered in
assessing how to best meet its regulatory
objectives.
(a) Regulatory Need
FINRA uses a number of measures to
deter and discipline misconduct by
brokers and the firms that employ them.
These measures span across several
FINRA programs, including statutory
disqualification processes, review of
membership applications, disclosure of
brokers’ regulatory backgrounds,
supervision requirements, focused
examinations, risk monitoring and
disciplinary actions.
Nonetheless, some brokers, while
relatively small in number, may
continue to present heightened risk of
harm to investors and act in ways that
could harm their customers—sometimes
substantially. Any misconduct by these
brokers may also undermine confidence
in the securities markets as a whole. For
example, recent studies provide
evidence on predictability of future
regulatory-related events for brokers
with a history of past regulatory-related
events such as repeated disciplinary
actions, arbitrations and customer
complaints.64
Brokers with a history of misconduct
can pose a particular challenge to
FINRA’s existing programs, such as
FINRA examination and enforcement
programs. For example, while the
FINRA examination program can
identify compliance failures and
prescribe remedies to be taken,
examiners are not empowered to require
individuals to make changes to or limit
their activities in a particular manner.
While these constraints on the
examination process protect against
potentially arbitrary or overly onerous
examination findings, an individual
with a history of misconduct can take
advantage of these limitations to
continue ongoing activities that harm or
pose risk of harm to investors until they
result in an enforcement action.
Likewise, enforcement actions can take
64 See
supra note 5.
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significant time to develop, prosecute
and conclude, during which time the
individual is able to continue
misconduct.
Furthermore, although FINRA has
adopted rules that impose supervisory
obligations on firms to ensure they are
appropriately supervising their brokers’
activities, some firms do not effectively
carry out these supervisory obligations
to ensure compliance. This is consistent
with some recent academic studies,
which find that some firms persistently
employ brokers who engage in
misconduct, and that misconduct can be
concentrated at these firms, suggesting
that some firms may not be acting
appropriately as a first line of defense to
prevent customer harm.65
Therefore, without additional
protections, the risk of potential
customer harm may continue to exist at
firms that employ brokers that have a
significant number of regulatory-related
events and that fail to effectively carry
out their supervisory obligations. The
proposals are designed to further
promote investor protection by
mitigating these concerns while
preserving principles of fairness.
(b) Economic Baseline
The following provides the economic
baseline for each of the current
proposals. These baselines serve as the
primary points of comparison for
assessing economic impacts, including
incremental benefits and costs of the
proposed rule amendments. For this
proposal, FINRA reviewed and analyzed
relevant data over the 2013–2018 period
(review period).
1. Proposed Amendments to the FINRA
Rule 9200 Series and FINRA Rule 9300
Series
The economic baseline used to
evaluate the economic impacts of the
proposed rule changes to the Rule 9200
Series and Rule 9300 Series is the
current regulatory framework under
these rules.66 FINRA analyzed
disciplinary matters that were appealed
to the NAC over the review period that
reached a final decision by the NAC.67
During the review period, there were
65 For example, see Mark Egan, Gregor Matvos, &
Amit Seru, The Market for Financial Adviser
Misconduct, J. Pol. Econ. 127, no. 1 (Feb. 2019):
233–295.
66 The proposal also includes corresponding
amendments to Rule 9556.
67 This analysis included all NAC appeals
(including calls for NAC review) filed during the
review period that reached a final decision by May
1, 2019. The analysis includes all NAC decisions,
including affirmations, modifications or reversals of
the findings in the disciplinary matters. The
analysis excludes appeals that were withdrawn
prior to the resolution of the appeal process.
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approximately 20 such appeals filed
each year, of which approximately 80
percent were filed by brokers, five
percent were filed by firms, and the
remaining 15 percent were filed jointly
by brokers and firms.68 FINRA
determined that, on average, these
disciplinary decisions were on appeal to
the NAC for approximately 15
months.69
2. Proposed Amendments to the FINRA
Rule 9520 Series
The economic baseline used to
evaluate the economic impacts of the
proposed rule changes to the Rule 9520
Series is the current regulatory
framework under these rules. FINRA
analyzed SD Applications filed during
the review period and determined that
there were 80 SD Applications filed by
71 firms for 79 individuals, or
approximately 13 applications that were
filed by 12 firms each year.70
Approximately 65 percent of these
applications were filed by small firms,
12 percent were filed by mid-size firms,
and 23 percent were filed by large
firms.71 FINRA also examined the
resolution of these applications and
determined that approximately 12.5
percent of the SD Applications were
approved, 11 percent were denied, 14
percent were pending during the review
period, and the remaining applications
(62.5 percent) did not require a
resolution because the statutorily
disqualified individual’s registration
with the filing firm was terminated or
the SD Application was subsequently
withdrawn.72 FINRA determined that,
on average, the processing time for an
SD Application that reached a final
68 FINRA further estimates that approximately 94
percent of the appeals filed by brokers involved one
broker, and the remaining six percent involved two
brokers. All the appeals filed by firms were
associated with one firm.
69 The median processing time was
approximately 14 months, while the 25th and the
75th percentiles were approximately 11 months and
19 months, respectively.
70 One of these 79 individuals was associated
with multiple SD Applications over the review
period. Of the 71 firms that filed SD Applications,
approximately 90 percent filed one application
during the review period, and the remaining 10
percent filed two or more applications.
71 FINRA defines a small firm as a member with
at least one and no more than 150 registered
persons, a mid-size firm as a member with at least
151 and no more than 499 registered persons, and
a large firm as a member with 500 or more
registered persons. See FINRA By-Laws, Article I.
72 In approximately 21 percent of the SD
Applications, the application was withdrawn
because the decision leading to the disqualifying
event was overturned, thus the individual was no
longer subject to a statutory disqualification, or
because the sanctions were no longer in effect.
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resolution (i.e., an approval or a denial)
was approximately 15 months.73
3. Proposed Amendments to FINRA
Rule 8312
The economic baseline used to
evaluate the economic impacts of the
proposed rule changes to Rule 8312
(FINRA BrokerCheck Disclosure) is the
current regulatory framework under
Rules 8312 and 3170. During the review
period, FINRA determined that 17 firms
hired or retained enough registered
persons from previously disciplined
firms to be designated as a ‘‘taping firm’’
under Rule 3170 and were notified
about their status during this period. All
of these firms were small firms with an
average size of approximately 40
registered persons. Of these 17 firms, 12
firms did not become subject to the
rule’s recording requirements because
they either took advantage of the onetime staff-reduction opportunity in Rule
3170(c) or terminated their FINRA
membership, and one firm was granted
an exemption pursuant to Rule 3170(d).
As a result, only four of the firms
designated as ‘‘taping firms’’ became
subject to the recording requirements of
Rule 3170.
4. Proposed Amendments to the FINRA
Rule 1000 Series
The economic baseline used to
evaluate the economic impacts of the
proposed rule changes to the MAP Rules
is the current regulatory framework
under these rules. The proposed rule
change would directly impact
individuals with one or more final
criminal matters or two or more
specified risk events within the prior
five years, who seek to become owners,
control persons, principals or registered
persons of a member firm. The criteria
used for identifying individuals under
this proposal and the number of
individuals meeting the proposed
criteria are discussed below.
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(c) Economic Impacts
The following provides the economic
impacts, including the anticipated
benefits and costs for each of the current
proposals.
1. Proposed Amendments to the FINRA
Rule 9200 Series and FINRA Rule 9300
Series
The proposed rule amendments
would directly impact firms and brokers
whose disciplinary matters are on
appeal to, or review by, the NAC. These
impacts would vary across appeals and
73 The median processing time was
approximately 14 months, and the 25th and the
75th percentiles were approximately 10 months and
19 months, respectively.
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depend on, among other factors, the
nature and severity of the conditions or
restrictions imposed on the activities of
respondents. As discussed above, the
scope of these conditions or restrictions
would depend on what the Hearing
Officer determines to be reasonably
necessary for the purpose of preventing
customer harm. Further, the conditions
and restrictions would be tailored to the
specific risks posed by the brokers or
firms during the appeal period.
Accordingly, the conditions and
restrictions are not intended to rise to
the level of the underlying sanctions
and would likely not be economically
equivalent to imposing the sanctions
during the appeal. In addition,
respondents will be able to seek
expedited reviews of orders imposing
conditions or restrictions.
Anticipated Benefits
The primary benefit of this proposal
accrues from limiting the potential risk
of continued harm to customers by
respondents during the appeal period by
imposing conditions or restrictions on
their activities, and requiring them to be
subject to heightened supervision plans,
while their disciplinary matter is on
appeal. In order to evaluate these
benefits and assess the potential risk
posed by brokers during the appeal
period, FINRA examined cases that
were appealed to the NAC during 2013–
2016 and determined whether the
brokers associated with an appeal to the
NAC had a new disclosure event—for
this analysis, a final criminal matter or
a specified risk event, as defined
above—at any time from the filing of the
appeal through the year-end after the
year in which the appeal reached a
decision.74 Based on this analysis,
FINRA estimates that 21 of the 75
brokers who appealed to the NAC
during the 2013–2016 period were
associated with a total of 28 disclosure
events that occurred during the
interstitial period after the filing of their
appeal to the NAC.75 FINRA anticipates
74 In making these calculations, FINRA based its
analysis on the occurrence of disclosure events as
used in proposed IM–1011–3 and Rule 1017(a)(7).
The analysis includes events that occurred and
reached a resolution between the NAC appeal year
and a year after the NAC decision year to allow
sufficient time for events that occurred during the
pendency of NAC to reach a resolution.
Accordingly, the sample period for this analysis is
based on appeals filed during the 2013–2016
period, instead of the full review period (2013–
2018).
75 These estimates are based on appeals filed by
brokers, or jointly filed by brokers and firms, and
excludes appeals that were filed only by firms.
These estimates likely underrepresent the overall
risk of customer harm posed by these brokers,
because they are based on a specific set of events
and outcomes used for classifying brokers for the
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that the proposed heightened
supervision requirement and the
conditions or restrictions placed on the
activities of these brokers would lead to
greater oversight of their activities by
their firm during the appeal period,
thereby reducing the potential risk of
future customer harm during this
period.76
Anticipated Costs
The costs of this proposal would
primarily fall upon brokers or firms
whose activities during the appeal
period would be subject to the specific
conditions or restrictions imposed by
the Hearing Officer.77 In addition, firms
would incur costs associated with
implementing heightened supervision
for brokers while their disciplinary
matters are under appeal. These costs
would likely vary significantly across
firms and could increase if the broker
acts in a principal capacity. For
example, firms employing disciplined
respondents who serve as principals,
executive managers or owners, or who
operate in other senior capacities,
would likely assume higher costs in
developing and implementing tailored
supervisory plans. Such plans may
entail re-assignments of responsibilities,
restructuring within senior management
and leadership, and more complex
oversight and governance approaches.
These potential costs, in turn, may
result in some brokers voluntarily
leaving the industry rather than waiting
for the resolution of the appeal
process.78
The costs associated with this
proposal would apply to brokers and
their employing member firms while the
brokers are employed during the
pendency of the NAC appeals (the
average processing time of which is 15
months) and any subsequent appeals.79
proposed amendments to the MAP Rules. In
addition, these brokers had other disclosure events
after their appeal was filed, and some of these other
events may also be associated with risk of customer
harm.
76 FINRA also anticipates that the proposed
changes to Rule 9556, which will establish an
expedited proceeding for failures to comply with
conditions or restrictions, will help ensure that the
firms will comply with the conditions and
restrictions imposed.
77 Brokers and firms that choose to defend against
motions for conditions and restrictions and that
pursue expedited reviews of orders imposing
conditions or restrictions would incur additional
costs associated with these reviews.
78 The proposal may also impose costs on issuers
in limited instances where a firm is enjoined from
participating in a private placement and the issuer
is especially reliant on that firm. The private issuer
may incur search costs to find a replacement firm
or individual and incur other direct and indirect
costs associated with the offering.
79 FINRA has no estimate for the time associated
with subsequent appeals.
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Many broker-appellants, however, are
not employed with any member firms
when their NAC appeal is filed or leave
shortly after the appeal is filed. FINRA
examined the employment history,
including employment start and end
dates, of the 131 brokers 80 associated
with NAC appeals during the review
period, and estimates that 54 of them (or
41 percent) were not employed by any
member firm during the appeal process,
33 of them (or 25 percent) were
employed by a member firm only for
part of the appeal process, and 44 of
them (or 34 percent) were employed by
a member firm throughout the appeal
process.
FINRA notes that consistent with
existing FINRA guidance, some firms
may have already established
heightened supervision of individuals
while their disciplinary matters are on
appeal.81 The existing heightened
supervision plans may address all, some
or none of the conditions or restrictions
imposed by the Hearing Panel Officer.
Accordingly, for these firms the
anticipated costs of this proposal may
be lower.
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Other Economic Impacts
In developing the proposal, FINRA
considered the possibility that, in some
cases, this proposal may limit activities
of brokers and firms, while their
disciplinary matter is under appeal, in
instances where the restricted activities
do not pose a risk to customers. In such
cases, these brokers and firms may lose
economic opportunities, and their
customers may lose the benefits
associated with the provision of these
services. FINRA believes that the
proposed rule changes mitigate such
risks by requiring the conditions or
restrictions imposed to be reasonably
necessary for the purpose of preventing
customer harm and by providing a
respondent with the right to seek
expedited review of a motion to modify
or remove any or all of the conditions
and restrictions. Further, as discussed
above, approximately 66 percent of the
broker-appellants during the review
period either were not employed by a
member firm during the appeal process
or were employed by a member firm
only for part of the appeal process.
Accordingly, these brokers would not be
impacted by this proposal or would be
subject to the proposed limitations only
for a limited period of time.
80 These 131 brokers correspond to those
associated with a NAC appeal during the review
period (2013–2018). The 75 brokers discussed in
the Anticipated Benefits section above are a
subgroup of brokers associated with a NAC appeal
during the 2013–2016 period. See supra note 74.
81 See Regulatory Notice 18–15 (April 2018).
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2. Proposed Amendments to the FINRA
Rule 9520 Series
result, these individuals may find it
more difficult to remain in the industry.
The proposed rule amendments
would impact statutorily disqualified
individuals and their employing firms
while the SD Application is being
processed. These individuals would be
subject to heightened supervision
during the pendency of their SD
Applications.
3. Proposed Amendments to the
BrokerCheck Rule
The proposed amendments would
impact taping firms and their registered
persons. Taping firms have a
proportionately significant number of
registered persons who were associated
with firms that were expelled by a selfregulatory organization or had their
registration revoked by the SEC for sales
practice violations, and as a result, may
pose greater risk to their customers.
Anticipated Benefits
The primary benefit of this proposed
rule change would arise from greater
oversight by employing firms of the
activities of statutorily disqualified
individuals during the pendency of
their SD Applications, thereby reducing
the potential risk of customer harm
during this period. In order to assess the
potential risk posed by these
individuals during the pendency of
their SD Applications, FINRA examined
whether individuals associated with an
SD Application filed during the 2013–
2016 period had a disclosure event 82 at
any time from the filing of the SD
Application through two years after
filing.83 Based on this analysis, FINRA
estimates that 26 (or 51 percent) of the
51 individuals associated with SD
Applications during the 2013–2016
period had a total of 41 disclosure
events during the interstitial period after
the filing of their SD Application.84
Anticipated Costs
The costs associated with this
proposal would fall primarily on firms
that incur direct and indirect costs
associated with establishing and
implementing the tailored heightened
supervision plan while an SD
Application is under review. As
discussed above, the costs would likely
vary significantly across firms and could
increase if the statutorily disqualified
individuals also serve as principals,
executive managers, or owners or
operate in other senior capacities.
Moreover, the heightened supervision
requirement may deter some firms from
retaining these individuals and, as a
82 For purposes of this analysis, ‘‘disclosure
event’’ included final criminal matters and
specified risk events, as defined in proposed Rule
1011(h) and (p).
83 This analysis includes events that occurred and
reached a resolution from the SD Application filing
year until the end of two years later to allow
sufficient time for events that occurred during the
eligibility proceeding to reach a resolution.
Accordingly, the sample period for this analysis is
based on SD Applications filed during the 2013–
2016 period, instead of the full review period
(2013–2018).
84 This likely underrepresents the overall risk of
customer harm, because the disclosure events in
this analysis included only final criminal matters
and specified risk events.
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Anticipated Benefits
The primary benefit of this proposed
rule change would arise from the
investor protection benefits associated
with disclosing a firm’s status as a
‘‘taping firm’’ through BrokerCheck to
the investors. This would allow
investors to make more informed
choices about the brokers and firms
with which they conduct business. The
anticipated benefits would increase
with the likelihood that a potential or
actual customer to a taping firm seeks
information through BrokerCheck.
Anticipated Costs
The proposal would not impose any
direct costs on brokers or firms.
Nonetheless it may impact their
businesses, as investors may rely on
information about a firm’s status as a
taping firm in determining whom to
engage for financial services and
brokerage activities. Disclosing the
status of a firm as a ‘‘taping firm’’
through BrokerCheck may also further
deter firms from hiring or retaining
brokers who were employed previously
by disciplined firms in order to avoid
the ‘‘taping firm’’ thresholds and
resulting disclosure on BrokerCheck.85
4. Proposed Amendments to MAP Rules
The proposed rule change would
directly impact individuals with one or
more final criminal matters or two or
more specified risk events within the
prior five years, who seek to become
owners, control persons, principals or
registered persons of a member firm. To
estimate the number of brokers who
would meet the proposed criteria,
FINRA analyzed the categories of events
and conditions associated with the
proposed criteria for all brokers during
the review period. For each year, FINRA
determined the approximate number of
85 As discussed above, only four firms during the
review period became subject to the taping
requirements of Rule 3170. As a result, FINRA does
not anticipate that this proposal would be
associated with significant economic impacts,
including the anticipated benefits or costs.
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brokers who met the proposed criteria
and became owners, control persons,
principals or registered persons of a
member firm. As discussed in more
detail below, this analysis showed that
there were 110–215 such individuals,
per year, who would have met the
proposed criteria had it been in place
during the review period.
The proposal is intended to apply to
brokers who may pose greater risks to
their customers than other brokers. A
framework for evaluating the
effectiveness of the criteria is to observe
the rate at which brokers identified
collectively by the criteria are
substantially more likely to have
regulatory-related events, including
specified risk events and final criminal
matters, than their peers. Based on
FINRA’s analysis of all individuals who
sought to become owners, control
persons, principals or registered persons
of a member firm during the review
period, individuals who would have
met the proposed criteria had on
average 1.4–1.6 final criminal matters
and specified risk events (per broker),
while other brokers had on average
0.002–0.004 such events (per broker).86
These estimates suggest that individuals
who would have been affected by this
proposal (had it been in place during
the review period) had on average over
450–900 times more final criminal
matters and specified risk events than
other brokers during the same review
period.
Anticipated Benefits
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The primary benefit of the proposed
amendments would be to reduce the
potential risk of future customer harm
by individuals who meet the proposed
criteria and seek to become an owner,
control person, principal, or registered
person of a member firm. FINRA
believes the proposed rule change
would further promote investor
protection by applying stronger
standards for continuing membership
with FINRA and for changes to a current
member firm’s ownership, control or
business operations. These benefits
would primarily arise from changes in
broker and firm behavior and increased
scrutiny by FINRA of brokers who meet
the proposed criteria during the review
of a materiality consultation and, where
appropriate, a CMA.
86 As
discussed above, the proposed criteria
includes individuals with one or more ‘‘final
criminal matters’’ or two or more ‘‘specified risk
events’’ in the prior five years. The individuals who
would have met the proposed criteria as a result of
two or more ‘‘specified risk events’’ in the prior five
years had on average 2.3–2.9 such events during the
review period.
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To scope these potential benefits and
assess the potential risk posed by
brokers who would meet the proposed
criteria, FINRA evaluated the extent to
which brokers who would have met the
criteria during 2013–2016 (had the
criteria existed) and sought the
proposed roles were associated with
‘‘new’’ final criminal matters or
specified risk events after having met
the proposed criteria. These ‘‘new’’
events correspond to events that were
identified or occurred after the broker’s
meeting the proposed criteria, and do
not include events that were pending at
the time of meeting the criteria and
subsequently resolved in the years
afterwards. As shown in Exhibit 3e,
FINRA estimates that, in 2013, 215
brokers would have met the proposed
criteria and sought the proposed roles.
These brokers were associated with 35
‘‘new’’ final criminal matters or
specified risk events that occurred after
their meeting the proposed criteria,
between 2014 and 2018. Exhibit 3e
similarly shows the number of events
associated with brokers who would
have met the proposed criteria and
sought the proposed roles in 2014, 2015,
and 2016. Across 2013–2016, there were
635 unique brokers who would have
met the proposed criteria and sought the
proposed roles, and these brokers were
associated with a total of 93 events that
occurred in the years after they met the
proposed criteria.
Exhibit 3e also shows, for the 2013–
2016 period, a factor representing a
multiple for the average number of
events for brokers who would have met
the proposed criteria and sought the
proposed roles relative to other brokers
who sought the proposed roles. For
example, the factor of 16x for 2013
indicates that brokers meeting the
proposed criteria and seeking the
proposed roles in 2013 had on average
16 times more new events (per broker)
in the subsequent years (2014–2018)
than other brokers who sought those
roles in 2013.87 Overall, this analysis
demonstrates that brokers who would
have met the proposed criteria and
sought the proposed roles during the
2013–2016 period had on average
approximately 16–49 times more new
criminal matters and specified risk
events after meeting the criteria than
other brokers who sought the proposed
roles.
87 Brokers meeting the proposed criteria and
seeking the proposed roles in 2013 had on average
0.16 new events (per broker) in the subsequent
years (2014–2018) compared to 0.01 events (per
broker) for other brokers seeking the proposed roles.
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Anticipated Costs
The cost of this proposal would fall
on the firms that seek to add owners,
control persons, principals or registered
persons who meet the proposed criteria.
These firms would be directly impacted
by the proposals through the
requirements to seek a materiality
consultation with FINRA and,
potentially, to file a CMA. While there
is no FINRA fee for seeking a materiality
consultation, firms may incur internal
costs or costs associated with engaging
external experts in conjunction with the
filing of a CMA. In addition, the
proposal could result in delays to a
firm’s ability to add owners, control
persons, principals or registered persons
who meet the proposed criteria, during
the time the mandatory materiality
consultation and any required CMA is
being processed. FINRA examined the
time to process materiality consultations
and determined that, on average, these
consultations are completed within
eight to ten days, although this time
period could be longer depending on
the complexity of the contemplated
expansion or transaction and the
aggregate number of consultations under
review. These anticipated costs may
deter some firms from hiring
individuals meeting the proposed
criteria, who as a result may find it
difficult to remain in the industry or
bear other labor market related costs.
Other Economic Impacts
To provide transparency and clarity
regarding the application of this
proposal, the proposed criteria is based
on disclosure events required to be
reported on the Uniform Registration
Forms. Information about disclosure
events reported on the Uniform
Registration Forms is generally available
to firms and FINRA. Accordingly, firms
would be able to identify the specific set
of disclosure events that would count
towards the proposed criteria and
replicate the proposed thresholds using
available data, with a few exceptions.88
In determining the proposed numeric
threshold, FINRA considered three key
factors: (1) The different types of
reported disclosure events; (2) the
counting criteria (i.e., the number of
reported events required to trigger the
obligations); and (3) the time period
over which the events are counted. In
88 Firms have access to disclosure events reported
on Form U4, U5, and U6 filings for individuals who
were previously registered with the same firms or
with other firms. Firms do not have access,
however, to information regarding individuals that
is disclosed on another firm’s Form BD. Firms may
not have access to information about disclosure
events for individuals, including control affiliates,
who were not previously registered.
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evaluating the proposed numeric
threshold versus alternative criteria,
significant attention was given to the
impact of possible misidentification of
individuals; specifically, the economic
trade-off between including individuals
who are less likely to subsequently pose
risk of harm to customers, and not
including individuals who are more
likely to subsequently pose risk of harm
to customers. There are costs associated
with both types of misidentifications.
For example, subjecting individuals
who are less likely to pose a risk to
customers to mandatory materiality
consultations, and potentially CMAs,
would impose additional costs on these
individuals, their affiliated firms and
customers. The proposed numeric
threshold aims to appropriately balance
these costs in the context of economic
impacts associated with the proposed
amendments to the MAP Rules.
The proposal may create incentives
for changes in behavior to avoid meeting
the proposed threshold. Under the
proposal standing alone, brokers and
firms may be more likely to try to settle
customer complaints or arbitrations
below $15,000 so that their settlements
do not count towards the proposed
threshold. To the extent, if any, that
customers also would be willing to
settle for less, this change may reduce
the compensation provided to
customers.89 Alternatively, it could
increase the time, effort and costs for
customers associated with negotiating a
settlement, even if the settled amount
would not change. Brokers and firms
also may consider underreporting the
disclosure events to avoid being subject
to the proposed rule. However, this
potential impact is mitigated by the
facts that many of the events are
reported by FINRA or other regulators,
incorrect or missing reports can trigger
regulatory action by FINRA, and FINRA
rules require firms to take appropriate
steps to verify the accuracy and
completeness of the information
contained in the Uniform Registration
Forms before they are filed. FINRA also
has the ability to check for unreported
events, particularly those that third
parties report in separate public notices,
such as the outcomes of some civil
proceedings.
FINRA recognizes that in some
instances, firms may not be able to
identify certain individuals with
89 The proposed $15,000 threshold for customer
settlements corresponds to the reporting threshold
for the Uniform Registration Forms and for the
settlement information to be displayed through
BrokerCheck. Accordingly, the change in incentives
to brokers and firms associated with the proposed
rule should be considered in the presence of the
incentives already in place.
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disclosure events who may seek to
become owners, control persons,
principals or registered persons of the
firm. Similarly, firms may have less
incentive to conduct appropriate due
diligence on those individuals for whom
firms may not have readily available
disclosure history.90 Firms still would
be required, however, to seek
information on relevant disclosure
events from individuals who seek to
become principals or registered persons,
as part of the registration process, and
take reasonable steps (e.g., by
conducting background checks) to verify
the accuracy and completeness of the
information provided by the
individuals. Nonetheless, FINRA
recognizes that in some cases, even after
conducting reasonable due diligence,
firms may not have the required
information to identify certain
individuals who meet the proposed
criteria, and these individuals may
continue to pose risk of future investor
harm. FINRA believes that these risks
are mitigated by its own examination
risk programs that monitor and examine
individuals for whom there are concerns
of ongoing misconduct or imminent risk
of harm to investors. These programs
identify high-risk individuals based on
the analysis of data available to the
firms as well as additional regulatory
data available to FINRA.91
In developing this proposal, FINRA
analyzed disclosure events reported on
the Uniform Registration Forms for all
individuals during the review period.
For each year, FINRA evaluated the data
and determined the approximate
number of individuals who would have
met the proposed numeric threshold of
one or more final criminal matters or
two or more specified risk events in the
prior five years. Exhibit 3a shows the
disclosure categories that FINRA
considered and the subcategories that
were used for identifying final criminal
matters and specified risk events. The
exhibit also shows the mapping of these
disclosure categories to the underlying
questions in Form U4.92 Exhibit 3b
shows the corresponding mapping of
these disclosure categories to the
questions in Form BD.93 Exhibit 3c
90 For example, as discussed above, firms do not
have access to disclosure events for non-registered
control affiliates at other firms. FINRA uses
disclosure events reported on Form BD across all
firms to identify disclosure records of nonregistered control affiliates.
91 See supra note 88.
92 Forms U5 and U6 have questions similar to
Form U4 that can also be mapped to the disclosure
categories in Exhibit 3a.
93 Form BD includes information on disclosure
events for individual control affiliates, including
non-registered control affiliates that may not have
Form U4, U5, or U6 filings. Form BD is the primary
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20759
provides a breakdown of the disclosure
categories for all individuals registered
with FINRA in 2018.94 The exhibit
illustrates the impacts of refining
subcategories of reported disclosure
events and using different numeric
thresholds on the number of disclosure
events and the number of registered
persons associated with these events.95
This analysis has led FINRA to initially
propose the numeric threshold set forth
in the current proposal.
The additional proposed obligations
would only apply to individuals with
one or more final criminal matters or
two or more specified risk events within
the prior five years who seek to become
owners, control persons, principals, or
registered persons of a firm.
Accordingly, FINRA examined
registration information in order to
identify all individuals who would have
met the proposed criteria and sought the
proposed roles during the review
period. Those identified serve as a
reasonable estimate for the number of
individuals who would have been
directly impacted by this proposal had
it been in place at the time. This
analysis indicates that there were 110–
215 such individuals per year, as shown
in Exhibit 3d. These individuals
represent 0.09–0.16 percent of
individuals who became owners,
control persons, principals, or registered
source of information on disclosure events for these
unregistered control affiliates. Form BD includes
information on final criminal matters and certain
specified risk events associated with regulatory
actions and civil judicial actions, but does not
include information on customer awards or
settlements.
94 Exhibit 3c does not include information on
individuals who were not registered with FINRA in
2018. These non-registered individuals may include
non-registered associated persons, including nonregistered control affiliates.
95 Exhibit 3c shows the number of criminal
disclosures and ‘‘disclosures considered in
developing specified risk events’’ (regulatory action
disclosures, civil judicial disclosures, and customer
complaint, arbitration, and civil litigation
disclosures)—including final and pending
disclosures—for brokers who were registered with
FINRA in 2018, over such brokers’ entire reporting
history; the number of brokers associated with these
disclosure events; and the impact of refining the
disclosure categories and the periods over which
these events are counted. For example, the exhibit
shows that brokers who were registered with FINRA
in 2018 had, over their entire reporting history,
19,655 criminal disclosures and 134,928
‘‘disclosures considered in developing specified
risk events.’’ It also shows that 41,915 individuals
had, over their entire reporting history, one or more
criminal disclosures or two or more ‘‘disclosures
considered in developing specified risk events.’’
When narrowing the disclosure categories to
include only the ‘‘final criminal matters’’ and
‘‘specified risk events’’ as defined in this proposal
(including the five-year lookback period), the
results narrow to 174 final criminal matters and
2,616 specified risk events, and to 414 brokers who
met the proposed numeric threshold of one or more
final criminal matters or two or more specified risk
events in the prior five years.
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persons with a new member in any year
during the review period.96
FINRA also analyzed firms that
employed individuals who would be
directly impacted by this proposal. The
analysis shows that in each year over
the review period, there were between
74–155 firms employing individuals
who would have met the proposed
criteria. Approximately 41 percent of
these firms were small, 12 percent were
mid-size, and the remaining 47 percent
were large.97 FINRA estimates that
approximately 31 percent of the
individuals meeting the proposed
criteria and who sought the proposed
roles were employed by small firms, ten
percent by mid-size firms and 59
percent by large firms.
(d) Alternatives Considered
FINRA recognizes that the design and
implementation of the rule proposals
may impose direct and indirect costs on
a variety of stakeholders, including
member firms, associated persons,
regulators, investors, and the public.
Accordingly, in developing its rule
proposals, FINRA sought to identify
alternative ways to enhance the
efficiency and effectiveness of the
proposals while maintaining their
regulatory objectives. The following
provides a discussion of the alternatives
FINRA considered for the current
proposals.
1. Proposed Amendments to the FINRA
Rule 9200 Series and FINRA Rule 9300
Series
As an alternative to the proposal to
authorize Hearing Officers to impose
conditions or restrictions, FINRA
considered whether to require sanctions
imposed by the FINRA Hearing Panel or
Hearing Officer in disciplinary
decisions to be effective during the
pendency of the NAC appeals and
subsequent appeals. FINRA believes
that such an approach could be too
restrictive in disciplinary matters with
significant sanctions and where the risk
of harm may be specific to particular
activities. Accordingly, FINRA believes
that conditions and restrictions that are
tailored specifically to the risk posed by
the individuals during the pendency of
the appeals, and are reasonably
necessary for the purpose of preventing
customer harm, would provide a better
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96 These
percentages are calculated by dividing
FINRA’s estimate of the number of individuals who
met the proposed criteria each year during the
review period and sought the proposed roles (110–
215 individuals per year) by the number of
individuals who became owners, control persons,
principals, or registered persons with a new
member each year during the review period
(122,003–131,156 individuals per year).
97 See supra note 71.
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balance between protecting investors
and preventing undue costs on
individuals and firms while their
appeals are pending.
2. Proposed Amendments to the FINRA
Rule 9520 Series
This proposal would subject
statutorily disqualified individuals
employed with member firms to
heightened supervision during the
pendency of their SD Applications.
Considering that the problem addressed
by the proposed amendments to the
FINRA Rule 9520 Series is very specific,
FINRA did not consider any significant
alternatives to this targeted proposal.
3. Proposed Amendments to FINRA
Rule 8312
Considering that this proposal would
likely not be associated with material
economic impacts, FINRA did not
consider any significant alternatives to
this proposal.98
4. Proposed Amendments to the FINRA
Rule 1000 Series
FINRA considered several alternatives
to the numeric and categorical
thresholds for identifying individuals
who would be subject to the proposed
amendments to the MAP Rules. In
determining the proposed threshold,
FINRA focused significant attention on
the economic trade-off between
incorrect identification of individuals
who may not subsequently pose risk of
harm to their customers, and not
including individuals who may
subsequently pose risk of harm to
customers. FINRA also considered three
key factors: (1) The different types of
reported disclosure events, (2) the
counting criteria (i.e., the number of
reported events), and (3) the time period
over which the events are counted.
FINRA considered several alternatives
for each of these three factors.
a. Alternatives Associated With the
Types of Disclosure Events
In determining the different types of
disclosure events, FINRA considered all
categories of disclosure events reported
on the Uniform Registration Forms,
including the financial disclosures and
the termination disclosures. FINRA
decided to exclude financial
disclosures, which include personal
bankruptcies, civil bonds, or judgments
and liens. While these events may be of
interest to investors in evaluating
whether or not to engage a broker, these
types of events are not by themselves
direct evidence of customer harm.
98 As discussed above, there were only four firms
that became subject to the taping requirements of
Rule 3170 during the review period.
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FINRA also considered whether
termination disclosures should be
included as specified risk events.
Termination disclosures include job
separations after allegations against the
brokers.99 Certain termination
disclosures reflect conflicts of interest
between the firm and the broker and, as
a result, may not necessarily be
indicative of misconduct. Further, the
underlying allegations in the
termination disclosures may be
associated with other disclosure events,
such as those associated with customer
settlements or awards, regulatory
actions or civil judicial actions, which
are already included in the proposed
criteria. Where so, the underlying
conduct posing potential future
customer harm would be captured in
the proposed criteria. As a result,
FINRA did not include termination
disclosures as specified risk events.
Accordingly, FINRA considered the
remaining five categories of disclosure
events listed in Exhibit 3a.
Within each disclosure category
included in the proposed criteria,
FINRA considered whether pending
matters should be included or if the
criteria should be restricted to final
matters that have reached a resolution
not in favor of the broker. Pending
matters may be associated with an
emerging pattern of customer harm and
capture timely information of potential
ongoing or recent misconduct. However,
pending matters may also include
disclosure events that remain
unresolved or subsequently get
dismissed because they lack merit or
suitable evidence. FINRA excluded
pending matters in the current proposal
because the potential adverse impacts
on the individuals who may be
identified because of pending matters
would likely outweigh the benefit of
including pending matters.100
Exhibit 3a shows the five categories of
disclosure events that were considered
and the subcategories that were
included in the proposed criteria. For
criminal matters, FINRA considered
whether criminal charges that do not
result in a conviction or a plea of guilty
or nolo contendere (no contest) should
be included in the proposed criteria.
These events correspond to criminal
matters in which the associated charges
99 Termination disclosures involve situations
where the individual voluntarily resigned, was
discharged, or was permitted to resign after
allegations.
100 For example, individuals who may be
identified on a fixed numeric threshold based upon
pending matters could find it difficult to become
owners, control persons, principals, or registered
persons of a member firm while these matters are
pending, even if such matters are subsequently
dismissed. See also Exhibit 3c.
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were subsequently dismissed or
withdrawn and, as a result, are not
necessarily evidence of misconduct.
Accordingly, FINRA only included
criminal convictions, including pleas of
guilty or nolo contendere (no contest),
in the proposed criteria.
For customer settlements and awards,
FINRA considered whether settlements
and awards in which the broker was not
‘‘named’’ should be considered as a
specified risk event. These ‘‘subject of’’
customer settlements and awards
correspond to events where the
customer initiates a claim against the
firm and does not specifically name the
broker, but the firm identifies the broker
as required by the Uniform Registration
Forms.101 In these cases, the broker is
not party to the proceedings or
settlement. There may be conflicts of
interest between the firm and the broker
such that the claim may be attributed to
the broker without the ability of that
broker to directly participate in the
resolution. Accordingly, FINRA
excluded ‘‘subject of’’ customer
settlements and awards from the
proposed criteria. FINRA recognizes
that excluding these events may also
undercount instances where the broker
may have been responsible for the
alleged customer harm.
For civil judicial actions and
regulatory actions, FINRA considered
whether all sanctions associated with
final matters should be included in the
proposed criteria or whether certain less
severe sanctions should be excluded.
Final regulatory action or civil judicial
action disclosures may be associated
with a wide variety of activities, ranging
from material customer harm to more
technical rule violations, such as a
failure to make timely filings or other
events not directly related to customer
harm. However, due to the way in
which such information is currently
reported, it is not straightforward to
distinguish regulatory or civil judicial
actions associated with customer harm
from other such actions.102 In the
101 For example, the Instructions to Form U4
provide that the answer to Questions 14I(4) or
14I(5) should be ‘‘yes’’ if the broker was not named
as a respondent/defendant but (1) the Statement of
Claim or Complaint specifically mentions the
individual by name and alleges the broker was
involved in one or more sales practice violations or
(2) the Statement of Claim or Complaint does not
mention the broker by name, but the firm has made
a good faith determination that the sales practice
violation(s) alleged involves one or more particular
brokers.
102 For example, the Uniform Registration Forms
contain information in disclosure reporting pages
that could be useful in identifying regulatory
actions or civil judicial actions associated with
customer harm, but it is stored as ‘‘free-text’’ and,
therefore, cannot be reliably compared across
disclosures.
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absence of a reliable way to identify
regulatory and civil judicial actions
associated with customer harm, FINRA
considered using a proxy of severity of
the underlying sanctions as a way to
exclude events that are likely not
associated with material customer harm.
Therefore, FINRA is proposing to
include regulatory actions or civil
judicial actions that are associated with
more severe sanctions, such as bars,
suspensions or monetary sanctions
above a de minimis dollar threshold of
$15,000. FINRA notes that relying
strictly on a proxy for severity would
likely exclude certain regulatory actions
or civil judicial actions that are
associated with customer harm, and
may include certain regulatory actions
or civil judicial actions that are not
associated with customer harm.
FINRA also considered several
alternative de minimis dollar thresholds
for disclosure events included in the
proposed criteria. For example, FINRA
considered higher dollar thresholds of
$25,000, $50,000 and $100,000 for
customer settlements, customer awards,
and monetary sanctions associated with
regulatory actions and civil judicial
actions. A dollar threshold may capture
a dimension of severity of the alleged
customer harm. The Uniform
Registration Forms establish a de
minimis dollar reporting threshold of
$10,000 for complaints filed prior to
2009 and $15,000 afterwards. The
reporting threshold may, however, be
low and possibly include instances
where the payment was made to end the
complaint and minimize litigation costs.
However, the dollar threshold does not
account for the value of the customers’
accounts, and there are likely cases
where even low dollar amounts
represent remuneration of a significant
portion of customer investments.
Accordingly, a dollar threshold may be
both under-inclusive and overinclusive, and as a result FINRA
considered a range of alternative
thresholds. Increasing the dollar
threshold from $15,000 to $25,000,
$50,000 and $100,000 would decrease
the number of individuals impacted by
this proposal from 110–215 individuals
each year over the review period (as
explained above) to 108–207
individuals, 103–197 individuals and
97–180 individuals each year,
respectively. Finally, FINRA notes that
establishing a de minimis dollar
threshold that is different than the
current reporting requirements could
increase confusion among investors and
registered persons and would likely
create additional incentives for brokers
and firms to keep future settlements
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below the dollar level that would trigger
the restrictions, to the detriment of
customers.
b. Alternatives Associated With the
Counting Criteria
FINRA considered a range of
alternative criteria for counting criminal
matters or specified risk events. For
example, FINRA considered whether
the counting criteria for final criminal
matters should be two or more final
criminal matters or one final criminal
matter and another specified risk event.
This alternative would effectively count
final criminal matters the same way as
other specified risk events. FINRA
believes that final criminal matters are
generally more directly tied to serious
misconduct than some of the other
specified risk events. Accordingly,
FINRA believes that one final criminal
matter, as defined by this proposal,
should be sufficient to trigger the
proposed criteria.103
FINRA also considered alternative
criteria for counting specified risk
events. For example, FINRA considered
decreasing the proposed threshold from
two specified risk events to one. This
alternative would change the proposed
criteria to one or more final criminal
matters or one (instead of two) or more
specified risk events during the prior
five-year period. This approach would
increase the number of individuals
impacted by this proposal from 110–215
individuals to 341–675 individuals each
year, over the review period. FINRA
also considered increasing the proposed
threshold from two specified risk events
to three, thereby changing the proposed
criteria to one or more final criminal
matter or three (instead of two) or more
specified risk events during the prior
five-year period. This approach would
decrease the number of individuals
impacted by this proposal from 110–215
individuals to 86–161 individuals each
year, over the review period. For the
reasons explained above, FINRA
considered alternative criteria for
counting specified risk events, but chose
the specification in the current
proposal.
c. Alternatives Associated With the
Time Period Over Which the Disclosure
Events Are Counted
FINRA also considered alternative
criteria for the time period over which
final criminal matters and specified risk
events are counted. For example, FINRA
considered whether final criminal
matters or specified risk events should
103 FINRA recognizes that final criminal matters
include felony convictions that may not be
investment related (e.g., a conviction associated
with multiple DUIs).
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be counted over the individual’s entire
reporting period or counted only over a
more recent period. Based on its
experience, FINRA believes that events
that are more than ten years old do not
necessarily pose the same level of
possible future risk to customers as
more recent events. Further, counting
final criminal matters or specified risk
events over an individual’s entire
reporting period would imply that
individuals with such events would be
subject to the criteria for their entire
career, even if they subsequently
worked without being associated with
any future events. Accordingly, FINRA
decided to include final criminal
matters or specified risk events
occurring only in a more recent period.
FINRA also considered a threshold
based on a five-year lookback period for
final criminal matters, but a five-to-ten
year lookback period for specified risk
events. Specifically, FINRA considered
a threshold that would be met if the
individual had one specified risk event
having resolved during the previous ten
years, and a second specified risk event
resolved during the previous five years,
or if the individual had one or more
final criminal matters resolved in the
prior five-year period. This approach
would increase the number of
individuals impacted by this proposal
from 110–215 individuals to 127–236
individuals each year, over the review
period. For the reasons explained above,
FINRA considered alternative criteria
for the lookback period for specified risk
events, but chose the specification in
the current proposal.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
The proposed rule change was
published for comment in Regulatory
Notice 18–16 (April 2018). Thirteen
comments were received in response to
the Regulatory Notice.104 A copy of the
Regulatory Notice is attached as Exhibit
2a [sic]. A list of commenters is attached
as Exhibit 2b [sic]. Copies of the
comment letters received in response to
the Regulatory Notice are attached as
Exhibit 2c [sic]. Of the 13 comment
letters received, eight were generally in
favor of the proposed rule change, two
were generally opposed, and one stated
that the proposal was an improvement
over the status quo but that significantly
more action would be needed to protect
investors.
FINRA has considered the comments
received. In light of some of those
104 All references to commenters are to the
comment letters as listed in Exhibit 2b.
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comments, FINRA has made some
modifications to the proposal. The
comments and FINRA’s responses are
set forth in detail below.
General Support for and Opposition to
the Proposal
Five commenters expressed general
support for the proposed rule changes in
Regulatory Notice 18–16, but all had
suggestions on how aspects of the
proposal should be modified.105 Two
commenters expressed support for the
proposed amendments, subject to
certain modifications.106 One
commenter expressed general support
for the proposed amendments except
the proposed amendments to the Rule
1000 Series.107 Two commenters
suggested different approaches that
FINRA could take.108 One commenter
expressed opposition to specific aspects
of the proposal.109 One commenter
opined that the proposal has numerous
deficiencies and offered remedies.110
All of these commenters’ suggestions are
discussed in more detail below.
Proposed Amendments to the FINRA
Rules 9200 and 9300 Series To Enhance
Investor Protection During the Pendency
of an Appeal or Call-for-Review
Proceeding
➢ Conditions or Restrictions
The proposed amendments to the
Rule 9200 and 9300 Series would allow
a Hearing Officer to impose conditions
or restrictions on the activities of a
respondent during the pendency of an
appeal to the NAC from, or call for NAC
review of, a disciplinary decision.
Some commenters expressed support
for these specific proposals. FSI
commented that permitting Hearing
Officers to impose conditions and
restrictions strikes the appropriate
balance between the member’s rights
and investor protection concerns.
NASAA supported imposing temporary
remedies on parties that lose at the
hearing level, writing that it would align
FINRA’s procedures with federal and
state law. PIABA wrote that a
disciplinary respondent should not be
permitted to conduct business as usual
during a disciplinary appeal.
Several commenters requested that a
disciplined respondent and firms that
associate with a disciplined respondent
have an opportunity to propose to the
Hearing Officers the conditions and
105 MML,
NASAA, PIABA, SIFMA, Wulff Hansen.
FSI.
107 Janney.
108 Better Markets, IBN.
109 Luxor.
110 Network 1.
106 Cambridge,
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restrictions that should be imposed.111
Cambridge stated that this opportunity
would help ensure that conditions and
restrictions are not overly broad and
account for a firm’s size, resources and
ability to supervise, and that it would
alleviate concerns about potential lost
income, lost opportunities and lost
clients that could result from the
conditions or restrictions. SIFMA wrote
that this opportunity would help ensure
that any conditions and restrictions
imposed are reasonably necessary for
the nature and scale of the misconduct
at issue and tailored to a firm’s business
model, and that it would reduce the
number of motions to modify or remove
conditions or restrictions.
While FINRA appreciates the
comments, FINRA notes that the
proposal allows an individual
respondent to make arguments
concerning the potential conditions and
restrictions to the Hearing Officer. In
this regard, nothing in the proposed rule
change prevents a respondent in a
disciplinary proceeding from proposing,
in opposition or response to a motion
for conditions or restrictions, the
conditions and restrictions that could or
should be imposed. Likewise, nothing
prevents an individual respondent,
during the underlying disciplinary
proceeding itself, from introducing
relevant evidence. Moreover, FINRA
rules only give named parties the right
to participate in a FINRA disciplinary
proceeding, and the complaint issued
against an individual respondent will
not always name that person’s
employing firm as a respondent.
However, in light of these comments,
FINRA is proposing to modify the
proposed rule as set forth in Regulatory
Notice 18–16 to clarify that a
respondent’s opposition or other
response to a motion for conditions or
restrictions must explain why no
conditions or restrictions should be
imposed or specify alternate conditions
or restrictions that are sought to be
imposed and explain why the
conditions or restrictions are reasonably
necessary for the purpose of preventing
customer harm.
Cambridge stated that the proposal
does not address the recourse available
for damages that could result from any
conditions or restrictions imposed, in
the event the underlying disciplinary
decision is reversed on appeal. FINRA
believes the proposal mitigates such
risks. The standard for imposing
conditions or restrictions—those that
the Hearing Officer considers reasonably
necessary for the purpose of preventing
customer harm—and the ability to
111 Cambridge,
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request an expedited proceeding before
the Review Subcommittee for prompt
review of any conditions or restrictions
imposed would act to ensure the
conditions and restrictions imposed are
reasonably tailored to address the
potential concerns. The Hearing Officer
that imposes conditions or restrictions
in the first instance would be
knowledgeable about the case and,
therefore, well-suited to craft
restrictions or conditions that are
tailored to addressing the potential
customer harm. And if a respondent
believes that the conditions or
restrictions imposed are too
burdensome, the respondent would be
permitted to request an expedited
review and stay the conditions or
restrictions.
Better Markets suggested that Hearing
Officers should be required, not just
permitted, to impose conditions or
restrictions that are necessary to protect
investors pending an appeal to the NAC.
FINRA believes, however, that it is more
appropriate to give Hearing Officers
discretion. There may be situations
when conditions or restrictions may be
deemed not necessary, such as when a
respondent firm or a respondent
individual’s employing firm has already
undertaken substantial subsequent
remedial measures or when the
violations at issue do not involve the
risk of customer harm.
FSI and Luxor opposed the standard
in proposed FINRA Rule 9285(a) that
the Hearing Officer may impose
conditions or restrictions that it
considers ‘‘reasonably necessary for the
purpose of preventing customer harm.’’
FSI opined that that standard could lead
to conditions or restrictions that are
unduly burdensome or unrelated to the
misconduct, and it suggested that the
standard also require that the conditions
and restrictions be ‘‘reasonably designed
to prevent further violations of the rule
or rules the Hearing Panel or Hearing
Officer [in the underlying disciplinary
proceeding] has found to have been
violated.’’ FSI further suggested that,
when imposing conditions or
restrictions, Hearing Officers be
required to consider the firm’s size,
resources and overall ability to
supervise the registered representative’s
compliance with the conditions or
restrictions. Luxor wrote that the
proposed standard would have a
chilling effect on a respondent’s right to
appeal because, depending on the
conditions and restrictions imposed, the
respondent may be unable to afford
legal representation or may suffer
irreversible damage to a book of
business.
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FINRA’s proposed standard, however,
is consistent with the rules of other selfregulatory organizations.112 Moreover,
FINRA believes that the proposed
standard—both its use of the term
‘‘reasonably necessary’’ and its
emphasis on ‘‘for the purpose of
preventing customer harm’’—provides
sufficient and appropriate limiting
parameters. FINRA also believes that
requiring that conditions or restrictions
be reasonably designed to prevent
further violations of the rule or rules
found to have been violated in the
underlying disciplinary decision, as FSI
suggests, may not allow the Hearing
Officer to adequately address the
investor protection concerns that have
been raised by the activities of the
respondent. As FINRA explained above
(and in Regulatory Notice 18–16), the
conditions and restrictions imposed
should target the misconduct
demonstrated in the disciplinary
proceeding and be tailored to the
specific risks posed by the member firm
or broker. With regard to FSI’s
suggestions to amend the standard to
require consideration of numerous
additional factors, FINRA believes that,
for investor protection purposes, the
primary driver of the conditions or
restrictions should be what is
reasonably necessary to prevent
customer harm, not the size of the
respondent’s employing firm or its
claims about its resources. FINRA
believes that the proposed standard—
coupled with the parties’ ability to
participate in the process, the
knowledge of the Hearing Officers, and
the availability of an expedited review—
are appropriate to yield conditions or
restrictions that are targeted at the
112 See BOX Rule 12110 (‘‘Pending effectiveness
of a decision imposing a sanction on the
Respondent, the person, committee or panel issuing
the decision (the ‘adjudicator’) may impose such
conditions and restrictions on the activities of the
Respondent as it considers reasonably necessary for
the protection of investors and the Exchange.’’);
CBOE Rule 13.11(b) (‘‘Pending effectiveness of a
decision imposing a sanction on the Respondent,
the Hearing Panel or the CRO, as applicable, may
impose such conditions and restrictions on the
activities of the Respondent as the Hearing Panel or
the CRO, as applicable, considers reasonably
necessary for the protection of investors and the
Exchange’’); CBOE BZX Rule 8.11 (‘‘Pending
effectiveness of a decision imposing a penalty on
the Respondent, the CRO, Hearing Panel or
committee of the Board, as applicable, may impose
such conditions and restrictions on the activities of
the Respondent as he, she or it considers reasonably
necessary for the protection of investors, creditors
and the Exchange.’’); MIAX Options Rule 1011(b)
(‘‘Pending effectiveness of a decision imposing a
sanction on the Respondent, the person, committee
or panel issuing the decision (the ‘adjudicator’) may
impose such conditions and restrictions on the
activities of the Respondent as it considers
reasonably necessary for the protection of investors
and the Exchange.’’).
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specific, identifiable risks presented to
customers and that are not overly
burdensome. FINRA further proposes,
that in light of this and other comments,
to clarify the process for imposing
conditions and restrictions during the
pendency of an appeal. Specifically,
FINRA is proposing to modify the
proposed rule as set forth in Regulatory
Notice 18–16 to clarify when and how
parties can seek to impose reasonably
necessary conditions and restrictions
following a disciplinary decision by a
Hearing Panel or Hearing Officer, the
process for a respondent to request an
appeal through an expedited proceeding
of such conditions and restrictions, and
to further clarify that such conditions
and restrictions would be stayed during
such expedited proceeding.
Several commenters requested that a
different burden be applied in proposed
Rule 9285(b)(2) for seeking the
modification or removal of conditions or
restrictions.113 PIABA suggested that, to
modify or remove conditions or
restrictions, the respondent should be
required to provide clear and
convincing evidence of a manifest error
by the trier of fact and show the
likelihood of success of the underlying
appeal. Cambridge and FSI suggested
that the respondent should have to
show that the Hearing Officer
committed an error, that the conditions
or restrictions are overly broad, or that
they are not narrowly tailored to prevent
future occurrences of the underlying
violations.
FINRA declines these comments. As
explained above, the burden in
proposed Rule 9285(b)(2) is that the
respondent would have to demonstrate
that the conditions or restrictions
imposed are not reasonably necessary
for the purpose of preventing customer
harm. This burden is consistent with the
standard set forth in proposed Rule
9285(a) for establishing conditions and
restrictions in the first place.
Furthermore, FINRA believes that, for
fairness reasons, a respondent’s ability
to seek the modification or removal of
conditions or restrictions should not be
constrained by the underlying merits of
the respondent’s disciplinary appeal.
Because there would be a separate,
specific standard for the imposition of
conditions or restrictions—i.e., those
that the Hearing Officer considers
reasonably necessary for the purpose of
preventing customer harm—any
conditions or restrictions imposed could
be erroneous for a reason that is entirely
unrelated to whether a respondent’s
underlying appeal has a likelihood of
success. Likewise, FINRA does not
113 Cambridge,
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support establishing a burden of proof
that would be more difficult to meet,
such as a ‘‘clear and convincing
evidence of a manifest error by the trier
of fact’’ standard. Thus, FINRA has
retained that aspect of the standard
proposed in Regulatory Notice 18–16
that would require a respondent to
demonstrate, when moving to modify or
remove conditions or restrictions, that
the conditions or restrictions imposed
are not reasonably necessary for the
purpose of preventing customer harm.
PIABA and Better Markets wrote
about the provisions in proposed Rule
9285(b) that would allow a respondent
to seek expedited review of an order
imposing conditions or restrictions.
PIABA supported the proposed
expedited review process. Better
Markets, on the other hand, wrote that
expedited reviews would add burdens
to the NAC and cause delays in
processing underlying disciplinary
appeals. FINRA has retained the
proposed expedited review process.
FINRA has added the expedited review
process to make the overall process
more fair for the respondents involved.
It also will further investor protection:
Because the filing of a motion to modify
or remove conditions or restrictions
would stay the effectiveness of the
conditions or restrictions, an expedited
review would allow properly imposed
conditions and restrictions to become
effective sooner. Moreover, because
proposed Rule 9285(b) would assign the
NAC’s Review Subcommittee—and not
the NAC itself—to decide motions to
modify or remove conditions or
restrictions and establish a 30-day
deadline for doing so, FINRA expects
that the expedited review process will
not result in materially longer times for
the NAC to process underlying
disciplinary appeals.
Several commenters disagreed with
how, pursuant to proposed Rule
9285(b), a motion to modify or remove
conditions or restrictions would effect a
stay of the conditions or restrictions.
Better Markets and NASAA suggested
that, for investor protection reasons,
there should be no stays. NASAA
further commented that permitting stays
would be inconsistent with how
proposed Rule 9285(b) would require
firms to establish heightened
supervision over individuals who
appeal disciplinary decisions. Luxor, on
the other hand, essentially sought to
expand stays, writing that no conditions
and restrictions should be imposed
during a disciplinary appeal except
upon a showing by FINRA of clear and
convincing evidence of imminent harm
to the public.
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In light of the conflicting comments
and FINRA’s belief that the stay
provision strikes the right balance,
FINRA is proposing to retain the
proposed stay provision. It
appropriately balances the investorprotection benefits of imposing
reasonably necessary conditions and
restrictions with the Exchange Act
requirement that FINRA provide a fair
procedure in disciplinary proceedings.
A stay of appropriately issued
conditions or restrictions would be in
place only during the relatively short
duration of an expedited proceeding.
Moreover, FINRA does not agree that
having a temporary stay of conditions or
restrictions during the expedited
proceeding process and requiring firms
to establish heightened supervision
plans during the pendency of appeals
are inconsistent. Proposed Rule 9285(e)
would require a disciplined
respondent’s member firm to establish a
reasonably designed heightened
supervision plan regardless of whether
a Hearing Officer imposes conditions
and restrictions.114 Thus, there is no
reason for a respondent’s firm to delay
adopting a heightened supervision plan
while any conditions or restrictions are
stayed pending an expedited review.
Moreover, proposed Rule 9285(e)
contemplates that a respondent’s firm
would need to create an amended plan
of heightened supervision that takes
into account any conditions or
restrictions imposed after the initial
plan is adopted.
PIABA wrote that the proposal should
require that an individual respondent’s
employing firm be notified immediately
of any conditions or restrictions
imposed. FINRA generally agrees with
this comment and, as explained above,
has modified the proposal to require
that the Office of Hearing Officers or the
Office of General Counsel, as
appropriate, provide a copy of the order
imposing conditions and restrictions to
each FINRA member with which the
respondent is associated. This would be
similar to how FINRA rules currently
require that copies of disciplinary
decisions be provided to each FINRA
member with which a respondent is
associated.115
➢ Heightened Supervision of
Disciplined Respondents
FINRA also received comments
concerning the proposed amendments
to require, in the event of an appeal or
call for review, that an individual
114 See also Regulatory Notice 18–15 (April 2018)
(Guidance on Implementing Effective Heightened
Supervisory Procedures for Associated Persons with
a History of Past Misconduct).
115 See Rule 9268(d).
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respondent’s member firm adopt
heightened supervisory procedures for
that individual respondent.
Better Markets and PIABA expressed
support for requiring firms to adopt
written plans of heightened supervision
while a disciplinary appeal is pending.
FSI and SIFMA stated that requiring
firms to adopt written plans of
heightened supervision within ten days
of any appeal or call for review is an
insufficiently short amount of time, and
that firms should have 30 days. FINRA
believes, however, that the ten-day
period is appropriate under the
circumstances. The longer the time
period without a plan of heightened
supervision in place, the greater the risk
to investors. Retaining the shorter, tenday deadline will allow the investorprotection benefits of the heightened
supervision plans to be in place sooner.
FINRA also believes that the ten-day
period is sufficient because a firm
should be aware of the potential need to
adopt a heightened supervision plan
well in advance of when it would be
required to do so. In this regard, Form
U4 requires that registered persons
report when they are the subject of a
regulatory complaint that could result in
an affirmative answer to other Form U4
disclosure questions that ask about selfregulatory organization findings and
disciplinary actions, and FINRA rules
require that the Office of Hearing
Officers promptly provide a copy of a
disciplinary decision to each member
with which a respondent is associated.
Furthermore, the ten-day deadline for
adopting a heightened supervision plan
would begin only when the respondent
appeals the decision to the NAC or
when the matter is called for review.
FINRA Rules 9311 and 9312 provide 25
days to file an appeal and 25 to 45 days
to call a case for review.
PIABA suggested that a firm required
to adopt a plan of heightened
supervision pursuant to proposed Rule
9285 also should be required to
document its enforcement of that plan.
FINRA has previously indicated that
documenting the enforcement of a
heightened supervision plan could be a
useful element of such a plan.116 Instead
of singling out additional provisions
like these in the rule text, however,
FINRA believes that its published
notices provide a thorough source of
guidance on heightened supervision
plans, including what provisions should
116 See Notice to Members 97–19 (April 1997)
(advising that firms could require supervisors of
registered representatives subject to special
supervisory arrangements to provide a sign-off on
daily activity or to periodically attest in writing that
they have carried out the terms of the special
supervision).
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be included at a minimum, and what
other provisions can be part of an
effective plan.117 As needed or
appropriate, FINRA would be able to
update its published guidance to
account for the heightened supervision
plans required by the proposed rule
change.
Luxor suggested that heightened
supervision plans would not be
necessary where a Hearing Officer
imposes conditions or restrictions.
FINRA believes that even when
conditions and restrictions are imposed,
the respondent’s member firm would
still need to address, in a heightened
supervision plan, how it would
implement and execute those conditions
and restrictions. Furthermore,
heightened supervision plans would be
needed to address activities that are not
subject to any imposed conditions or
restrictions.
Proposed Amendments to the FINRA
Rule 9520 Series To Require Automatic
Interim Plans of Heightened
Supervision of a Disqualified Person
During the Period When FINRA Is
Reviewing an Eligibility Application
Several commenters specifically
approved of the proposed amendments
to Rule 9522, which would require a
member firm to adopt interim
heightened supervisory procedures for a
disqualified person during the
pendency of the firm’s SD Application
to continue associating with that
disqualified person. NASAA
commented that this regulatory gap
should be closed. PIABA commented
that there is an obvious benefit to the
proposal.
Better Markets suggested that firms
should be required to adopt a plan of
heightened supervision immediately
when an associated person is found to
have committed acts that are grounds
for becoming disqualified, even pending
the associated person’s appeal of the
underlying disqualifying event. While
FINRA agrees that there may be benefits
to requiring firms to place a disqualified
associated person on a heightened
supervision plan immediately and
before the filing of an application to
continue associating with that person,
FINRA believes the timing requirement
of the proposed rule—to require such a
plan once a firm has made a
determination to seek approval for
continued association with the
disqualified associated person—strikes
the appropriate balance.
Network 1 wrote that requiring firms
to expend resources on developing
117 See Notice to Members 97–17 (April 1997);
Regulatory Notice 18–15 (April 2018).
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heightened supervision plans for
disqualified persons while an SD
Application is pending is a disincentive
to hiring the person at all. While FINRA
recognizes that the requirement to
develop and implement an interim
heightened supervision plan in these
circumstances may deter some firms
from retaining or hiring a disqualified
person, FINRA believes that if a firm
elects to sponsor a disqualified person
it needs to provide greater oversight of
the activities of such person during the
pendency of the SD Application,
thereby reducing the potential risk of
customer harm during this period.
Moreover, if the SD Application is
approved by FINRA, the firm would in
almost all cases be required to prepare
a plan of heightened supervision.
Aderant noted that although proposed
Rule 9522(g) sets a ten-day deadline to
remedy a substantially incomplete
application that seeks the continued
associated of a disqualified person, the
version proposed in Regulatory Notice
18–16 did not identify the specific event
that triggers the ten-day deadline.
FINRA agrees that a modification is
appropriate and has revised proposed
Rule 9522(g) to establish that the event
triggering the ten-day deadline is service
of the notice of delinquency.
Proposed Amendments to FINRA Rule
8312
The proposed amendments to FINRA
Rule 8312 would remove the
requirement that the only means
through which persons can request
information as to whether a particular
member is subject to the provisions of
the Taping Rule is a telephonic inquiry
via the BrokerCheck toll-free telephone
listing. The proposed amended rule
would permit FINRA to release this
information through BrokerCheck
regardless of how it is requested.
NASAA agreed with this proposal,
stating that it would advance investor
protection.
Other commenters opposed it. Luxor
wrote that the proposal is punitive, will
disproportionately cause reputational
damage to small firms, and will create
a perception that a taping firm and its
representatives are to be viewed
negatively simply by association with
behavior that occurred at other firms
and other persons. Network 1
commented that there is little likelihood
the public will understand the
difference between a taping firm and a
disciplined firm. FINRA notes that Rule
8312 already provides, however, that
FINRA will release whether a particular
member firm is subject to the Taping
Rule in response to telephonic inquiries
via the BrokerCheck toll-free telephone
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20765
listing. The proposed amendments—
which will only remove the telephonic
inquiry limitation—will simply make it
easier for investors to obtain this same
information by expanding the means
through which investors can access it.
Moreover, the comment that the
proposed amendments would have a
disproportionate effect on small firms
has no basis; there is currently only one
firm subject to the Taping Rule.
Several comments raised concerns
regarding the content of the proposed
BrokerCheck disclosure relating to
taping firms. Better Markets and PIABA
requested that the disclosure be
explained in BrokerCheck and include a
specific narrative description of why the
disclosure is being made. NASAA
suggested that the proposed
BrokerCheck disclosure appear only on
the BrokerCheck reports of the few firms
that are subject to the Taping Rule.
NASAA further commented that the
disclosure should identify the firm as
subject to the Taping Rule and explain
in plain English what that means.
Network 1 and Better Markets raised
concerns as to how the proposed
amendments would impact the
information disclosed through
BrokerCheck concerning individuals.
Network 1 requested that FINRA amend
the proposal to ensure that the
information disclosed on BrokerCheck
not communicate any ‘‘guilt by
association’’ for persons who are
employees of taping firms and who have
‘‘clean records.’’ Better Markets, on the
other hand, suggested that the
BrokerCheck profiles of individual
brokers should denote when they are
associated with taping firms.
FINRA appreciates the concerns
expressed and agrees that the
BrokerCheck disclosure of a firm as
being subject to the Taping Rule should
include a clear explanation of what that
means, to help investors understand
why the taping firm is subject to
heightened procedures and incent them
to research the background of a broker
associated with the taping firm.
Proposed Amendments to the FINRA
Rule 1000 Series To Impose Additional
Obligations on Member Firms That
Associate With Persons With a
Significant History of Past Misconduct
➢ General Comments
The proposed amendments to the
FINRA Rule 1010 Series would require
a member firm to submit a letter to
Member Regulation seeking a
materiality consultation when a natural
person that has, in the prior five years,
one or more ‘‘final criminal matters’’ or
two or more ‘‘specified risk events’’
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seeks to become an owner, control
person, principal or registered person.
Several commenters expressed
general support for the proposed
amendments to the Rule 1000 Series.118
Better Markets characterized requiring
materiality consultations before hiring
as an important regulatory innovation.
NASAA described the proposal as a
reasonable means of getting Member
Regulation more involved in members’
decisions to associate with individuals
who have significant disciplinary
histories. PIABA wrote that the
proposed amendments would promote
investor protection, adequately apply
stronger standards for continuing
membership, and remind firms of the
need to keep new representatives with
significant disciplinary histories under a
well-defined, well-enforced supervisory
plan.
Janney and SIFMA commented that
the proposed rule requiring materiality
consultations is contrary to the spirit of
FINRA’s current guidance about
materiality consultations, which they
assert focuses on changes to a firm’s
business model and not the activity or
employability of individuals. FINRA
disagrees with this assertion and
believes the proposed rule is consistent
with FINRA rules governing the
membership application process, which
considers, among other things, firms’
hiring decisions and individuals’ past
activities. For example, the safe harbor
in IM–1011–1 is premised on the notion
that hiring a certain number of
associated persons involved in sales can
be a material change in business
operations that requires the filing of a
CMA, and the safe harbor is not
available to a member firm or a
principal of a firm that has a specified
disciplinary history. Likewise, FINRA
rules require Member Regulation to
consider, in new membership
applications and CMAs, a variety of
criminal, civil, regulatory, and
arbitration events when assessing
whether an applicant and its associated
persons are capable of complying with
federal securities laws, the rules and
regulations thereunder, and FINRA
rules.119
Several commenters expressed
concern about the possible negative
impact of the proposed rule on a firm’s
hiring practices and the ability of
individuals with such events to be
hired. Luxor commented that the
proposed rule changes are unnecessary,
because FINRA can contact a firm when
it has hired ‘‘high-risk brokers.’’ Luxor
also commented that if a person has a
➢ Definitions and Criteria That Would
Require a Materiality Consultation
FINRA received numerous comments
concerning the definitions in proposed
Rule 1011 of ‘‘final criminal matter’’ and
‘‘specified risk event’’ and the criteria in
proposed Rule 1017(a)(7) that would
trigger the need to request a materiality
consultation. Some commenters
expressly supported the proposed
definitions and criteria.120 FSI wrote
that the numeric parameters and
proposed criteria are sound and
reasonable, and it supported how the
‘‘specified risk events’’ are final and
investment- or regulatory-related.
NASAA wrote that the proposed
definition of ‘‘final criminal matter’’
appropriately captures the scope of
disclosable criminal events on the
118 Better
119 See
Markets, Cambridge, NASAA, PIABA.
Rule 1014(a)(3).
license to operate and has not been
barred or otherwise precluded from
operating, no additional consultation
should be required when a firm wishes
to hire that person. Janney stated that
the investing public and the markets
would be better protected by FINRA
taking contemporaneous action, instead
of disrupting the hiring practices of an
unrelated firm as many as five years
after the underlying disclosure events in
proposed Rule 1017(a)(7) and IM–1011–
3 have occurred. Janney also expressed
the view that it appears that FINRA
would like to review transitions
specifically in the context of an
affiliation change, and the proposed rule
would create the ability to prevent
transition of a registered representative
without taking enforcement action.
FINRA believes the proposed rule is
necessary to ensure that FINRA has a
more meaningful regulatory touchpoint
at the time an individual with a
significant history of misconduct seeks
to become an owner, control person,
principal or registered person of a
member firm. The proposal would apply
in the limited circumstance where such
individual meets the required
thresholds for disclosure events. FINRA
believes requiring firms to ask FINRA
for a materiality consultation, for
example, when it is planning to hire a
particular individual that meets the
required thresholds, would allow
FINRA the opportunity to meaningfully
assess the underlying disciplinary
events and review the firm’s supervisory
practices and internal controls. The
ability of FINRA to conduct this review
contemporaneously furthers investor
protection. Moreover, nothing in the
proposed rule precludes FINRA from
taking enforcement action when
necessary or appropriate.
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120 FSI,
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Uniform Registration Forms. PIABA
wrote that the criteria and definitions
are appropriate and clear enough to
avoid confusion, and that the minor
compliance costs will be far outweighed
by the increased investor protections.
Other commenters suggested
alternatives to the proposed definitions
and criteria. For example:
• Some commenters proposed that
the definition of ‘‘final criminal matter’’
include only investment- or fraudrelated criminal matters 121 or matters
that would generate a risk of customer
harm.122
• Several commenters proposed that
the definition of ‘‘specified risk event’’
use a dollar threshold that is either
higher 123 or lower 124 than $15,000.
• Some commenters proposed that
the final awards and settlements that are
counted as ‘‘specified risk events’’ be
broadened 125 or narrowed.126
• Several commenters proposed
changes to how ‘‘specified risk events’’
would be counted.127
• Some commenters suggested that
lookback periods for events that would
trigger a materiality consultation be
either shortened 128 or increased.129
• Luxor wrote that additional factors
should be included in the criteria for
whether a materiality consultation is
required, including the length of time
the individual has been in the industry,
121 Luxor,
Wulff Hansen.
This commenter also requested
guidance concerning whether ‘‘final criminal
matter’’ would include situations where a person
receives a deferred sentence and can clear a
conviction through compliance with a courtordered program. Per the proposed definition,
whether a ‘‘final criminal matter’’ would count for
purposes of proposed Rule 1017(a)(7) and IM–
1011–3 would depend on whether the matter ‘‘is
disclosed, or was required to be disclosed, on the
applicable Uniform Registration Forms.’’ The
setting aside of a conviction does not necessarily
mean that it need not be reported on, or that the
matter should be expunged from, the Uniform
Registration Forms. See, e.g., Form U4 and U5
Interpretive Questions and Answers, https://
www.finra.org/sites/default/files/InterpretiveGuidance-final-03.05.15.pdf (Questions 14A and
14B, Interpretive Question and Answer 2, stating
that ‘‘[e]ach order setting aside a conviction will be
reviewed by RAD staff to determine if the
conviction must be reported’’).
123 Cambridge, IBN, Janney, MML. Cambridge
asserted that some unfair high-risk characterizations
resulting from a $15,000 threshold would involve
control persons, principals and registered persons
who are required to disclose events due to a
managerial role but are ‘‘likely not directly involved
in’’ the underlying violations in those disclosed
events. FINRA notes that the proposed definition of
‘‘specified risk event’’ does not include final awards
or settlements where the person was not named but
is only the ‘‘subject of.’’
124 Better Markets.
125 NASAA.
126 Luxor, Network 1.
127 Luxor, MML, Wulff Hansen.
128 Luxor.
129 NASAA.
122 MML.
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the number of events during that period,
and the circumstances of those events.
• Several commenters suggested
narrowing the kinds of business
expansions that would require
materiality consultations.130
After considering all the commenters’
suggested alternative definitions and
criteria, FINRA has decided to retain the
definitions of ‘‘final criminal matter’’
and ‘‘specified risk events’’ and the
criteria that would trigger a materiality
consultation that it proposed in
Regulatory Notice 18–16. Many of the
comments concern issues that FINRA
already considered and addressed in the
economic assessment in Regulatory
Notice 18–16, and the comments have
not persuaded FINRA that any changes
to the definitions or criteria would be
more efficient or effective at addressing
the potential for future customer harm
presented. As FINRA explained in
Regulatory Notice 18–16, the primary
benefit of the proposed rule change
would be to reduce the potential risk of
future customer harm by individuals
who meet the proposed criteria and seek
to become an owner, control person,
principal or registered person of a
member firm. The proposed rule change
would further promote investor
protection by applying stronger
standards for changes to a current
member firm’s ownership, control or
business operations, including the
potential that such changes would
require the filing and approval of a
CMA. In developing this proposal, one
of the guiding principles was to provide
transparency regarding the proposal’s
application, so that firms could largely
identify with available data the specific
set of disclosure events that would
count towards the proposed criteria and
whether a proposed business change
would trigger the need for a materiality
consultation. This is why FINRA’s
proposal is based mostly on events
disclosed on the Uniform Registration
Forms, which are generally available to
firms and FINRA.
While FINRA generally agrees with
the comments that the proposed
materiality consultation process should
account for situations where numerous
‘‘specified risk events’’ are related,131 it
does not believe that modifying the rulebased criteria is the best way to do so.
Rather, FINRA believes the materiality
consultation process should allow it to
assess an individual’s particular events.
Moreover, based on experience gained
through the materiality consultations,
FINRA may be able to develop guidance
for the Department concerning
130 Janney,
131 MML,
Luxor, MML, SIFMA, Wulff Hansen.
Wulff Hansen.
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situations involving the ‘‘specified risk
events’’ that could affect whether a
proposed business expansion is or is not
material.
Wulff Hansen suggested that a
materiality consultation should be
required when a person having two or
more ‘‘specified risk events’’ is already
associated with a member and seeks to
become an owner or control person.
FINRA notes that the proposed rule
already would require materiality
consultations for internal moves. As
explained above, however, the proposed
rule would not apply when a person
who meets the proposed criteria in
proposed Rule 1017(a)(7) is already a
principal at a member firm and seeks to
add an additional principal registration
at that same firm. In that instance, the
proposed rule amendments would not
require a materiality consultation.
➢ Materiality Consultation Procedures
FSI and Janney requested that FINRA
develop additional procedures for the
materiality consultation process. For
example, these commenters wrote that
FINRA should establish time frames for
FINRA staff to issue a decision in a
materiality consultation, with one
commenter explaining that time
deadlines would allow firms to
minimize litigation risks when making
hiring decisions. FSI asked that FINRA
consider establishing rule-based
remedies for firms that disagree with
FINRA staff’s materiality consultation
decisions, and a rule-based requirement
that FINRA explain in writing a
decision that requires a firm to file a
CMA.132 MML suggested that the
proposed rule should outline the issues
that would be central to the
Department’s materiality determination
and clarify the proposed requirement
that a member submit a written letter to
the Department in a ‘‘manner prescribed
by FINRA.’’
In general, FINRA believes that
additional rule-based procedures for the
materiality consultation process would
undermine its informality, flexibility
and expedited nature. By analogy,
FINRA’s existing materiality
consultation process has no writtendecision requirement and no appeal
process. Nevertheless, FINRA believes it
would be helpful to provide guidance
about the materiality consultation
process that would be required by the
proposed rule, to supplement the
already published guidance about
FINRA’s existing materiality
132 FSI also wrote that additional procedures
would be appropriate because the materiality
consultations would be a rule-based requirement,
not voluntary.
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20767
consultation process.133 For that reason,
FINRA has explained in detail—both in
Regulatory Notice 18–16 and above—the
kinds of information that the firm
should provide when seeking a
materiality consultation required by
proposed Rule 1017(a)(7) and what
information would be relevant to the
Department’s materiality decision.
FINRA also will provide more guidance
as necessary as to what firms should
provide when seeking the materiality
consultation required by the proposed
rule amendments.
Miscellaneous Comments
SIFMA requested that FINRA provide
a notification to firms of registered
persons who have ‘‘specified risk
events,’’ similar to how FINRA provides
information gathered in its public
records searches for information relating
to bankruptcies, judgments and liens,
asserting that individuals may not
identify and disclose ‘‘specified risk
events’’ to firms in a timely manner.
FINRA appreciates this suggestion, but
notes that the events included in the
definition are derived from the Uniform
Registration Forms and, therefore, firms
should generally be able to conduct
appropriate due diligence to identify
such individuals. Indeed, FINRA Rule
3110(e) already requires firms to
establish and implement written
procedures reasonably designed to
verify the accuracy and completeness of
the information contain in an
applicant’s initial or transfer Form U4,
which would include verifying the
accuracy and completeness of answers
and disclosures concerning ‘‘final
criminal matters’’ and the events
covered by the definition of ‘‘specified
risk events.’’
Cambridge commented that persons
should have the opportunity to
confidentially submit an application
seeking a materiality consultation to
‘‘pre-qualify’’ a transition from one firm
133 See The Materiality Consultation Process for
CMAs, https://www.finra.org/rules-guidance/
guidance/materiality-consultation-process. FINRA’s
existing guidance provides that a materiality
consultation submission should include, but is not
limited to, the following: (i) A description of the
proposed change in business sufficient for staff to
understand the scope of the business and how it
will be conducted; (ii) why the firm believes that
the proposed new business or product is similar in
scope or nature to their existing business; (iii) the
anticipated impact the change will have to the
firm’s supervisory structure; (iv) any impact the
proposed change will have to the firm’s capital or
liquidity; (v) the nature and scope of updates
required to written supervisory procedures, systems
and firm operations; (vi) any recent disciplinary
matters that relate to the proposed activities as well
as how the firm’s overall regulatory history may
impact the ability of the firm to effectively conduct
the activity; and (vii) any relevant documentation
to support the proposal.
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to another and gain confidence that they
are free to make such a transfer. FINRA
does not believe, however, that
prequalification of a person with a
significant history of misconduct would
be appropriate, or even possible, in the
absence of additional information about,
among other things, the specific context
in which the person would be
associated with a new firm and the
activities and history of such proposed
new firm.
Better Markets opined that the
proposed rule change would reflect an
improvement over the status quo but is
still insufficient, and that FINRA should
do more to reduce the number of
brokers with a significant history of
misconduct and the prevalence of
recidivism. Specifically, Better Markets
wrote that FINRA should ban brokers
with two criminal convictions or three
‘‘specified risk events’’ at a $5,000 level
(instead of the proposed $15,000 level)
and immediately and permanently expel
a firm where more than 20% of its
brokers have three or more ‘‘specified
risk events.’’ Better Markets also
suggested that FINRA engage in more
investor education on the topic of
recidivist brokers, design a user-friendly
disclosure system that clearly identifies
brokers with a demonstrable pattern of
violations, and repeal the part of FINRA
Rule 9311 that stays a Hearing Panel or
Hearing Officer decision pending an
appeal to the NAC.
FINRA’s efforts to address the risks
posed by brokers with a significant
history of misconduct are ongoing, and
FINRA appreciates comments on
additional steps that FINRA might take.
Some of Better Markets’ suggestions,
however, amount to a request that
FINRA create new categories of
‘‘statutory disqualification.’’ Federal law
defines the types of misconduct that
presumptively disqualify a broker from
associating with a firm, and amending
what qualifies as a statutory
disqualification is beyond FINRA’s
jurisdiction. In addition, FINRA does
not agree that repealing the provision in
Rule 9311(b) that stays the effect of a
Hearing Panel or Hearing Officer
decision would be appropriate at this
time. FINRA’s rule that stays the effect
of a Hearing Panel or Hearing Officer
decision is consistent with rules of other
self-regulatory organizations and the
SEC.134 Moreover, the proposed rule
134 See, e.g., 17 CFR 201.360(d) (providing that an
SEC ALJ’s initial decision shall not become final as
to a party or person who timely files a petition for
review); CBOE Rule 13.11(b) (providing that
sanctions shall not become effective until the
Exchange review process is completed or the
decision otherwise becomes final); NASDAQ PHLX
Rule 9311(b) (providing that an appeal to the
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change would protect investors during a
disciplinary appeal by empowering
Hearing Officers to impose conditions
and restrictions that they consider
reasonably necessary for the purpose of
preventing customer harm.
Miscellaneous Comments Outside the
Scope of the Proposal
Some comments raised concerns
regarding broader issues, such as
arbitration proceedings and public
disclosure of arbitration settlements,135
the composition of Hearing Panels in
FINRA’s disciplinary proceedings,136
questions about whether firms are
permitted to pay disqualified persons
consistent with FINRA Rule 8311,137
various Constitutional protections that
FINRA should adopt in investigations
and disciplinary proceedings,138 and
how FINRA might improve the Taping
Rule to prevent non-compliance with
that rule.139 FINRA believes, however,
that these comments are all outside the
scope of the proposal.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Within 45 days of the date of
publication of this notice in the Federal
Register or within such longer period (i)
as the Commission may designate up to
90 days of such date if it finds such
longer period to be appropriate and
publishes its reasons for so finding or
Exchange Review Council from a disciplinary
decision shall operate as a stay until the Exchange
Review Council issues a decision); NYSE CHX
Article 12, Rule 6 (providing that the enforcement
of any orders or penalties shall be stayed upon the
filing of a notice of appeal pending the outcome of
final review by a Judiciary Committee or the Board
of Directors).
135 IBN suggested that FINRA should have local
arbitration hearings, with panels composed of local
representatives and local firms, and that FINRA
should eliminate mandatory arbitration or require
arbitrators to be lawyers and follow the rule of law.
Network 1 commented that FINRA should consider
the ‘‘prejudicial effect’’ on brokers of the six-year
limitations period for filing an arbitration claim and
of nuisance-value arbitration actions brought by
non-attorney representatives; that references to
arbitration claims brought by a non-attorney
representative that are settled or that result in an
award in favor of the broker should be removed
from the broker’s public record; and that an
arbitration claim brought by a non-attorney
representative that results in a settlement should
not be made available to the public at all.
136 Network 1 commented that FINRA
adjudicatory panels should include one attorney
with a demonstrated history of representing brokers
or member firms, securities industry experience,
and knowledge of securities laws, regulations and
rules and industry practices in the investment
banking and securities businesses. It also
commented that FINRA should establish a process
for soliciting ‘‘bona fide neutrals’’ to sit on
adjudicatory panels.
137 Network 1.
138 Network 1.
139 NASAA.
PO 00000
Frm 00107
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
(ii) as to which the self-regulatory
organization consents, the Commission
will:
(A) By order approve or disapprove
such proposed rule change, or
(B) institute proceedings to determine
whether the proposed rule change
should be disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include File Number SR–
FINRA–2020–011 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–FINRA–2020–011. This file
number should be included on the
subject line if email is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
post all comments on the Commission’s
internet website (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent
amendments, all written statements
with respect to the proposed rule
change that are filed with the
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for website viewing and
printing in the Commission’s Public
Reference Room, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549, on official
business days between the hours of 10
a.m. and 3 p.m. Copies of such filing
also will be available for inspection and
copying at the principal office of
FINRA. All comments received will be
posted without change. Persons
submitting comments are cautioned that
we do not redact or edit personal
identifying information from comment
submissions. You should submit only
information that you wish to make
available publicly. All submissions
should refer to File Number SR–FINRA–
E:\FR\FM\14APN1.SGM
14APN1
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 72 / Tuesday, April 14, 2020 / Notices
2020–011 and should be submitted on
or before May 5, 2020.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.140
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020–07777 Filed 4–13–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
[Release No. 34–88589; File No. SR–
NYSEAMER–2020–22]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; NYSE
American LLC; Notice of Filing and
Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed
Rule Change To Extend the Current
Pilot Program Related to Rule 7.10E
April 8, 2020.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) 1 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’) 2 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,3
notice is hereby given that on March 27,
2020, NYSE American LLC (‘‘NYSE
American’’ or ‘‘Exchange’’) filed with
the Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’) the
proposed rule change as described in
Items I and II below, which Items have
been prepared by the self-regulatory
organization. The Commission is
publishing this notice to solicit
comments on the proposed rule change
from interested persons.
jbell on DSKJLSW7X2PROD with NOTICES
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The Exchange proposes to extend the
current pilot program related to Rule
7.10E (Clearly Erroneous Executions) to
the close of business on October 20,
2020. The proposed rule change is
available on the Exchange’s website at
www.nyse.com, at the principal office of
the Exchange, and at the Commission’s
Public Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission, the
self-regulatory organization included
statements concerning the purpose of,
and basis for, the proposed rule change
and discussed any comments it received
on the proposed rule change. The text
of those statements may be examined at
the places specified in Item IV below.
140 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 15 U.S.C. 78a.
3 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
1 15
18:26 Apr 13, 2020
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and the
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
1. Purpose
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
VerDate Sep<11>2014
The Exchange has prepared summaries,
set forth in sections A, B, and C below,
of the most significant parts of such
statements.
Jkt 250001
The purpose of the proposed rule
change is to extend the current pilot
program related to Rule 7.10E (Clearly
Erroneous Executions) to the close of
business on October 20, 2020. The pilot
program is currently due to expire on
April 20, 2020.
On September 10, 2010, the
Commission approved, on a pilot basis,
changes to Rule 7.10E that, among other
things: (i) Provided for uniform
treatment of clearly erroneous execution
reviews in multi-stock events involving
twenty or more securities; and (ii)
reduced the ability of the Exchange to
deviate from the objective standards set
forth in the rule.4 In 2013, the Exchange
adopted a provision designed to address
the operation of the Plan.5 Finally, in
2014, the Exchange adopted two
additional provisions providing that: (i)
A series of transactions in a particular
security on one or more trading days
may be viewed as one event if all such
transactions were effected based on the
same fundamentally incorrect or grossly
misinterpreted issuance information
resulting in a severe valuation error for
all such transactions; and (ii) in the
event of any disruption or malfunction
in the operation of the electronic
communications and trading facilities of
an Exchange, another SRO, or
responsible single plan processor in
connection with the transmittal or
receipt of a trading halt, an Officer,
acting on his or her own motion, shall
nullify any transaction that occurs after
a trading halt has been declared by the
primary listing market for a security and
before such trading halt has officially
ended according to the primary listing
market.6
These changes were originally
scheduled to operate for a pilot period
to coincide with the pilot period for the
Plan to Address Extraordinary Market
Volatility (the ‘‘Limit Up-Limit Down
4 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 62886
(Sept. 10, 2010), 75 FR 56613 (Sept. 16, 2010) (SR–
NYSEAmer–2010–60).
5 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 68801
(Feb. 1, 2013), 78 FR 8630 (Feb. 6, 2013) (SR–
NYSEMKT–2013–11).
6 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 72434
(June 19, 2014), 79 FR 36110 (June 25, 2014) (SR–
NYSEMKT–2014–37).
PO 00000
Frm 00108
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
20769
Plan’’ or ‘‘LULD Plan’’),7 including any
extensions to the pilot period for the
LULD Plan.8 In April 2019, the
Commission approved an amendment to
the LULD Plan for it to operate on a
permanent, rather than pilot, basis.9 In
light of that change, the Exchange
amended Rule 7.10E to untie the pilot’s
effectiveness from that of the LULD Plan
and to extend the pilot’s effectiveness to
the close of business on October 18,
2019.10 The Exchange later amended
Rule 7.10E to extend the pilot’s
effectiveness to the close of business on
April 20, 2020.11
The Exchange now proposes to amend
Rule 7.10E to extend the pilot’s
effectiveness for a further six months
until the close of business on October
20, 2020. If the pilot period is not either
extended, replaced or approved as
permanent, the prior versions of
paragraphs (c), (e)(2), (f), and (g) shall be
in effect, and the provisions of
paragraphs (i) through (k) shall be null
and void.12 In such an event, the
remaining sections of Rule 7.10E would
continue to apply to all transactions
executed on the Exchange. The
Exchange understands that the other
national securities exchanges and
Financial Industry Regulatory Authority
(‘‘FINRA’’) will also file similar
proposals to extend their respective
clearly erroneous execution pilot
programs, the substance of which are
identical to Rule 7.10E.
The Exchange does not propose any
additional changes to Rule 7.10E.
Extending the effectiveness of Rule
7.10E for an additional six months will
provide the Exchange and other selfregulatory organizations additional time
to consider whether further
amendments to the clearly erroneous
execution rules are appropriate.
2. Statutory Basis
The Exchange believes the proposed
rule change is consistent with the
requirements of Section 6(b) of the
7 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 67091
(May 31, 2012), 77 FR 33498 (June 6, 2012) (the
‘‘Limit Up-Limit Down Release’’).
8 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 71820
(March 27, 2014), 79 FR 18595 (April 2, 2014) (SR–
NYSEMKT–2014–28).
9 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 85623
(April 11, 2019), 84 FR 16086 (April 17, 2019)
(approving Eighteenth Amendment to LULD Plan).
10 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 85563
(April 9, 2019), 84 FR 15241 (April 15, 2019) (SR–
NYSEAMER–2019–11).
11 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 87354
(October 18, 2019), 84 FR 57139 (October 24, 2019)
(SR–NYSEAMER–2019–44).
12 See supra notes 4–6. The prior versions of
paragraphs (c), (e)(2), (f), and (g) generally provided
greater discretion to the Exchange with respect to
breaking erroneous trades.
E:\FR\FM\14APN1.SGM
14APN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 72 (Tuesday, April 14, 2020)]
[Notices]
[Pages 20745-20769]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-07777]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-88600; File No. SR-FINRA-2020-011]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority, Inc.; Notice of Filing of a Proposed Rule Change To Address
Brokers With a Significant History of Misconduct
April 8, 2020.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(``Act'') \1\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\2\ notice is hereby given that
on April 3, 2020, Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc.
(``FINRA'') filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (``SEC''
or ``Commission'') the proposed rule change as described in Items I,
II, and III below, which Items have been prepared by FINRA. The
Commission is publishing this notice to solicit comments on the
proposed rule change from interested persons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of Substance
of the Proposed Rule Change
FINRA is proposing to (1) amend the FINRA Rule 9200 Series
(Disciplinary Proceedings) and the 9300 Series (Review of Disciplinary
Proceeding by National Adjudicatory Council and FINRA Board;
Application for SEC Review) to allow a Hearing Officer to impose
conditions or restrictions on the activities of a respondent member
firm or respondent broker, and require a respondent broker's member
firm to adopt heightened supervisory procedures for such broker, when a
disciplinary matter is appealed to the National Adjudicatory Council
(``NAC'') or called for NAC review; (2) amend the FINRA Rule 9520
Series (Eligibility Proceedings) to require member firms to adopt
heightened supervisory procedures for statutorily disqualified brokers
during the period a statutory disqualification eligibility request is
under review by FINRA; (3) amend FINRA Rule 8312 (FINRA BrokerCheck
Disclosure) to allow the disclosure through FINRA BrokerCheck of the
status of a member firm as a ``taping firm'' under FINRA Rule 3170
(Tape Recording of Registered Persons by Certain Firms); and (4) amend
the FINRA Rule 1000 Series (Member Application and Associated Person
Registration) to require a member firm to submit a written request to
FINRA's Department of Member Regulation (``Member Regulation''),
through the Membership Application Group (``MAP Group''), seeking a
materiality consultation and approval of a continuing membership
application, if required, when a natural person that has, in the prior
five years, one or more ``final criminal matters'' or two or more
``specified risk events'' \3\ seeks to become an owner, control person,
principal or registered person of the member firm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ As explained more below, the proposed definitions of ``final
criminal matter'' and ``specified risk event'' generally include
final, adjudicated disclosure events disclosed on a person's or
firm's Uniform Registration Forms. For purposes of the proposed rule
change, Uniform Registration Forms for firms and brokers refer to,
and would be defined as, the Uniform Application for Broker-Dealer
Registration (Form BD), the Uniform Application for Securities
Industry Registration or Transfer (Form U4), the Uniform Termination
Notice for Securities Industry Registration (Form U5) and the
Uniform Disciplinary Action Reporting Form (Form U6), as such may be
amended or any successor(s) thereto.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The text of the proposed rule change is available on FINRA's
website at https://www.finra.org, at the principal office of FINRA and
at the Commission's Public Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission, FINRA included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for the proposed rule change and
discussed any comments it received on the proposed rule change. The
text of these statements may be examined at the places specified in
Item IV below. FINRA has prepared summaries, set forth in sections A,
B, and C below, of the most significant aspects of such statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
1. Purpose
Overview
FINRA uses a combination of tools to reduce the risk of harm to
investors from member firms and the brokers they hire that have a
history of misconduct. These tools include assessments of applications
filed by member firms to retain or employ an individual subject to a
statutory disqualification, reviews of membership and continuing
membership applications (``CMAs''), disclosure of brokers' regulatory
backgrounds, supervision requirements, focused examinations, risk
monitoring and disciplinary actions. These tools, among others, have
been useful in identifying and addressing a range of misconduct and
serve to further the Exchange Act goals, reflected in FINRA's mission,
of investor protection and market integrity.
In addition, FINRA Rule 3110 (Supervision) requires member firms to
establish and maintain a system to supervise the activities of each
associated person that is reasonably designed to achieve compliance
with applicable securities laws and FINRA rules. The rule also requires
member firms to establish, maintain and enforce written procedures to
supervise the types of business in which they engage and the activities
of their associated persons that are reasonably designed to achieve
compliance with applicable securities laws and FINRA rules.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See Rule 3110(a) and (b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Despite these requirements and FINRA's ongoing efforts to
strengthen protections for investors and the markets through its
oversight of member firms and the brokers they employ, persistent
compliance issues continue to arise in some member firms. Recent
studies, for example, find that some firms persistently employ brokers
who engage in misconduct, which results in higher levels of misconduct
by these firms. These studies also provide evidence that past
disciplinary and other regulatory events associated with a member firm
or individual can be predictive of similar future events, such as
repeated disciplinary actions, arbitrations and complaints.\5\ This
risk
[[Page 20746]]
cannot always be adequately addressed by FINRA's existing rules and
programs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ For example, in 2015 FINRA's Office of the Chief Economist
(OCE) published a study that examined the predictability of
disciplinary and other disclosure events associated with investor
harm based on past similar events. The OCE study showed that past
disclosure events, including regulatory actions, customer
arbitrations and litigations of brokers, have significant power to
predict future investor harm. See Hammad Qureshi & Jonathan Sokobin,
Do Investors Have Valuable Information About Brokers? (FINRA Office
of the Chief Economist Working Paper, Aug. 2015). A subsequent
academic research paper presented evidence that suggests a higher
rate of new disciplinary and other disclosure events is highly
correlated with past disciplinary and other disclosure events, as
far back as nine years prior. See Mark Egan, Gregor Matvos, & Amit
Seru, The Market for Financial Adviser Misconduct, J. Pol. Econ.
127, no. 1 (Feb. 2019): 233-295.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Brokers and member firms with a history of misconduct can pose a
particular challenge for FINRA's existing examination and enforcement
programs. For example, FINRA examinations of member firms can identify
compliance failures--or imminent failures--and prescribe remedies to be
taken, but examiners are not empowered to require a firm to change or
limit its business operations in a particular manner. While these
constraints on the examination process protect firms from potentially
arbitrary or overly onerous examination findings, a firm or individual
with a history of misconduct can take advantage of these limits to
continue ongoing activities that harm or pose risk of harm to investors
until they result in an enforcement action.
FINRA disciplinary actions, in turn, can be brought only after a
violation--and any resulting customer harm--may have already occurred.
In addition, disciplinary proceedings can take significant time to
develop, prosecute and conclude, during which time the respondent in a
disciplinary proceeding is able to continue misconduct, perpetuating
significant risks of additional harm to customers and investors.
Litigated enforcement actions brought by FINRA involve a hearing and
often multiple rounds of appeals, thereby effectively forestalling the
imposition of disciplinary sanctions--and their potential deterrent
effect--for an extended period. For example, a FINRA enforcement
proceeding could involve a hearing before a Hearing Panel, numerous
motions, an appeal to the NAC, and further appeals to the SEC and
federal courts of appeals. Moreover, even when a FINRA Hearing Panel or
Hearing Officer imposes a significant sanction, the sanction is stayed
during appeal to the NAC, many sanctions are automatically stayed on
appeal to the SEC, and they potentially can be stayed during appeal to
the courts. When all appeals are exhausted, the respondent's FINRA
registration may have terminated, limiting FINRA's jurisdiction and
eliminating the leverage that FINRA has to incent the respondent to
comply with the sanction, including making restitution to customers.
Similarly, FINRA's eligibility proceedings are sometimes not
available or sufficient to address the risks posed by brokers with a
significant history of past misconduct. Federal law and regulations
define the types of misconduct that presumptively disqualify a broker
from associating with a member firm and also govern the standards and
procedures FINRA must follow when a firm seeks to associate or continue
associating with a broker subject to a statutory disqualification.
These laws and regulations limit who FINRA may subject to an
eligibility proceeding and affect how FINRA may exercise its authority
in those proceedings.
FINRA's membership proceedings also do not always protect against
the risks posed when a firm hires brokers with a significant history of
misconduct. For firms eligible for the safe harbor for business
expansions in IM-1011-1 (Safe Harbor for Business Expansions), there
are a defined set of expansions (including, among other things,
increases in the number of associated persons involved in sales) that
are presumed not to be a material change in business operations and
therefore do not require the firm to file a CMA.
Thus, notwithstanding the existing protections afforded by the
federal securities laws and FINRA rules, the risk of potential customer
harm may persist where a firm or broker has a significant history of
past misconduct.
FINRA is taking steps to strengthen its tools to respond to brokers
with a significant history of misconduct and the firms that employ
them, several of which are described below. In addition, the proposed
rule change, as explained further below, would create several
additional protections to address this risk.
Additional Steps Undertaken by FINRA
As part of this initiative, FINRA has undertaken the following:
[rtarr8] Published Regulatory Notice 18-15 (Heightened
Supervision), which reiterates the existing obligation of member firms
to implement for such individuals tailored heightened supervisory
procedures under Rule 3110;
[rtarr8] Published Regulatory Notice 18-17 (FINRA Revises the
Sanction Guidelines), which announced revisions to the FINRA Sanction
Guidelines;
[rtarr8] Raised fees for statutory disqualification applications;
\6\ and
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 83181 (May 7, 2018),
83 FR 22107 (May 11, 2018) (Notice of Filing and Immediate
Effectiveness of File No. SR-FINRA-2018-018).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[rtarr8] Revised the qualification examination waiver guidelines to
permit FINRA to more broadly consider past misconduct when considering
examination waiver requests.
In addition, to further address issues created by member firms that
have a significant history of misconduct, FINRA has issued a Regulatory
Notice seeking comment on proposed new Rule 4111 (Restricted Firm
Obligations).\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ See Regulatory Notice 19-17 (May 2019).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Amendments to the FINRA Rule 9200 Series and FINRA Rule 9300
Series To Enhance Investor Protection During the Pendency of an Appeal
or Call-for-Review Proceeding
FINRA is proposing amendments to the Rule 9200 Series (Disciplinary
Proceedings) and Rule 9300 Series (Review of Disciplinary Proceeding by
National Adjudicatory Council and FINRA Board; Application for SEC
Review) to bolster investor protection during the pendency of an appeal
from, or a NAC review of, a Hearing Panel or Hearing Officer
disciplinary decision, by empowering Hearing Officers to impose
conditions or restrictions on disciplined respondents and requiring
firms to adopt heightened supervision plans concerning disciplined
individual respondents. The proposed rule also would establish a
process for an expedited review by the Review Subcommittee of the NAC
of any conditions or restrictions imposed.
Currently, the Rule 9200 and Rule 9300 Series permit FINRA to bring
disciplinary actions against member firms, associated persons of member
firms or persons within FINRA's jurisdiction for alleged violations of
FINRA rules, SEC regulations or federal securities laws. Following the
filing of a complaint, FINRA's Chief Hearing Officer will assign a
Hearing Officer to preside over the disciplinary proceeding and appoint
a Hearing Panel, or an Extended Hearing Panel if applicable,\8\ to
conduct a hearing and issue a written decision. For each case, the
Hearing Panel or, in the case of default
[[Page 20747]]
decisions, the Hearing Officer will issue a written decision that makes
findings and, if violations occurred, imposes sanctions. Sanctions can
include, among other things, fines, suspensions, bars and orders to pay
restitution.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ References to ``Hearing Panel'' will refer to both a Hearing
Panel and an Extended Hearing Panel collectively, unless otherwise
noted. A Hearing Panel consists of a FINRA Hearing Officer and two
panelists, drawn primarily from a pool of current and former
securities industry members of FINRA's District and Regional
Committees, as well as its Market Regulation Committee, former
members of FINRA's NAC and former FINRA Directors or Governors.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under FINRA's disciplinary procedures, any party can appeal a
Hearing Panel or Hearing Officer decision to the NAC. In addition, any
member of the NAC or the NAC's Review Subcommittee, or the General
Counsel in the case of default decisions, may on their own initiate a
review of a decision. On appeal or review, the NAC will determine if a
Hearing Panel's or a Hearing Officer's findings were factually
supported and legally correct. The NAC also reviews any sanctions
imposed and considers the FINRA Sanction Guidelines when doing so. The
NAC prepares a proposed written decision. If the FINRA Board of
Governors does not call the case for review, the NAC's decision becomes
final and constitutes the final disciplinary action of FINRA, unless
the NAC remands the proceeding to the Hearing Officer or Hearing Panel.
If the FINRA Board of Governors calls the case for review, the FINRA
Board of Governors' decision constitutes the final disciplinary action
of FINRA, unless the Board of Governors remands the proceeding to the
NAC. A respondent in a FINRA disciplinary proceeding may appeal a final
FINRA disciplinary action to the SEC, and further to a United States
federal court of appeals.
When a Hearing Panel or Hearing Officer decision is on appeal or
review before the NAC, any sanctions imposed by the Hearing Panel or
Hearing Officer decision, including bars and expulsions, are
automatically stayed and not enforced against the respondent during the
pendency of the appeal or review proceeding.\9\ In turn, the filing of
an application for SEC review stays the effectiveness of any sanction,
other than a bar or an expulsion, imposed in a decision constituting a
final FINRA disciplinary action.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ See FINRA Rules 9311(b), 9312(b). In contrast, an appeal to
the NAC or a call for NAC review does not stay a decision, or that
part of a decision, that imposes a permanent cease and desist order.
See FINRA Rules 9311(b), 9312(b).
\10\ See FINRA Rule 9370(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed FINRA Rule 9285 (Interim Orders and Mandatory Heightened
Supervision While on Appeal or Discretionary Review) would establish
additional investor protections when a Hearing Panel or Hearing Officer
decision that makes findings that a respondent violated a statute or
rule provision is appealed to the NAC or called for NAC review.
Proposed Rule 9285(a) would provide that the Hearing Officer that
participated in the underlying disciplinary proceeding may impose any
conditions or restrictions on the activities of a respondent during the
appeal as the Hearing Officer considers reasonably necessary for the
purpose of preventing customer harm. In light of comments received in
response to Regulatory Notice 18-16, FINRA has modified the proposal to
make the imposition of possible conditions and restrictions a separate,
second step after a finding of a violation by a Hearing Panel or
Hearing Officer, and to provide greater clarity on how the process
would operate.
Unless otherwise ordered by a Hearing Officer, proposed Rule
9285(a)(1) would allow FINRA's Department of Enforcement
(``Enforcement''), within ten days after service of a notice of appeal
from, or the notice of a call for NAC review of, a disciplinary
decision of a Hearing Officer or Hearing Panel, to file a motion for
the imposition of conditions or restrictions on the activities of a
respondent that are reasonably necessary for the purpose of preventing
customer harm.\11\ Proposed Rule 9285(a)(1) also would provide
expressly that the Hearing Officer that participated in the underlying
disciplinary proceeding would have jurisdiction to rule on a motion
seeking conditions or restrictions, notwithstanding the appeal or call
for NAC review. FINRA believes that the Hearing Officer's knowledge
about the factual background and the violations, gained through
presiding over the disciplinary proceeding, would make the Hearing
Officer well qualified to evaluate the potential for customer harm and
craft, in the first instance and in an expeditious manner, tailored
conditions and restrictions to minimize that potential harm. In a
change from the proposal in Regulatory Notice 18-16, the proposed rule
would give the Hearing Officer who participated in the underlying
proceeding (instead of the Hearing Panel) the authority to impose
conditions or restrictions that are reasonably necessary for the
purpose of preventing customer harm, a change that FINRA believes will
enable orders imposing conditions or restrictions to be imposed more
expeditiously.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ See Rule 9311(a) (generally allowing a party to file a
notice of appeal within 25 days after service of a decision issued
pursuant to Rule 9268 or Rule 9269) and Rule 9312 (generally
allowing a call for review within 45 days after the date of service
of a decision issued pursuant to Rule 9268 and within 25 days after
the date of service of a default decision issued pursuant to Rule
9269).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Rule 9285(a)(2) through (a)(5), along with proposed Rule
9285(c), would establish the briefing, timing and other procedural
requirements relating to the imposition of conditions or restrictions.
The proposed rule would permit Enforcement to file a motion seeking the
imposition of conditions or restrictions that are reasonably necessary
for the purpose of preventing customer harm, and the motion must
specify the conditions and restrictions that are sought to be imposed
and explain why they are necessary. A respondent would have the right
to file an opposition or other response to the motion within ten days
after service of the motion, unless otherwise ordered by the Hearing
Officer, and must explain why no conditions or restrictions should be
imposed or specify alternative conditions and restrictions that are
sought to be imposed and explain why they are reasonably necessary for
the purpose of preventing customer harm. Enforcement would have no
automatic right to file a reply. The Hearing Officer would decide the
motion on the papers and without oral argument, unless an oral argument
is specifically ordered. In addition, the Hearing Officer would be
required to issue a written order ruling upon the motion in an
expeditious manner and no later than 20 days after any opposition or
permitted reply is filed. In an enhancement from the proposal in
Regulatory Notice 18-16, proposed Rule 9285(a)(5) also would require
that the Office of Hearing Officers provide a copy of the order to each
FINRA member with which the respondent is associated.
If the Hearing Officer grants a motion for conditions or
restrictions, its order should describe the activities that the
respondent shall refrain from taking and any conditions imposed. The
Hearing Officer would be guided by the limiting principle--set forth in
proposed Rule 9285(a)(5)--that the Hearing Officer shall have the
authority to impose any conditions or restrictions that the Hearing
Officer considers reasonably necessary for the purpose of preventing
customer harm. As FINRA explained in Regulatory Notice 18-16, the
conditions and restrictions imposed should target the misconduct
demonstrated in the disciplinary proceeding and be tailored to the
specific risks posed by the member firm or broker. Conditions or
restrictions could include, for example, prohibiting a member firm or
broker from offering private placements in cases of misrepresentations
and omissions made to customers, or
[[Page 20748]]
prohibiting penny stock liquidations in cases involving violations of
the penny stock rules. A condition could also include posting a bond to
cover harm to customers before the sanction imposed becomes final or
precluding a broker from acting in a specified capacity. FINRA believes
authorizing Hearing Officers to impose conditions or restrictions
during the period an appeal or review proceeding is pending would allow
FINRA to target the demonstrated bad conduct of a respondent during the
pendency of the appeal or review and add an interim layer of investor
protection while the disciplinary proceeding remains pending.\12\
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\12\ The examples of conditions and restrictions set forth above
are intended to provide guidance concerning the kinds of conditions
and restrictions that could be imposed. FINRA expects that requiring
Enforcement to file a motion specifying the conditions or
restrictions sought also will help focus adjudicators on options
that are available, and allow for the flexibility needed to address
the risk posed by different factual scenarios. If helpful to
adjudicators and parties, FINRA also would publish additional
guidance on the kinds of restrictions or conditions that could be
imposed.
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Proposed Rule 9285(b), along with proposed Rule 9285(c), would
establish an expedited process for the review of a Hearing Officer's
order imposing conditions or restrictions. Specifically, proposed Rule
9285(b)(1) would permit a respondent that is subject to a Hearing
Officer order imposing conditions or restrictions to file, within ten
days after service of that order, a motion with the Review Subcommittee
to modify or remove any or all of the conditions or restrictions.
Proposed Rule 9285(b)(2) would provide, among other things, that the
respondent has the burden to show that the conditions or restrictions
are not reasonably necessary for the purpose of preventing customer
harm.\13\
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\13\ In Regulatory Notice 18-16, FINRA originally proposed that
the respondent would also be required to demonstrate that Hearing
Officer ``committed an error by ordering the conditions or
restrictions imposed.'' FINRA believes that it is more appropriate
for the burden in proposed Rule 9285(b)(2) to mirror what
Enforcement must show when seeking conditions or restrictions and
the Hearing Officer's authority to impose conditions and
restrictions.
Notwithstanding that FINRA no longer proposes including the
``committed an error'' standard in the proposed rule, FINRA intends
that the Review Subcommittee would essentially conduct a de novo
review when considering a respondent's motion to modify or remove
conditions or restrictions. An exception would be for a Hearing
Officer's credibility determinations, which are entitled to
considerable weight and deference, and can be overturned only where
the record contains substantial evidence for doing so.
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Proposed Rule 9285(b)(3) would give Enforcement five days from
service of the respondent's motion to file an opposition or other
response, unless otherwise ordered by the Review Subcommittee. Proposed
Rule 9285(b)(4) would provide that the respondent may not file a reply.
Proposed Rule 9285(b)(5) would provide that the NAC's Review
Subcommittee would decide the motion based on the papers and without
oral argument, unless an oral argument is specifically ordered by the
Review Subcommittee, and make that decision in an expeditious manner
and no later than 30 days after the filing of the opposition. The rule
would provide that the Review Subcommittee could approve, modify or
remove any and all of the conditions or restrictions. It also would
require that FINRA's Office of General Counsel provide a copy of the
Review Subcommittee's order to each FINRA member with which the
respondent is associated. Proposed Rule 9285(b)(6) would provide that
the filing of a motion pursuant to Rule 9285(b) would stay the
effectiveness of the conditions and restrictions ordered by the Hearing
Officer until the Review Subcommittee rules on the motion.
Proposed Rule 9285(d) would provide that conditions or restrictions
imposed by a Hearing Officer that are not subject to a stay or imposed
by the Review Subcommittee shall remain in effect until FINRA's final
decision takes effect. Thus, the conditions or restrictions would
remain in effect until there is a final FINRA disciplinary action and
all appeals are exhausted.
The remainder of proposed Rule 9285 sets requirements for member
firms, during an appeal or NAC review proceeding, to establish
mandatory heightened supervision plans for disciplined respondents.
Specifically, when a Hearing Panel or Hearing Officer disciplinary
decision finding that a respondent violated a statute or rule provision
is appealed or called for NAC review, proposed Rule 9285(e) would
require any member with which the respondent is associated to adopt a
written plan of heightened supervision of the respondent. The plan of
heightened supervision would be required to comply with FINRA Rule
3110,\14\ be reasonably designed and tailored to include specific
supervisory policies and procedures that address the violations found
by the Hearing Panel or Hearing Officer, and be reasonably designed to
prevent or detect a reoccurrence of those violations. The plan of
heightened supervision would be required to, at a minimum, designate an
appropriately registered principal responsible for carrying out the
plan of heightened supervision. Proposed Rule 9285(d) also would
require that the plan of heightened supervision be signed by the
designated principal and include an acknowledgement that the principal
is responsible for implementing and maintaining the plan. The plan of
heightened supervision would be required to remain in place until
FINRA's final decision takes effect. Thus, the plan of heightened
supervision would be required to remain in place until there is a final
FINRA disciplinary action and all appeals are exhausted.\15\
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\14\ Rule 3110 requires member firms to establish and maintain a
system to supervise the activities of each associated person that is
reasonably designed to achieve compliance with applicable securities
laws and FINRA rules. See also Regulatory Notice 18-15 (Guidance on
Implementing Effective Heightened Supervisory Procedures for
Associated Persons with a History of Misconduct), at p.2 & n.2
(April 2018).
\15\ Although proposed Rule 9285(d) would not require heightened
supervision plans after FINRA's final decision takes effect, the
supervisory obligations of member firms regarding associated persons
with a history of past misconduct would continue to apply. See
Regulatory Notice 18-15 (April 2018).
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Proposed Rule 9285(d) would require the member to file the written
plan of heightened supervision with FINRA's Office of General Counsel
and serve a copy on Enforcement and the respondent, within ten days of
any party filing an appeal from the Hearing Panel's or Hearing
Officer's decision or of the case being called for NAC review.
Similarly, if the respondent becomes associated with another member
firm while the Hearing Panel's or Hearing Officer's decision is on
appeal to, or review before, the NAC, that firm would be required,
within ten days of the respondent becoming associated with it, to file
a copy of a plan of heightened supervision with FINRA's Office of
General Counsel and serve a copy on Enforcement and the respondent.
In a change from Regulatory Notice 18-16, FINRA has modified the
heightened supervision plan requirements to account for the possibility
that a firm could be required pursuant to proposed Rule 9285(e) to
adopt a mandatory heightened supervision plan before any conditions or
restrictions imposed pursuant to proposed Rule 9285 take effect.
Proposed Rule 9285(e)(1) would require that a member that has adopted a
written plan of heightened supervision for a respondent would be
required to file and serve an amended plan that takes into account any
conditions or restrictions imposed pursuant to proposed Rule 9285,
within ten days of the conditions or restrictions becoming effective.
Proposed Rule 9285 would apply to disciplinary proceedings
initiated on or
[[Page 20749]]
after the effective date of the proposed rule.
Along with proposed Rule 9285, FINRA is proposing corresponding
amendments to five existing rules: FINRA Rules 9235 (Hearing Officer
Authority), 9311 (Appeal by Any Party; Cross-Appeal), 9312 (Review
Proceeding Initiated by Adjudicatory Council), 9321 (Transmission of
Record), and 9556 (Failure to Comply with Temporary and Permanent Cease
and Desist Orders).
The proposed amendments to Rule 9235 would provide that the Hearing
Officer has the authority to rule on a motion pursuant to Rule 9285 for
conditions or restrictions.
The proposed amendments to Rules 9311 and 9312 would ensure that
the stay provisions in those rules do not affect a motion for
conditions or restrictions.\16\ Currently, Rule 9311(b) provides, in
pertinent part, that an appeal to the NAC from a decision issued
pursuant to Rule 9268 or Rule 9269 shall operate as a stay of that
decision until the NAC issues a decision pursuant to Rule 9349 or, in
cases called for discretionary review by the FINRA Board, until a
decision is issued pursuant to Rule 9351. Rule 9312(b) contains similar
stay provisions for decisions that are called for review. Rules 9311(b)
and 9312(b) would be amended to expressly state that, notwithstanding
the stay of sanctions under Rules 9311 and 9312, the Hearing Officer
may impose such conditions and restrictions on the activities of a
respondent as the Hearing Officer considers reasonably necessary for
the purpose of preventing customer harm, in accordance in proposed Rule
9285(a), and that the Review Subcommittee shall consider any motion
filed pursuant to Rule 9285(b) to modify or remove any or all of the
conditions or restrictions.
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\16\ The proposed amendments to Rule 9312 discussed in this
paragraph reflect an enhancement to the proposal in Regulatory
Notice 18-16 (April 2018).
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Other proposed amendments to Rule 9311 and 9312 would ensure that a
member firm is notified of events that would require it to adopt a
written plan of heightened supervision pursuant to proposed Rule
9285.\17\ Proposed Rule 9311(g) would require the Office of Hearing
Officers, when an appeal is filed from a decision finding that a
Respondent violated a statute or rule provision, to promptly notify
each FINRA member with which the Respondent is associated that an
appeal has been filed. Similarly, proposed Rule 9312(c)(3) would
require the Office of General Counsel, when a decision finding that a
Respondent violated a statute or rule provision is called for review,
to promptly notify each FINRA member with which the Respondent is
associated of the call for review.
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\17\ The proposed amendments to Rules 9311 and 9312 discussed in
this paragraph are an enhancement from the proposal in Regulatory
Notice 18-16 (April 2018).
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The proposed amendments to Rule 9321 would govern the record
related to a motion for conditions or restrictions.\18\ Rule 9321
currently governs the process for the Office of Hearing Officers to
transmit the record of a disciplinary proceeding to the NAC. The
proposed amendments to Rule 9321 would set forth provisions for how the
Office of Hearing Officers would transmit to the NAC the supplemental
record of a proceeding concerning a motion to impose conditions or
restrictions.
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\18\ The proposed amendments to Rule 9321 reflect an enhancement
to the proposal in Regulatory Notice 18-16 (April 2018).
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Rule 9556 currently governs expedited proceedings for failures to
comply with temporary and permanent cease and desist orders. The
proposed amendments to Rule 9556 would grant FINRA staff the authority
to bring an expedited proceeding against a respondent that fails to
comply with conditions and restrictions imposed pursuant to proposed
Rule 9285 and create the process for the expedited proceeding.
Specifically, proposed Rule 9556(a)(2) would permit FINRA staff to
issue a notice to a respondent stating that the failure to comply with
the conditions or restrictions imposed under Rule 9285 within seven
days of service of the notice will result in a suspension or
cancellation of membership or a suspension or bar from associating with
any member. Proposed Rule 9556(c)(2) would govern the contents of the
notice. It would require that the notice explicitly identify the
conditions or restrictions that are alleged to have been violated and
contain a statement of facts specifying the alleged violation. It also
would require that the notice state or explain--just as the rule
currently requires for a notice of a failure to comply with temporary
and permanent cease and desist orders--when the FINRA action will take
effect, what the respondent must do to avoid such action, that the
respondent may file a written request for a hearing with the Office of
Hearing Officers pursuant to Rule 9559, the deadline for requesting a
hearing and the Hearing Officer's or Hearing Panel's authority.
Proposed Amendments to the FINRA Rule 9520 Series To Require Interim
Plans of Heightened Supervision of a Disqualified Person During the
Period When FINRA is Reviewing an Eligibility Application
FINRA is proposing to amend FINRA Rule 9522 (Initiation of
Eligibility Proceeding; Member Regulation Consideration) in the FINRA
Rule 9520 Series (Eligibility Proceedings) to require a member firm
that files an application to continue associating with a disqualified
person under Rule 9522(a)(3) or 9522(b)(1)(B) to also include an
interim plan of heightened supervision that would be in effect
throughout the entirety of the application review process.\19\ The
proposed amendments would delineate the circumstances under which a
statutorily disqualified individual may remain associated with a FINRA
member while FINRA is reviewing the application.
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\19\ In Regulatory Notice 18-16 (April 2018), FINRA originally
proposed the amendments discussed in this section as amendments to
FINRA Rule 9523.
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As background, brokers who have engaged in the types of misconduct
specified in the Exchange Act's statutory disqualification provisions
must undergo special review by FINRA before they are permitted to re-
enter or continue working in the securities industry. In conducting its
review, FINRA seeks to exclude brokers who pose a risk of recidivism
from re-entering or continuing in the securities business, subject to
the limits developed in SEC case law.
As a general framework, the Exchange Act sets out the types of
misconduct that presumptively exclude brokers from engaging in the
securities business, identified as statutory disqualifications.\20\
These statutory disqualifications are the result of actions against a
broker taken by a regulator or court based on a finding of serious
misconduct that calls into question the integrity of the broker, and
include, among other things, any felony and certain misdemeanors for a
period of ten years from the date of conviction; expulsions or bars
(and current suspensions) from membership or participation in a self-
regulatory organization; bars (and current suspensions) ordered by the
SEC, Commodity Futures Trading Commission or other appropriate
regulatory agency or authority; willful violations of the federal
securities and
[[Page 20750]]
commodities laws or MSRB rules; permanent or temporary injunctions from
acting in certain capacities; and certain final orders of a state
securities commission.
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\20\ Section 3(a)(39) of the Exchange Act defines the
circumstances when a person is subject to a ``statutory
disqualification.''
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The Exchange Act and SEC rules thereunder establish a framework
within which FINRA evaluates whether to allow an individual who is
subject to a statutory disqualification to associate with a member
firm.\21\ A member firm that seeks to employ or continue the employment
of a disqualified individual must file an application seeking approval
from FINRA (``SD Application'').\22\ The Rule 9520 Series sets forth
rules governing eligibility proceedings, in which FINRA evaluates
whether to allow a member, person associated with a member, potential
member or potential associated person subject to a statutory
disqualification to enter or remain in the securities industry. A
member firm's SD Application to associate with, or continue associating
with, a disqualified person is subject to careful scrutiny by FINRA to
review whether the individual's association with the member firm is in
the public interest and does not create an unreasonable risk or harm to
the market or investors. To determine whether the SD Application will
be approved or denied, FINRA takes into account factors that include
the nature and gravity of the disqualifying event; the length of time
that has elapsed since the disqualifying event and any intervening
misconduct occurring since; the regulatory history of the disqualified
individual, the firm and individuals who will act as supervisors; the
potential for future regulatory problems; the precise nature of the
securities-related activities proposed in the SD Application; and any
proposed plan of heightened supervision.\23\
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\21\ See 15 U.S.C. 78o-3(g)(2) (``A registered securities
association may, and in cases in which the Commission, by order,
directs as necessary or appropriate in the public interest or for
the protection of investors shall, deny membership to any registered
broker or dealer, and bar from becoming associated with a member any
person, who is subject to a statutory disqualification.''); see also
17 CFR 240.19h-1.
\22\ See General Information on FINRA's Eligibility
Requirements, https://www.finra.org/industry/general-information-finras-eligibility-requirements.
\23\ FINRA's review of many SD Applications also is governed by
the standards set forth in Paul Edward Van Dusen, 47 S.E.C. 668
(1981), and Arthur H. Ross, 50 S.E.C. 1082 (1992). These standards
provide that in situations where an individual's misconduct has
already been addressed by the SEC or FINRA, and certain sanctions
have been imposed for such misconduct, FINRA should not consider the
individual's underlying misconduct when it evaluates an SD
Application. In Van Dusen, the SEC stated that when the period of
time specified in the sanction has passed, in the absence of ``new
information reflecting adversely on [the applicant's] ability to
function in his proposed employment in a manner consonant with the
public interest,'' it is inconsistent with the remedial purposes of
the Exchange Act and unfair to deny an application for re-entry. 47
S.E.C. at 671. The SEC also noted in Van Dusen, however, that an
applicant's re-entry is not ``to be granted automatically'' after
the expiration of a given time period. Id. Instead, the SEC
instructed FINRA to consider other factors, such as: (1) ``other
misconduct in which the applicant may have engaged''; (2) ``the
nature and disciplinary history of a prospective employer''; and (3)
``the supervision to be accorded the applicant.'' Id. Further, in
Ross, the SEC established a narrow exception to the rule that FINRA
confine its analysis to ``new information.'' 50 S.E.C. at 1085. The
S.E.C. stated that FINRA could consider the conduct underlying a
disqualifying order if an applicant's later misconduct was so
similar that it formed a ``significant pattern.'' Id. at 1085 n.10.
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If FINRA recommends approval of the SD Application, the
recommendation is submitted either directly to the SEC for its review
or to the NAC and ultimately to the SEC for their reviews and
approvals, as applicable. If FINRA recommends denial of the SD
Application, the member firm has the right to a hearing before a panel
of the Statutory Disqualification Committee and the opportunity to
demonstrate why the SD Application should be approved.\24\ If the NAC
denies the SD Application, the member firm can appeal the decision to
the SEC and, thereafter, a federal court of appeals.\25\
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\24\ The hearing panel considers evidence and other matters in
the record and makes a written recommendation on the SD Application
to the Statutory Disqualification Committee. See Rule 9524(a)(10).
The Statutory Disqualification Committee, in turn, recommends a
decision to the NAC, which issues a written decision to the member
firm that filed the SD Application. See Rules 9524(a)(10), 9524(b).
\25\ Approximately 73.5 percent of the SD Applications filed
during 2013-2018 were either denied by FINRA, withdrawn because the
applicant expected FINRA would recommend denial of its application,
or closed because the SD Application was not required by operation
of law. Approximately 12.5 percent were approved. FINRA approval
sometimes resulted from legal principles, including those embodied
in the Exchange Act and in case law, as noted above, which limits
FINRA's discretion to deny an application. The remaining 14 percent
of the SD Applications are pending.
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Currently, as part of an SD Application, a member firm will propose
a written plan of heightened supervision of the statutorily
disqualified person that would become effective upon approval by FINRA
of the SD Application to associate with the statutorily disqualified
person.\26\ A heightened supervisory plan must be acceptable to FINRA,
and FINRA will reject any plan that is not specifically tailored to
address the individual's prior misconduct and mitigate the risk of
future misconduct. In this regard, FINRA's primary consideration is a
heightened supervisory plan carefully constructed to best ensure
investor protection.
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\26\ See General Information on FINRA's Eligibility
Requirements, https://www.finra.org/industry/general-information-finras-eligibility-requirements (explaining that ``in virtually
every application that the NAC approves, it will do so subject to
the applicant member's agreement to implement a special supervisory
plan'').
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Despite the fact that FINRA will generally not approve an SD
Application that lacks an acceptable plan of heightened supervision,
there is currently no requirement under FINRA rules that firms place
statutorily disqualified individuals whom they employ on interim
heightened supervision while an SD Application is pending. However, the
proposed amendments to Rule 9522 would establish this requirement,
consistent with existing FINRA guidance.\27\
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\27\ FINRA has reminded member firms of their obligation to
tailor the firm's supervisory systems to account for brokers with a
history of industry or regulatory-related incidents, including
disciplinary actions. And specifically as to disqualified persons,
FINRA has stated that a firm's continuing to associate with a person
who becomes disqualified while associated with the firm raises
significant investor protection concerns, and that such a firm
should evaluate the facts and circumstances to make a determination
of whether adopting and implementing an interim plan of heightened
supervision during the pendency of an SD Application would be
appropriate. See Regulatory Notice 18-15 (April 2018).
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Specifically, proposed Rule 9522(f) would require that an
application to continue associating with a statutorily disqualified
person must include an interim plan of heightened supervision and a
written representation from the member firm that the statutorily
disqualified person is currently subject to that plan. The proposed
rule would require that the interim plan of heightened supervision
comply with Rule 3110 and be reasonably designed and tailored to
include specific supervisory policies and procedures that address any
regulatory concerns related to the nature of the disqualification, the
nature of the firm's business, and the disqualified person's current
and proposed activities during the review process. The proposed rule
also would require that the SD Application identify an appropriately
registered principal responsible for carrying out the interim plan of
heightened supervision, and that the responsible principal sign the
plan and acknowledge his or her responsibility for implementing and
maintaining it. The interim plan of heightened supervision would be in
effect throughout the entirety of the SD Application review process,
which would conclude only upon the final resolution of the eligibility
proceeding.
Proposed Rule 9522(g) would authorize Member Regulation to reject
an SD Application filed pursuant to
[[Page 20751]]
Rule 9522(a)(3) or Rule 9522(b)(1)(B) that seeks the continued
association of a disqualified person if it determines that the
application is substantially incomplete--either because it does not
include a reasonably designed interim plan of heightened supervision or
because it does not include a written representation that the
disqualified person is currently subject to that plan. The sponsoring
firm would have ten days after service of the notice of delinquency, or
such other time as prescribed by Member Regulation, to remedy the SD
Application.
Under proposed Rule 9522(h), if an applicant firm fails to remedy
an SD Application that is substantially incomplete, Member Regulation
would provide written notice of its determination to reject the SD
Application and its reasons for so doing, and FINRA would refund the
application fee, less $1,000, which FINRA would retain as a processing
fee. Upon such rejection of the SD Application, the applicant firm
would be required to promptly terminate association with the
disqualified person.\28\
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\28\ As part of its examination program, FINRA would generally
examine for compliance with interim plans of heightened supervision
established pursuant to proposed Rule 9522(f).
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The proposed amendments to Rule 9522 would apply to SD Applications
that are filed on or after the effective date of the proposed rule
amendments.
Proposed Amendments to FINRA Rule 8312
Rule 8312 (FINRA BrokerCheck Disclosure) governs the information
FINRA releases to the public through its BrokerCheck system.\29\
BrokerCheck helps investors make informed choices about the brokers and
member firms with which they conduct business by providing extensive
registration and disciplinary history to investors at no charge. FINRA
requires member firms to inform their customers of the availability of
BrokerCheck.\30\
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\29\ The BrokerCheck website address is brokercheck.finra.org.
\30\ See FINRA Rule 2210(d)(8) (requiring that each of a
member's websites include a readily apparent reference and hyperlink
to BrokerCheck on the initial web page that the member intends to be
viewed by retail investors and any other web page that includes a
professional profile of one or more registered persons who conduct
business with retail investors); FINRA Rule 2267 (requiring members
to provide to customers the FINRA BrokerCheck Hotline Number and a
statement as to the availability to the customer of an investor
brochure that includes information describing BrokerCheck).
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Rule 8312(b) currently requires that FINRA release information
about, among other things, whether a particular member firm is subject
to the provisions of FINRA Rule 3170 (Tape Recording of Registered
Persons by Certain Firms) (the ``Taping Rule''), but only in response
to telephonic inquiries via the BrokerCheck toll-free telephone
listing. The Taping Rule is designed to ensure that a member firm with
a significant number of registered persons that previously were
employed by ``disciplined firms'' \31\ has specific supervisory
procedures in place to prevent fraudulent and improper sales practices
or other customer harm.\32\ Under the Taping Rule, a member with a
specified percentage of registered persons who have been associated
with disciplined firms in a registered capacity in the last three years
is designated as a ``taping firm.'' \33\
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\31\ Rule 3170(a)(2) defines a ``disciplined firm'' to mean:
(A) A member that, in connection with sales practices involving
the offer, purchase, or sale of any security, has been expelled from
membership or participation in any securities industry self-
regulatory organization or is subject to an order of the SEC
revoking its registration as a broker-dealer;
(B) a futures commission merchant or introducing broker that
has been formally charged by either the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission or a registered futures association with deceptive
telemarketing practices or promotional material relating to security
futures, those charges have been resolved, and the futures
commission merchant or introducing broker has been closed down and
permanently barred from the futures industry as a result of those
charges; or
(C) a futures commission merchant or introducing broker that,
in connection with sales practices involving the offer, purchase, or
sale of security futures is subject to an order of the SEC revoking
its registration as a broker or dealer.
\32\ To assist member firms in complying with Rule 3170, FINRA
publishes on its website a list of Disciplined Firms Under FINRA
Taping Rule, which identifies firms that meet the definition of
``disciplined firm'' and that were disciplined within the last three
years. As of March 31, 2020, that list identified seven firms as
``disciplined firms.'' See https://www.finra.org/rules-guidance/oversight-enforcement/disciplinary-actions/disciplined-firms-under-taping-rule.
\33\ Rule 3170(a)(5)(A) defines a ``taping firm'' to mean:
(i) A member with at least five but fewer than ten registered
persons, where 40% or more of its registered persons have been
associated with one or more disciplined firms in a registered
capacity within the last three years;
(ii) A member with at least ten but fewer than twenty
registered persons, where four or more of its registered persons
have been associated with one or more disciplined firms in a
registered capacity within the last three years;
(iii) A member with at least twenty registered persons where
20% or more of its registered persons have been associated with one
or more disciplined firms in a registered capacity within the last
three years.
As of March 31, 2020, there is one firm that is designated as a
taping firm.
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A member firm that either is notified by FINRA or otherwise has
actual knowledge that it is a taping firm must establish, maintain and
enforce special written procedures for supervising the telemarketing
activities of all its registered persons. Those procedures must include
procedures for recording all telephone conversations between the taping
firm's registered persons and both existing and potential customers,
and for reviewing the recordings to ensure compliance with applicable
securities laws and regulations and applicable FINRA rules. The Taping
Rule also requires taping firms to retain all the recordings for a
period of not less than three years and file quarterly reports with
FINRA.\34\
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\34\ Rule 3170 provides member firms that trigger application of
the taping requirement a one-time opportunity to adjust their
staffing levels to fall below the prescribed threshold levels and
thus avoid application of the Taping Rule. See Rule 3170(c).
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To provide enhanced disclosure to the public of information as to
whether a member firm is subject to the Taping Rule, FINRA is proposing
to delete the requirement in Rule 8312(b) that FINRA provide that
information only in response to telephonic inquiries via the
BrokerCheck toll-free telephone listing. As a result, proposed Rule
8312(b) would permit FINRA to release through BrokerCheck information
as to whether a particular member firm is subject to the Taping
Rule.\35\ FINRA believes that broadening the disclosure through
BrokerCheck of the status of a member firm as a taping firm will help
inform more investors of the heightened procedures required of the
firm, which may incent the investors to research more carefully the
background of a broker associated with the taping firm.
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\35\ See Rule 8312(a) (requiring that ``[i]n response to a
written inquiry, electronic inquiry, or telephonic inquiry via a
toll-free telephonic listing,'' FINRA shall release through
BrokerCheck information regarding, in pertinent part, a current or
former FINRA member).
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Proposed Amendments to the FINRA Rule 1000 Series to Impose Additional
Obligations on Member Firms That Associate With Persons With a
Significant History of Past Misconduct \36\
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\36\ The text of FINRA Rules 1011, 1017 and CAB Rule 111
incorporates the changes approved by the SEC in Securities Exchange
Act Release No. 88482 (March 26, 2020), 85 FR 18299 (April 1, 2020)
(Order Approving File No. SR-FINRA-2019-030) (``MAP Rules Amendment
Release'').
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Current MAP Process
FINRA is proposing amendments to the FINRA Rule 1000 Series (Member
Application and Associated Person Registration)--specifically the rules
that govern membership proceedings (``MAP Rules'')--to impose
additional obligations on member firms when a natural person that has,
in the prior five years, either one or more ``final criminal matters''
or two or more ``specified risk events'' seeks to become an owner,
[[Page 20752]]
control person, principal or registered person of the member.
Reviewing CMAs is one of the ways FINRA seeks to address the risks
posed by brokers with a significant history of misconduct. Rule 1017
specifies the changes in a member's ownership, control or business
operations that require a CMA and FINRA's approval.\37\ Among the
events that require a CMA are a ``material change in business
operations,'' which is defined to include: (1) Removing or modifying a
membership agreement restriction; (2) market making, underwriting or
acting as a dealer for the first time; and (3) adding business
activities that require a higher minimum net capital under SEA Rule
15c3-1.\38\ In addition, a CMA is required for business expansions to
increase the number of ``associated persons involved in sales,''
offices, or markets made that are a material change in business
operations.\39\ However, IM-1011-1 (Safe Harbor for Business
Expansions) creates a safe harbor for incremental increases in these
three categories of business expansions. Under this safe harbor
provision, a member, subject to specified conditions and thresholds,
may undergo such business expansions without filing a CMA.\40\ One such
expansion is an increase, within the parameters set forth in IM-1011-1,
in the number of ``associated persons involved in sales.'' \41\
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\37\ See Rule 1017(a). The events that require a member to file
a CMA for approval before effecting the proposed event are:
(1) A merger of the member with another member, unless both
members are members of the New York Stock Exchange, Inc. (``NYSE'')
or the surviving entity will continue to be a member of the NYSE;
(2) a direct or indirect acquisition by the member of another
member, unless the acquiring member is a member of the NYSE;
(3) direct or indirect acquisitions or transfers of 25 percent
or more in the aggregate of the member's assets or any asset,
business or line of operation that generates revenues composing 25
percent or more in the aggregate of the member's earnings measured
on a rolling 36-month basis, unless both the seller and acquirer are
members of the NYSE;
(4) a change in the equity ownership or partnership capital of
the member that results in one person or entity directly or
indirectly owning or controlling 25 percent or more of the equity or
partnership capital; or
(5) a material change in business operations as defined in Rule
1011.
In addition, Rule 1017(a)(6) mandates a member firm to seek a
materiality consultation in two situations in which specified
pending arbitration claims, unpaid arbitration awards, or unpaid
arbitration settlements are involved. See MAP Rules Amendment
Release.
\38\ See Rules 1011(l), 1017(a)(5). Rule 1011(l) sets forth a
non-exhaustive list of events that are material changes in business
operations. FINRA also has provided guidance on additional criteria
member firms should take into consideration when assessing the
materiality of a proposed change. See Notice to Members 00-73
(October 2000). A member may file an application for approval of a
material change in business operations at any time, but the member
may not effect such change until the conclusion of the proceeding,
unless Member Regulation and the member otherwise agree. See Rule
1017(c)(3).
\39\ See Rule 1017(b)(2)(C) (``If the application requests
approval of an increase in Associated Persons involved in sales,
offices, or markets made, the application shall set forth the
increases in such areas during the preceding 12 months.'').
\40\ The safe harbor is unavailable to a member that has a
membership agreement that contains a specific restriction as to one
or more of the three areas of expansion or to a member that has a
``disciplinary history'' as defined in IM-1011-1. The safe harbor
also is not available to any member that is seeking to add one or
more ``associated persons involved in sales'' and one or more of
those associated persons has a ``covered pending arbitration
claim,'' an unpaid arbitration award or unpaid settlement related to
an arbitration. See MAP Rules Amendment Release.
\41\ For eligible firms, IM-1011-1 permits a firm that has one
to ten ``associated persons involved in sales'' to increase that
number by ten persons within a one-year period, and a firm that has
11 or more ``associated persons involved in sales'' to increase that
number by ten persons or 30 percent, whichever is greater, within a
one-year period. See IM-1011-1.
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In determining whether to approve a CMA, Member Regulation, through
the MAP Group (collectively, ``the Department''), evaluates whether the
applicant and its associated persons meet each of the standards for
admission in FINRA Rule 1014(a) and whether the applicant would
continue to meet those standards upon approval of the CMA.\42\ The
Department evaluates an applicant's financial, operational, supervisory
and compliance systems to ensure that each applicant meets these
standards for admission.
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\42\ See Rule 1017(h)(1) and (h)(1)(A).
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One of the standards, Rule 1014(a)(3), requires an applicant to
demonstrate that it and its associated persons are capable of complying
with the federal securities laws and FINRA rules, including observing
high standards of commercial honor and just and equitable principles of
trade. When the Department evaluates the Rule 1014(a)(3) standard, it
takes into consideration, among other things, whether persons
associated with an applicant are the subject of disciplinary actions
taken against them by industry authorities, criminal actions, civil
actions, arbitrations, customer complaints, remedial actions or other
industry-related matters that could pose a threat to public
investors.\43\ Some of these matters are considered whether they are
adjudicated, settled or pending.\44\ Some of these events are so
material that, when they exist, a presumption exists that the CMA
should be denied.\45\
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\43\ See Rule 1014(a)(3).
\44\ See Rule 1014(a)(3).
\45\ See Rule 1017(h) (``Where the Department determines that
the Applicant or its Associated Person are the subject of any of the
events set forth in Rule 1014(a)(3)(A) and (C) through (E), a
presumption exists that the application should be denied.'').
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Although firms with a ``disciplinary history'' as defined by IM-
1011-1 are not eligible to use the safe harbor, none of the safe
harbor's parameters relates to the history of a member firm's
associated persons. Given the recent studies that provide evidence of
the predictability of future regulatory-related events for brokers with
a history of past regulatory-related events, FINRA is concerned about
instances where a member on-boards associated persons with a
significant history of misconduct and does so within the safe-harbor
parameters, thus avoiding prior consultation or review by FINRA. FINRA
believes there are instances in which a member firm's hiring of an
associated person with a significant history of misconduct--and other
associations with such persons--would reflect a material change in
business operations.
[rtarr8]Proposed Rule 1017(a)(7) To Require Materiality Consultations
The proposed amendments to the MAP Rules would seek to address this
concern. Proposed Rule 1017(a)(7) would require that a member firm,
notwithstanding Rule 1017(a)(3),\46\ (a)(4),\47\ (a)(5) \48\ and (a)(6)
\49\ and IM-1011-1,\50\ file a CMA when a natural person seeking to
become an owner, control person, principal or registered person of a
member has, in the prior five years, one or more ``final criminal
matters'' or two or more ``specified risk events''--as further
explained below--unless the member has submitted a
[[Page 20753]]
written request to the Department seeking a materiality consultation
for the contemplated activity. Rule 1017(a)(7) would further provide,
however, that Rule 1017(a)(7) would not apply when the member is
required to file an SD Application or written request for relief
pursuant to Rule 9522 for approval of the same contemplated
association.\51\ Proposed Rule 1017(a)(7) also would contain
requirements for the request seeking a materiality consultation and the
Department's review and determination, including a description of the
possible outcomes of FINRA's determination on a materiality
consultation.
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\46\ Rule 1017(a)(3) requires a member to file a CMA for
approval of direct or indirect acquisitions or transfers of 25
percent or more in the aggregate of the member's assets or any
asset, business or line of operation that generates revenues
composing 25 percent or more in the aggregate of the member's
earnings measured on a rolling 36-month basis, unless both the
seller and acquirer are members of the New York Stock Exchange, Inc.
The reference to Rule 1017(a)(3) in proposed Rule 1017(a)(7)
reflects a change from the proposal in Regulatory Notice 18-16.
\47\ Rule 1017(a)(4) requires a member to file a CMA for
approval of a change in the equity ownership or partnership capital
of the member that results in one person or entity directly or
indirectly owning or controlling 25 percent or more of the equity or
partnership capital.
\48\ Rule 1017(a)(5) requires a member to file a CMA for
approval of a ``material change in business operations.''
\49\ See MAP Rules Amendment Release.
\50\ The reference to IM-1011-1 in proposed Rule 1017(a)(7)
reflects a change from the proposal in Regulatory Notice 18-16.
\51\ In that event, the member firm would be required to obtain
FINRA's approval to associate or continue associating with the
disqualified person pursuant to the FINRA Rule 9520 Series, but it
would not also be required to request a materiality consultation or
file a CMA pursuant to proposed Rule 1017(a)(7). The Member
Regulation staff that considers the SD Application may consult with
the MAP Group, as appropriate.
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Proposed Rule 1017(a)(7) also would establish that the safe harbor
for business expansions in IM-1011-1 would not be available to the
member firm when a materiality consultation is required under proposed
Rule 1017(a)(7). In a corresponding change, proposed IM-1011-3
(Business Expansions and Persons with Specified Risk Events) would
provide that the safe harbor for business expansions in IM-1011-1 would
not be available to any member that is seeking to add a natural person
who has, in the prior five years, one or more ``final criminal
matters'' or two or more ``specified risk events'' and seeks to become
an owner, control person, principal or registered person of the member.
Proposed IM-1011-3 would further provide, in those circumstances, that
if the member is not otherwise required to file a CMA, the member must
comply with the requirements of proposed Rule 1017(a)(7).\52\ Proposed
Rule 1017(a)(7) and proposed IM-1011-3 would not apply when a person is
already a principal at a member firm and seeks to add an additional
principal registration at that same firm. In that instance, the
proposed rule amendments would not require a materiality consultation.
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\52\ FINRA has modified the language in proposed Rule 1017(a)(7)
and IM-1011-3 from the versions that were proposed in Regulatory
Notice 18-16. FINRA has done so for clarity and to align the
structure of these proposed rules to the changes to the MAP Rules
approved in the MAP Rules Amendment Release.
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Currently, FINRA has a voluntary materiality consultation
process.\53\ As explained above, a member is required to file a CMA
when it plans to undergo an event specified under Rule 1017 (e.g.,
acquisition or transfer of the member's assets, a business expansion).
Before taking this step, a member has the option of seeking guidance,
or a materiality consultation, from FINRA on whether or not such
proposed event would require a CMA.\54\ The materiality consultation
process is voluntary, and FINRA has published guidelines about this
process on FINRA.org.\55\ A request for a materiality consultation, for
which there is no fee, is a written request from a member for FINRA's
determination on whether a contemplated change in business operations
or activities is material and would therefore require a CMA. The
characterization of a proposed change as material depends on an
assessment of all the relevant facts and circumstances. Through this
consultation, FINRA may communicate with the member to obtain further
documents and information regarding the contemplated change and its
anticipated impact on the member. Where FINRA determines that a
contemplated change is material, FINRA will instruct the member to file
a CMA if it intends to proceed with such change. Ultimately, the member
is responsible for compliance with Rule 1017. If FINRA determines
during the materiality consultation that the contemplated business
change is material, then the member potentially could be subject to
disciplinary action for failure to file a CMA under Rule 1017.\56\
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\53\ See The Materiality Consultation Process for Continuing
Membership Applications, https://www.finra.org/rules-guidance/guidance/materiality-consultation-process; see also Regulatory
Notice 18-23 (July 2018).
\54\ See IM-1011-1 (stating, ``[f]or any expansion beyond these
[safe harbor] limits, a member should contact its district office
prior to implementing the change to determine whether the proposed
expansion requires an application under Rule 1017''); see also
Notice to Members 00-73 (October 2000) (stating that ``[a] member
may, but is not required to, contact the District Office to obtain
guidance on'' whether a change and expansion that falls outside of
the safe harbor provisions is material).
\55\ See The Materiality Consultation Process for Continuing
Membership Applications, https://www.finra.org/rules-guidance/guidance/materiality-consultation-process.
\56\ See Notice to Members 00-73 (October 2000).
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The proposed rule change would establish an additional category of
mandatory materiality consultations.\57\ The materiality consultations
required by proposed Rule 1017(a)(7) would focus on, and the submitting
member firm would need to provide information relating to, the conduct
underlying the individual's ``final criminal matters'' and ``specified
risk events,'' as well as other matters relating to the subject person,
such as disciplinary actions taken by FINRA or other industry
authorities, adverse examination findings, customer complaints, pending
or unadjudicated matters, terminations for cause or other incidents
that could indicate a threat to public investors. The Department's
assessment in the materiality consultation would consider, among other
things, whether the events are customer-related; whether the events
represent discrete actions or are based on the same underlying conduct;
the anticipated activities of the person; the disciplinary history,
experience and background of the proposed supervisor, if applicable;
the disciplinary history, supervisory practices, standards, systems and
internal controls of the member firm and whether they are reasonably
designed to achieve compliance with applicable securities laws and
regulations and FINRA rules; whether the member firm employs or intends
to employ in any capacity multiple persons with one or more ``final
criminal matters'' or two or more ``specified risk events'' in the
prior five years; and any other investor protection concern raised by
seeking to make the person an owner, control person, principal or
registered person of the member firm.
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\57\ FINRA Rule 1017(a)(6) will mandate materiality
consultations if a member is contemplating: (i) To add one or more
``associated persons involved in sales'' and one or more of those
associated persons has a ``covered pending arbitration claim,'' an
unpaid arbitration award or an unpaid settlement related to an
arbitration; or (ii) any direct or indirect acquisition or transfer
of a member's assets or any asset, business or line of operation
where the transferring member or an associated person of the
transferring member has a covered pending arbitration claim, an
unpaid arbitration award or an unpaid settlement related to an
arbitration, and the member is not otherwise required to file a CMA.
See MAP Rules Amendment Release. In a separate proposal, FINRA is
proposing to mandate materiality consultations under other
circumstances. See Regulatory Notice 18-23 (July 2018) (seeking
comment on a proposal to the MAP rules that would, among other
things, codify the materiality consultation process and mandate a
consultation under specified circumstances such as where an
applicant seeks to engage in, for the first time, retail foreign
currency exchange activities, variable life settlement sales to
retail customers, options activities or municipal securities
activities).
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[rtarr8]Proposed Definitions of ``Final Criminal Matter'' and
``Specified Risk Event''
The terms ``final criminal matter'' and ``specified risk event''
would be defined in proposed amendments to Rule 1011 (Definitions).
Proposed Rule 1011(h) would define the term ``final criminal matter''
to mean a final criminal matter that resulted in a conviction of, or
guilty plea or nolo contendere (no contest) by, a person that is
disclosed, or was required to be disclosed, on the applicable Uniform
Registration
[[Page 20754]]
Forms.\58\ Proposed Rule 1011(p) would define ``specified risk event''
to mean any one of the following events that are disclosed, or are or
were required to be disclosed, on the applicable Uniform Registration
Forms: (1) A final investment-related,\59\ consumer-initiated customer
arbitration award or civil judgment against the person for a dollar
amount at or above $15,000 in which the person was a named party; (2) a
final investment-related, consumer-initiated customer arbitration
settlement or civil litigation settlement for a dollar amount at or
above $15,000 in which the person was a named party; (3) a final
investment-related civil action where (A) the total monetary sanctions
(including civil and administrative penalties or fines, disgorgement,
monetary penalties other than fines, or restitution) were ordered for a
dollar amount at or above $15,000, or (B) the sanction against the
person was a bar, expulsion, revocation, or suspension; and (4) a final
regulatory action where (A) the total monetary sanctions (including
civil and administrative penalties or fines, disgorgement, monetary
penalties other than fines, or restitution) were ordered for a dollar
amount at or above $15,000, or (B) the sanction against the person was
a bar (permanently or temporarily), expulsion, rescission, revocation
or suspension from associating with a member.
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\58\ Proposed Rule 1011(r) would define ``Uniform Registration
Forms'' to mean the Uniform Application for Broker-Dealer
Registration (Form BD), the Uniform Application for Securities
Industry Registration or Transfer (Form U4), the Uniform Termination
Notice for Securities Industry Registration (Form U5) and the
Uniform Disciplinary Action Reporting Form (Form U6), as such may be
amended or any successor(s) thereto.
\59\ The Form U4 Explanation of Terms defines the term
``investment-related'' as pertaining to securities, commodities,
banking, insurance, or real estate (including, but not limited to,
acting as or being associated with a broker-dealer, issuer,
investment company, investment adviser, futures sponsor, bank, or
savings association).
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The proposed definitions and criteria would provide transparency
regarding how the proposed rules would be applied, as they are based on
disclosure events required to be reported on the Uniform Registration
Forms. Firms, in general, would be able to identify the specific set of
disclosure events that would count towards the proposed criteria and,
using available data, determine independently whether a proposed
association with an individual would require a materiality
consultation.\60\
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\60\ The exceptions are that the Uniform Registration Forms do
not provide information about customer awards or judgments against,
or customer settlements with, control affiliates who have not filed
a Form U4. For those events, firms would have to gather that
information directly from the person.
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In addition, as explained more below in the Economic Impact
Assessment, FINRA developed the proposed criteria and definitions with
significant attention to the economic trade-off between including
individuals who are less likely to subsequently pose risk of harm to
customers, and not including individuals who are more likely to
subsequently pose risk of harm to customers.
FINRA believes the proposed amendments to the Rule 1000 Series
would further promote investor protection by applying stronger
standards for continuing membership with FINRA and for changes to a
current member firm's ownership, control or business operations.
If the Commission approves the proposed rule change, FINRA will
announce the effective date of the proposed rule change in a Regulatory
Notice to be published no later than 90 days following Commission
approval. The effective date will be no later than 180 days following
publication of the Regulatory Notice announcing Commission
approval.\61\
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\61\ FINRA notes that the proposed rule change would impact all
members, including members that are funding portals or have elected
to be treated as capital acquisition brokers (``CABs''), given that
the funding portal rule set incorporates the Rule 9200 Series and
Rule 9300 Series and Rule 9556 by reference, and the CAB rule set
incorporates Rules 1011, 1017 and 8312 and the Rule 9200 Series,
Rule 9300 Series and Rule 9500 Series by reference. In addition,
FINRA is proposing corresponding amendments to CAB Rule 111, to
reflect that a CAB would be subject to IM-1011-3, and amendments to
Funding Portal Rule 900(b) to require heightened supervision during
the time an eligibility request is pending.
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2. Statutory Basis
FINRA believes that the proposed rule change is consistent with the
provisions of Section 15A(b)(6) of the Act,\62\ which requires, among
other things, that FINRA rules must be designed to prevent fraudulent
and manipulative acts and practices, to promote just and equitable
principles of trade, and, in general, to protect investors and the
public interest. The proposed rule change is designed to protect
investors and the public interest by strengthening the tools available
to FINRA to address the risks posed by brokers with a significant
history of misconduct and the firms that employ them. Allowing Hearing
Officers to impose tailored conditions and restrictions on respondents
after the finding of a violation, and requiring firms to place
disciplined respondent brokers with whom they associate under mandatory
heightened supervision during the pendency of an appeal or a review
proceeding, would create strong measures of deterrence while an appeal
or review proceeding is pending and while the sanctions imposed have
not yet taken effect. Likewise, requiring firms to place disqualified
persons on interim plan of heightened supervision while an SD
Application is pending would require that a fundamental investor
protection measure--almost always required at firms that FINRA, as part
of the eligibility proceedings process, permits to associate with
disqualified persons--be established at an earlier point in time and
thereby limit the potential for harm to the public. Broadening the
disclosure through BrokerCheck of the status of a member firm as a
taping firm, beyond only telephonic BrokerCheck inquiries, will inform
more investors of the heightened procedures required of the taping
firm, and thereby incent investors to research carefully the background
of a broker associated with the taping firm. Finally, requiring member
firms to seek materiality consultations when a person seeking to become
an owner, control person, principal or registered person has a
significant history of misconduct will give FINRA an opportunity to
assess whether the proposed association is material and warrants closer
regulatory scrutiny and, further, may create incentives for changes in
behavior by both brokers and the firms that employ them. In situations
where the proposed association of a person with a significant history
of misconduct would require a CMA, FINRA would then be able to assess,
if the firm still seeks to proceed, whether the member firm would
continue to meet all the Rule 1014 membership standards if the proposed
association were approved and prevent the proposed association if it
would not continue to meet those standards.\63\
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\62\ 15 U.S.C. 78o-3(b)(6).
\63\ See Rule 1014(a) (Standards for Admission).
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As such, the proposed rule change will help address concerns
regarding brokers with a significant history of misconduct in
situations where risks for potential further harm to investors may
exist, particularly when such individuals concentrate at a firm or are
able to move readily from firm to firm. The proposed additional
obligations on such brokers and the increased scrutiny by the firms
that employ them, should create incentives for brokers and firms to
change activities and behaviors to mitigate FINRA's concerns.
[[Page 20755]]
B. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on Competition
FINRA does not believe that the proposed rule change will result in
any burden on competition that is not necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
Economic Impact Assessment
FINRA has undertaken an economic impact assessment, as set forth
below, to analyze the regulatory need for the proposed rulemaking, its
potential economic impacts, including anticipated benefits and costs,
and the alternatives FINRA considered in assessing how to best meet its
regulatory objectives.
(a) Regulatory Need
FINRA uses a number of measures to deter and discipline misconduct
by brokers and the firms that employ them. These measures span across
several FINRA programs, including statutory disqualification processes,
review of membership applications, disclosure of brokers' regulatory
backgrounds, supervision requirements, focused examinations, risk
monitoring and disciplinary actions.
Nonetheless, some brokers, while relatively small in number, may
continue to present heightened risk of harm to investors and act in
ways that could harm their customers--sometimes substantially. Any
misconduct by these brokers may also undermine confidence in the
securities markets as a whole. For example, recent studies provide
evidence on predictability of future regulatory-related events for
brokers with a history of past regulatory-related events such as
repeated disciplinary actions, arbitrations and customer
complaints.\64\
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\64\ See supra note 5.
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Brokers with a history of misconduct can pose a particular
challenge to FINRA's existing programs, such as FINRA examination and
enforcement programs. For example, while the FINRA examination program
can identify compliance failures and prescribe remedies to be taken,
examiners are not empowered to require individuals to make changes to
or limit their activities in a particular manner. While these
constraints on the examination process protect against potentially
arbitrary or overly onerous examination findings, an individual with a
history of misconduct can take advantage of these limitations to
continue ongoing activities that harm or pose risk of harm to investors
until they result in an enforcement action. Likewise, enforcement
actions can take significant time to develop, prosecute and conclude,
during which time the individual is able to continue misconduct.
Furthermore, although FINRA has adopted rules that impose
supervisory obligations on firms to ensure they are appropriately
supervising their brokers' activities, some firms do not effectively
carry out these supervisory obligations to ensure compliance. This is
consistent with some recent academic studies, which find that some
firms persistently employ brokers who engage in misconduct, and that
misconduct can be concentrated at these firms, suggesting that some
firms may not be acting appropriately as a first line of defense to
prevent customer harm.\65\
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\65\ For example, see Mark Egan, Gregor Matvos, & Amit Seru, The
Market for Financial Adviser Misconduct, J. Pol. Econ. 127, no. 1
(Feb. 2019): 233-295.
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Therefore, without additional protections, the risk of potential
customer harm may continue to exist at firms that employ brokers that
have a significant number of regulatory-related events and that fail to
effectively carry out their supervisory obligations. The proposals are
designed to further promote investor protection by mitigating these
concerns while preserving principles of fairness.
(b) Economic Baseline
The following provides the economic baseline for each of the
current proposals. These baselines serve as the primary points of
comparison for assessing economic impacts, including incremental
benefits and costs of the proposed rule amendments. For this proposal,
FINRA reviewed and analyzed relevant data over the 2013-2018 period
(review period).
1. Proposed Amendments to the FINRA Rule 9200 Series and FINRA Rule
9300 Series
The economic baseline used to evaluate the economic impacts of the
proposed rule changes to the Rule 9200 Series and Rule 9300 Series is
the current regulatory framework under these rules.\66\ FINRA analyzed
disciplinary matters that were appealed to the NAC over the review
period that reached a final decision by the NAC.\67\ During the review
period, there were approximately 20 such appeals filed each year, of
which approximately 80 percent were filed by brokers, five percent were
filed by firms, and the remaining 15 percent were filed jointly by
brokers and firms.\68\ FINRA determined that, on average, these
disciplinary decisions were on appeal to the NAC for approximately 15
months.\69\
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\66\ The proposal also includes corresponding amendments to Rule
9556.
\67\ This analysis included all NAC appeals (including calls for
NAC review) filed during the review period that reached a final
decision by May 1, 2019. The analysis includes all NAC decisions,
including affirmations, modifications or reversals of the findings
in the disciplinary matters. The analysis excludes appeals that were
withdrawn prior to the resolution of the appeal process.
\68\ FINRA further estimates that approximately 94 percent of
the appeals filed by brokers involved one broker, and the remaining
six percent involved two brokers. All the appeals filed by firms
were associated with one firm.
\69\ The median processing time was approximately 14 months,
while the 25th and the 75th percentiles were approximately 11 months
and 19 months, respectively.
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2. Proposed Amendments to the FINRA Rule 9520 Series
The economic baseline used to evaluate the economic impacts of the
proposed rule changes to the Rule 9520 Series is the current regulatory
framework under these rules. FINRA analyzed SD Applications filed
during the review period and determined that there were 80 SD
Applications filed by 71 firms for 79 individuals, or approximately 13
applications that were filed by 12 firms each year.\70\ Approximately
65 percent of these applications were filed by small firms, 12 percent
were filed by mid-size firms, and 23 percent were filed by large
firms.\71\ FINRA also examined the resolution of these applications and
determined that approximately 12.5 percent of the SD Applications were
approved, 11 percent were denied, 14 percent were pending during the
review period, and the remaining applications (62.5 percent) did not
require a resolution because the statutorily disqualified individual's
registration with the filing firm was terminated or the SD Application
was subsequently withdrawn.\72\ FINRA determined that, on average, the
processing time for an SD Application that reached a final
[[Page 20756]]
resolution (i.e., an approval or a denial) was approximately 15
months.\73\
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\70\ One of these 79 individuals was associated with multiple SD
Applications over the review period. Of the 71 firms that filed SD
Applications, approximately 90 percent filed one application during
the review period, and the remaining 10 percent filed two or more
applications.
\71\ FINRA defines a small firm as a member with at least one
and no more than 150 registered persons, a mid-size firm as a member
with at least 151 and no more than 499 registered persons, and a
large firm as a member with 500 or more registered persons. See
FINRA By-Laws, Article I.
\72\ In approximately 21 percent of the SD Applications, the
application was withdrawn because the decision leading to the
disqualifying event was overturned, thus the individual was no
longer subject to a statutory disqualification, or because the
sanctions were no longer in effect.
\73\ The median processing time was approximately 14 months, and
the 25th and the 75th percentiles were approximately 10 months and
19 months, respectively.
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3. Proposed Amendments to FINRA Rule 8312
The economic baseline used to evaluate the economic impacts of the
proposed rule changes to Rule 8312 (FINRA BrokerCheck Disclosure) is
the current regulatory framework under Rules 8312 and 3170. During the
review period, FINRA determined that 17 firms hired or retained enough
registered persons from previously disciplined firms to be designated
as a ``taping firm'' under Rule 3170 and were notified about their
status during this period. All of these firms were small firms with an
average size of approximately 40 registered persons. Of these 17 firms,
12 firms did not become subject to the rule's recording requirements
because they either took advantage of the one-time staff-reduction
opportunity in Rule 3170(c) or terminated their FINRA membership, and
one firm was granted an exemption pursuant to Rule 3170(d). As a
result, only four of the firms designated as ``taping firms'' became
subject to the recording requirements of Rule 3170.
4. Proposed Amendments to the FINRA Rule 1000 Series
The economic baseline used to evaluate the economic impacts of the
proposed rule changes to the MAP Rules is the current regulatory
framework under these rules. The proposed rule change would directly
impact individuals with one or more final criminal matters or two or
more specified risk events within the prior five years, who seek to
become owners, control persons, principals or registered persons of a
member firm. The criteria used for identifying individuals under this
proposal and the number of individuals meeting the proposed criteria
are discussed below.
(c) Economic Impacts
The following provides the economic impacts, including the
anticipated benefits and costs for each of the current proposals.
1. Proposed Amendments to the FINRA Rule 9200 Series and FINRA Rule
9300 Series
The proposed rule amendments would directly impact firms and
brokers whose disciplinary matters are on appeal to, or review by, the
NAC. These impacts would vary across appeals and depend on, among other
factors, the nature and severity of the conditions or restrictions
imposed on the activities of respondents. As discussed above, the scope
of these conditions or restrictions would depend on what the Hearing
Officer determines to be reasonably necessary for the purpose of
preventing customer harm. Further, the conditions and restrictions
would be tailored to the specific risks posed by the brokers or firms
during the appeal period. Accordingly, the conditions and restrictions
are not intended to rise to the level of the underlying sanctions and
would likely not be economically equivalent to imposing the sanctions
during the appeal. In addition, respondents will be able to seek
expedited reviews of orders imposing conditions or restrictions.
Anticipated Benefits
The primary benefit of this proposal accrues from limiting the
potential risk of continued harm to customers by respondents during the
appeal period by imposing conditions or restrictions on their
activities, and requiring them to be subject to heightened supervision
plans, while their disciplinary matter is on appeal. In order to
evaluate these benefits and assess the potential risk posed by brokers
during the appeal period, FINRA examined cases that were appealed to
the NAC during 2013-2016 and determined whether the brokers associated
with an appeal to the NAC had a new disclosure event--for this
analysis, a final criminal matter or a specified risk event, as defined
above--at any time from the filing of the appeal through the year-end
after the year in which the appeal reached a decision.\74\ Based on
this analysis, FINRA estimates that 21 of the 75 brokers who appealed
to the NAC during the 2013-2016 period were associated with a total of
28 disclosure events that occurred during the interstitial period after
the filing of their appeal to the NAC.\75\ FINRA anticipates that the
proposed heightened supervision requirement and the conditions or
restrictions placed on the activities of these brokers would lead to
greater oversight of their activities by their firm during the appeal
period, thereby reducing the potential risk of future customer harm
during this period.\76\
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\74\ In making these calculations, FINRA based its analysis on
the occurrence of disclosure events as used in proposed IM-1011-3
and Rule 1017(a)(7). The analysis includes events that occurred and
reached a resolution between the NAC appeal year and a year after
the NAC decision year to allow sufficient time for events that
occurred during the pendency of NAC to reach a resolution.
Accordingly, the sample period for this analysis is based on appeals
filed during the 2013-2016 period, instead of the full review period
(2013-2018).
\75\ These estimates are based on appeals filed by brokers, or
jointly filed by brokers and firms, and excludes appeals that were
filed only by firms. These estimates likely underrepresent the
overall risk of customer harm posed by these brokers, because they
are based on a specific set of events and outcomes used for
classifying brokers for the proposed amendments to the MAP Rules. In
addition, these brokers had other disclosure events after their
appeal was filed, and some of these other events may also be
associated with risk of customer harm.
\76\ FINRA also anticipates that the proposed changes to Rule
9556, which will establish an expedited proceeding for failures to
comply with conditions or restrictions, will help ensure that the
firms will comply with the conditions and restrictions imposed.
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Anticipated Costs
The costs of this proposal would primarily fall upon brokers or
firms whose activities during the appeal period would be subject to the
specific conditions or restrictions imposed by the Hearing Officer.\77\
In addition, firms would incur costs associated with implementing
heightened supervision for brokers while their disciplinary matters are
under appeal. These costs would likely vary significantly across firms
and could increase if the broker acts in a principal capacity. For
example, firms employing disciplined respondents who serve as
principals, executive managers or owners, or who operate in other
senior capacities, would likely assume higher costs in developing and
implementing tailored supervisory plans. Such plans may entail re-
assignments of responsibilities, restructuring within senior management
and leadership, and more complex oversight and governance approaches.
These potential costs, in turn, may result in some brokers voluntarily
leaving the industry rather than waiting for the resolution of the
appeal process.\78\
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\77\ Brokers and firms that choose to defend against motions for
conditions and restrictions and that pursue expedited reviews of
orders imposing conditions or restrictions would incur additional
costs associated with these reviews.
\78\ The proposal may also impose costs on issuers in limited
instances where a firm is enjoined from participating in a private
placement and the issuer is especially reliant on that firm. The
private issuer may incur search costs to find a replacement firm or
individual and incur other direct and indirect costs associated with
the offering.
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The costs associated with this proposal would apply to brokers and
their employing member firms while the brokers are employed during the
pendency of the NAC appeals (the average processing time of which is 15
months) and any subsequent appeals.\79\
[[Page 20757]]
Many broker-appellants, however, are not employed with any member firms
when their NAC appeal is filed or leave shortly after the appeal is
filed. FINRA examined the employment history, including employment
start and end dates, of the 131 brokers \80\ associated with NAC
appeals during the review period, and estimates that 54 of them (or 41
percent) were not employed by any member firm during the appeal
process, 33 of them (or 25 percent) were employed by a member firm only
for part of the appeal process, and 44 of them (or 34 percent) were
employed by a member firm throughout the appeal process.
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\79\ FINRA has no estimate for the time associated with
subsequent appeals.
\80\ These 131 brokers correspond to those associated with a NAC
appeal during the review period (2013-2018). The 75 brokers
discussed in the Anticipated Benefits section above are a subgroup
of brokers associated with a NAC appeal during the 2013-2016 period.
See supra note 74.
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FINRA notes that consistent with existing FINRA guidance, some
firms may have already established heightened supervision of
individuals while their disciplinary matters are on appeal.\81\ The
existing heightened supervision plans may address all, some or none of
the conditions or restrictions imposed by the Hearing Panel Officer.
Accordingly, for these firms the anticipated costs of this proposal may
be lower.
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\81\ See Regulatory Notice 18-15 (April 2018).
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Other Economic Impacts
In developing the proposal, FINRA considered the possibility that,
in some cases, this proposal may limit activities of brokers and firms,
while their disciplinary matter is under appeal, in instances where the
restricted activities do not pose a risk to customers. In such cases,
these brokers and firms may lose economic opportunities, and their
customers may lose the benefits associated with the provision of these
services. FINRA believes that the proposed rule changes mitigate such
risks by requiring the conditions or restrictions imposed to be
reasonably necessary for the purpose of preventing customer harm and by
providing a respondent with the right to seek expedited review of a
motion to modify or remove any or all of the conditions and
restrictions. Further, as discussed above, approximately 66 percent of
the broker-appellants during the review period either were not employed
by a member firm during the appeal process or were employed by a member
firm only for part of the appeal process. Accordingly, these brokers
would not be impacted by this proposal or would be subject to the
proposed limitations only for a limited period of time.
2. Proposed Amendments to the FINRA Rule 9520 Series
The proposed rule amendments would impact statutorily disqualified
individuals and their employing firms while the SD Application is being
processed. These individuals would be subject to heightened supervision
during the pendency of their SD Applications.
Anticipated Benefits
The primary benefit of this proposed rule change would arise from
greater oversight by employing firms of the activities of statutorily
disqualified individuals during the pendency of their SD Applications,
thereby reducing the potential risk of customer harm during this
period. In order to assess the potential risk posed by these
individuals during the pendency of their SD Applications, FINRA
examined whether individuals associated with an SD Application filed
during the 2013-2016 period had a disclosure event \82\ at any time
from the filing of the SD Application through two years after
filing.\83\ Based on this analysis, FINRA estimates that 26 (or 51
percent) of the 51 individuals associated with SD Applications during
the 2013-2016 period had a total of 41 disclosure events during the
interstitial period after the filing of their SD Application.\84\
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\82\ For purposes of this analysis, ``disclosure event''
included final criminal matters and specified risk events, as
defined in proposed Rule 1011(h) and (p).
\83\ This analysis includes events that occurred and reached a
resolution from the SD Application filing year until the end of two
years later to allow sufficient time for events that occurred during
the eligibility proceeding to reach a resolution. Accordingly, the
sample period for this analysis is based on SD Applications filed
during the 2013-2016 period, instead of the full review period
(2013-2018).
\84\ This likely underrepresents the overall risk of customer
harm, because the disclosure events in this analysis included only
final criminal matters and specified risk events.
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Anticipated Costs
The costs associated with this proposal would fall primarily on
firms that incur direct and indirect costs associated with establishing
and implementing the tailored heightened supervision plan while an SD
Application is under review. As discussed above, the costs would likely
vary significantly across firms and could increase if the statutorily
disqualified individuals also serve as principals, executive managers,
or owners or operate in other senior capacities. Moreover, the
heightened supervision requirement may deter some firms from retaining
these individuals and, as a result, these individuals may find it more
difficult to remain in the industry.
3. Proposed Amendments to the BrokerCheck Rule
The proposed amendments would impact taping firms and their
registered persons. Taping firms have a proportionately significant
number of registered persons who were associated with firms that were
expelled by a self-regulatory organization or had their registration
revoked by the SEC for sales practice violations, and as a result, may
pose greater risk to their customers.
Anticipated Benefits
The primary benefit of this proposed rule change would arise from
the investor protection benefits associated with disclosing a firm's
status as a ``taping firm'' through BrokerCheck to the investors. This
would allow investors to make more informed choices about the brokers
and firms with which they conduct business. The anticipated benefits
would increase with the likelihood that a potential or actual customer
to a taping firm seeks information through BrokerCheck.
Anticipated Costs
The proposal would not impose any direct costs on brokers or firms.
Nonetheless it may impact their businesses, as investors may rely on
information about a firm's status as a taping firm in determining whom
to engage for financial services and brokerage activities. Disclosing
the status of a firm as a ``taping firm'' through BrokerCheck may also
further deter firms from hiring or retaining brokers who were employed
previously by disciplined firms in order to avoid the ``taping firm''
thresholds and resulting disclosure on BrokerCheck.\85\
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\85\ As discussed above, only four firms during the review
period became subject to the taping requirements of Rule 3170. As a
result, FINRA does not anticipate that this proposal would be
associated with significant economic impacts, including the
anticipated benefits or costs.
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4. Proposed Amendments to MAP Rules
The proposed rule change would directly impact individuals with one
or more final criminal matters or two or more specified risk events
within the prior five years, who seek to become owners, control
persons, principals or registered persons of a member firm. To estimate
the number of brokers who would meet the proposed criteria, FINRA
analyzed the categories of events and conditions associated with the
proposed criteria for all brokers during the review period. For each
year, FINRA determined the approximate number of
[[Page 20758]]
brokers who met the proposed criteria and became owners, control
persons, principals or registered persons of a member firm. As
discussed in more detail below, this analysis showed that there were
110-215 such individuals, per year, who would have met the proposed
criteria had it been in place during the review period.
The proposal is intended to apply to brokers who may pose greater
risks to their customers than other brokers. A framework for evaluating
the effectiveness of the criteria is to observe the rate at which
brokers identified collectively by the criteria are substantially more
likely to have regulatory-related events, including specified risk
events and final criminal matters, than their peers. Based on FINRA's
analysis of all individuals who sought to become owners, control
persons, principals or registered persons of a member firm during the
review period, individuals who would have met the proposed criteria had
on average 1.4-1.6 final criminal matters and specified risk events
(per broker), while other brokers had on average 0.002-0.004 such
events (per broker).\86\ These estimates suggest that individuals who
would have been affected by this proposal (had it been in place during
the review period) had on average over 450-900 times more final
criminal matters and specified risk events than other brokers during
the same review period.
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\86\ As discussed above, the proposed criteria includes
individuals with one or more ``final criminal matters'' or two or
more ``specified risk events'' in the prior five years. The
individuals who would have met the proposed criteria as a result of
two or more ``specified risk events'' in the prior five years had on
average 2.3-2.9 such events during the review period.
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Anticipated Benefits
The primary benefit of the proposed amendments would be to reduce
the potential risk of future customer harm by individuals who meet the
proposed criteria and seek to become an owner, control person,
principal, or registered person of a member firm. FINRA believes the
proposed rule change would further promote investor protection by
applying stronger standards for continuing membership with FINRA and
for changes to a current member firm's ownership, control or business
operations. These benefits would primarily arise from changes in broker
and firm behavior and increased scrutiny by FINRA of brokers who meet
the proposed criteria during the review of a materiality consultation
and, where appropriate, a CMA.
To scope these potential benefits and assess the potential risk
posed by brokers who would meet the proposed criteria, FINRA evaluated
the extent to which brokers who would have met the criteria during
2013-2016 (had the criteria existed) and sought the proposed roles were
associated with ``new'' final criminal matters or specified risk events
after having met the proposed criteria. These ``new'' events correspond
to events that were identified or occurred after the broker's meeting
the proposed criteria, and do not include events that were pending at
the time of meeting the criteria and subsequently resolved in the years
afterwards. As shown in Exhibit 3e, FINRA estimates that, in 2013, 215
brokers would have met the proposed criteria and sought the proposed
roles. These brokers were associated with 35 ``new'' final criminal
matters or specified risk events that occurred after their meeting the
proposed criteria, between 2014 and 2018. Exhibit 3e similarly shows
the number of events associated with brokers who would have met the
proposed criteria and sought the proposed roles in 2014, 2015, and
2016. Across 2013-2016, there were 635 unique brokers who would have
met the proposed criteria and sought the proposed roles, and these
brokers were associated with a total of 93 events that occurred in the
years after they met the proposed criteria.
Exhibit 3e also shows, for the 2013-2016 period, a factor
representing a multiple for the average number of events for brokers
who would have met the proposed criteria and sought the proposed roles
relative to other brokers who sought the proposed roles. For example,
the factor of 16x for 2013 indicates that brokers meeting the proposed
criteria and seeking the proposed roles in 2013 had on average 16 times
more new events (per broker) in the subsequent years (2014-2018) than
other brokers who sought those roles in 2013.\87\ Overall, this
analysis demonstrates that brokers who would have met the proposed
criteria and sought the proposed roles during the 2013-2016 period had
on average approximately 16-49 times more new criminal matters and
specified risk events after meeting the criteria than other brokers who
sought the proposed roles.
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\87\ Brokers meeting the proposed criteria and seeking the
proposed roles in 2013 had on average 0.16 new events (per broker)
in the subsequent years (2014-2018) compared to 0.01 events (per
broker) for other brokers seeking the proposed roles.
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Anticipated Costs
The cost of this proposal would fall on the firms that seek to add
owners, control persons, principals or registered persons who meet the
proposed criteria. These firms would be directly impacted by the
proposals through the requirements to seek a materiality consultation
with FINRA and, potentially, to file a CMA. While there is no FINRA fee
for seeking a materiality consultation, firms may incur internal costs
or costs associated with engaging external experts in conjunction with
the filing of a CMA. In addition, the proposal could result in delays
to a firm's ability to add owners, control persons, principals or
registered persons who meet the proposed criteria, during the time the
mandatory materiality consultation and any required CMA is being
processed. FINRA examined the time to process materiality consultations
and determined that, on average, these consultations are completed
within eight to ten days, although this time period could be longer
depending on the complexity of the contemplated expansion or
transaction and the aggregate number of consultations under review.
These anticipated costs may deter some firms from hiring individuals
meeting the proposed criteria, who as a result may find it difficult to
remain in the industry or bear other labor market related costs.
Other Economic Impacts
To provide transparency and clarity regarding the application of
this proposal, the proposed criteria is based on disclosure events
required to be reported on the Uniform Registration Forms. Information
about disclosure events reported on the Uniform Registration Forms is
generally available to firms and FINRA. Accordingly, firms would be
able to identify the specific set of disclosure events that would count
towards the proposed criteria and replicate the proposed thresholds
using available data, with a few exceptions.\88\ In determining the
proposed numeric threshold, FINRA considered three key factors: (1) The
different types of reported disclosure events; (2) the counting
criteria (i.e., the number of reported events required to trigger the
obligations); and (3) the time period over which the events are
counted. In
[[Page 20759]]
evaluating the proposed numeric threshold versus alternative criteria,
significant attention was given to the impact of possible
misidentification of individuals; specifically, the economic trade-off
between including individuals who are less likely to subsequently pose
risk of harm to customers, and not including individuals who are more
likely to subsequently pose risk of harm to customers. There are costs
associated with both types of misidentifications. For example,
subjecting individuals who are less likely to pose a risk to customers
to mandatory materiality consultations, and potentially CMAs, would
impose additional costs on these individuals, their affiliated firms
and customers. The proposed numeric threshold aims to appropriately
balance these costs in the context of economic impacts associated with
the proposed amendments to the MAP Rules.
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\88\ Firms have access to disclosure events reported on Form U4,
U5, and U6 filings for individuals who were previously registered
with the same firms or with other firms. Firms do not have access,
however, to information regarding individuals that is disclosed on
another firm's Form BD. Firms may not have access to information
about disclosure events for individuals, including control
affiliates, who were not previously registered.
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The proposal may create incentives for changes in behavior to avoid
meeting the proposed threshold. Under the proposal standing alone,
brokers and firms may be more likely to try to settle customer
complaints or arbitrations below $15,000 so that their settlements do
not count towards the proposed threshold. To the extent, if any, that
customers also would be willing to settle for less, this change may
reduce the compensation provided to customers.\89\ Alternatively, it
could increase the time, effort and costs for customers associated with
negotiating a settlement, even if the settled amount would not change.
Brokers and firms also may consider underreporting the disclosure
events to avoid being subject to the proposed rule. However, this
potential impact is mitigated by the facts that many of the events are
reported by FINRA or other regulators, incorrect or missing reports can
trigger regulatory action by FINRA, and FINRA rules require firms to
take appropriate steps to verify the accuracy and completeness of the
information contained in the Uniform Registration Forms before they are
filed. FINRA also has the ability to check for unreported events,
particularly those that third parties report in separate public
notices, such as the outcomes of some civil proceedings.
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\89\ The proposed $15,000 threshold for customer settlements
corresponds to the reporting threshold for the Uniform Registration
Forms and for the settlement information to be displayed through
BrokerCheck. Accordingly, the change in incentives to brokers and
firms associated with the proposed rule should be considered in the
presence of the incentives already in place.
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FINRA recognizes that in some instances, firms may not be able to
identify certain individuals with disclosure events who may seek to
become owners, control persons, principals or registered persons of the
firm. Similarly, firms may have less incentive to conduct appropriate
due diligence on those individuals for whom firms may not have readily
available disclosure history.\90\ Firms still would be required,
however, to seek information on relevant disclosure events from
individuals who seek to become principals or registered persons, as
part of the registration process, and take reasonable steps (e.g., by
conducting background checks) to verify the accuracy and completeness
of the information provided by the individuals. Nonetheless, FINRA
recognizes that in some cases, even after conducting reasonable due
diligence, firms may not have the required information to identify
certain individuals who meet the proposed criteria, and these
individuals may continue to pose risk of future investor harm. FINRA
believes that these risks are mitigated by its own examination risk
programs that monitor and examine individuals for whom there are
concerns of ongoing misconduct or imminent risk of harm to investors.
These programs identify high-risk individuals based on the analysis of
data available to the firms as well as additional regulatory data
available to FINRA.\91\
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\90\ For example, as discussed above, firms do not have access
to disclosure events for non-registered control affiliates at other
firms. FINRA uses disclosure events reported on Form BD across all
firms to identify disclosure records of non-registered control
affiliates.
\91\ See supra note 88.
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In developing this proposal, FINRA analyzed disclosure events
reported on the Uniform Registration Forms for all individuals during
the review period. For each year, FINRA evaluated the data and
determined the approximate number of individuals who would have met the
proposed numeric threshold of one or more final criminal matters or two
or more specified risk events in the prior five years. Exhibit 3a shows
the disclosure categories that FINRA considered and the subcategories
that were used for identifying final criminal matters and specified
risk events. The exhibit also shows the mapping of these disclosure
categories to the underlying questions in Form U4.\92\ Exhibit 3b shows
the corresponding mapping of these disclosure categories to the
questions in Form BD.\93\ Exhibit 3c provides a breakdown of the
disclosure categories for all individuals registered with FINRA in
2018.\94\ The exhibit illustrates the impacts of refining subcategories
of reported disclosure events and using different numeric thresholds on
the number of disclosure events and the number of registered persons
associated with these events.\95\ This analysis has led FINRA to
initially propose the numeric threshold set forth in the current
proposal.
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\92\ Forms U5 and U6 have questions similar to Form U4 that can
also be mapped to the disclosure categories in Exhibit 3a.
\93\ Form BD includes information on disclosure events for
individual control affiliates, including non-registered control
affiliates that may not have Form U4, U5, or U6 filings. Form BD is
the primary source of information on disclosure events for these
unregistered control affiliates. Form BD includes information on
final criminal matters and certain specified risk events associated
with regulatory actions and civil judicial actions, but does not
include information on customer awards or settlements.
\94\ Exhibit 3c does not include information on individuals who
were not registered with FINRA in 2018. These non-registered
individuals may include non-registered associated persons, including
non-registered control affiliates.
\95\ Exhibit 3c shows the number of criminal disclosures and
``disclosures considered in developing specified risk events''
(regulatory action disclosures, civil judicial disclosures, and
customer complaint, arbitration, and civil litigation disclosures)--
including final and pending disclosures--for brokers who were
registered with FINRA in 2018, over such brokers' entire reporting
history; the number of brokers associated with these disclosure
events; and the impact of refining the disclosure categories and the
periods over which these events are counted. For example, the
exhibit shows that brokers who were registered with FINRA in 2018
had, over their entire reporting history, 19,655 criminal
disclosures and 134,928 ``disclosures considered in developing
specified risk events.'' It also shows that 41,915 individuals had,
over their entire reporting history, one or more criminal
disclosures or two or more ``disclosures considered in developing
specified risk events.'' When narrowing the disclosure categories to
include only the ``final criminal matters'' and ``specified risk
events'' as defined in this proposal (including the five-year
lookback period), the results narrow to 174 final criminal matters
and 2,616 specified risk events, and to 414 brokers who met the
proposed numeric threshold of one or more final criminal matters or
two or more specified risk events in the prior five years.
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The additional proposed obligations would only apply to individuals
with one or more final criminal matters or two or more specified risk
events within the prior five years who seek to become owners, control
persons, principals, or registered persons of a firm. Accordingly,
FINRA examined registration information in order to identify all
individuals who would have met the proposed criteria and sought the
proposed roles during the review period. Those identified serve as a
reasonable estimate for the number of individuals who would have been
directly impacted by this proposal had it been in place at the time.
This analysis indicates that there were 110-215 such individuals per
year, as shown in Exhibit 3d. These individuals represent 0.09-0.16
percent of individuals who became owners, control persons, principals,
or registered
[[Page 20760]]
persons with a new member in any year during the review period.\96\
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\96\ These percentages are calculated by dividing FINRA's
estimate of the number of individuals who met the proposed criteria
each year during the review period and sought the proposed roles
(110-215 individuals per year) by the number of individuals who
became owners, control persons, principals, or registered persons
with a new member each year during the review period (122,003-
131,156 individuals per year).
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FINRA also analyzed firms that employed individuals who would be
directly impacted by this proposal. The analysis shows that in each
year over the review period, there were between 74-155 firms employing
individuals who would have met the proposed criteria. Approximately 41
percent of these firms were small, 12 percent were mid-size, and the
remaining 47 percent were large.\97\ FINRA estimates that approximately
31 percent of the individuals meeting the proposed criteria and who
sought the proposed roles were employed by small firms, ten percent by
mid-size firms and 59 percent by large firms.
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\97\ See supra note 71.
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(d) Alternatives Considered
FINRA recognizes that the design and implementation of the rule
proposals may impose direct and indirect costs on a variety of
stakeholders, including member firms, associated persons, regulators,
investors, and the public. Accordingly, in developing its rule
proposals, FINRA sought to identify alternative ways to enhance the
efficiency and effectiveness of the proposals while maintaining their
regulatory objectives. The following provides a discussion of the
alternatives FINRA considered for the current proposals.
1. Proposed Amendments to the FINRA Rule 9200 Series and FINRA Rule
9300 Series
As an alternative to the proposal to authorize Hearing Officers to
impose conditions or restrictions, FINRA considered whether to require
sanctions imposed by the FINRA Hearing Panel or Hearing Officer in
disciplinary decisions to be effective during the pendency of the NAC
appeals and subsequent appeals. FINRA believes that such an approach
could be too restrictive in disciplinary matters with significant
sanctions and where the risk of harm may be specific to particular
activities. Accordingly, FINRA believes that conditions and
restrictions that are tailored specifically to the risk posed by the
individuals during the pendency of the appeals, and are reasonably
necessary for the purpose of preventing customer harm, would provide a
better balance between protecting investors and preventing undue costs
on individuals and firms while their appeals are pending.
2. Proposed Amendments to the FINRA Rule 9520 Series
This proposal would subject statutorily disqualified individuals
employed with member firms to heightened supervision during the
pendency of their SD Applications. Considering that the problem
addressed by the proposed amendments to the FINRA Rule 9520 Series is
very specific, FINRA did not consider any significant alternatives to
this targeted proposal.
3. Proposed Amendments to FINRA Rule 8312
Considering that this proposal would likely not be associated with
material economic impacts, FINRA did not consider any significant
alternatives to this proposal.\98\
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\98\ As discussed above, there were only four firms that became
subject to the taping requirements of Rule 3170 during the review
period.
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4. Proposed Amendments to the FINRA Rule 1000 Series
FINRA considered several alternatives to the numeric and
categorical thresholds for identifying individuals who would be subject
to the proposed amendments to the MAP Rules. In determining the
proposed threshold, FINRA focused significant attention on the economic
trade-off between incorrect identification of individuals who may not
subsequently pose risk of harm to their customers, and not including
individuals who may subsequently pose risk of harm to customers. FINRA
also considered three key factors: (1) The different types of reported
disclosure events, (2) the counting criteria (i.e., the number of
reported events), and (3) the time period over which the events are
counted. FINRA considered several alternatives for each of these three
factors.
a. Alternatives Associated With the Types of Disclosure Events
In determining the different types of disclosure events, FINRA
considered all categories of disclosure events reported on the Uniform
Registration Forms, including the financial disclosures and the
termination disclosures. FINRA decided to exclude financial
disclosures, which include personal bankruptcies, civil bonds, or
judgments and liens. While these events may be of interest to investors
in evaluating whether or not to engage a broker, these types of events
are not by themselves direct evidence of customer harm. FINRA also
considered whether termination disclosures should be included as
specified risk events. Termination disclosures include job separations
after allegations against the brokers.\99\ Certain termination
disclosures reflect conflicts of interest between the firm and the
broker and, as a result, may not necessarily be indicative of
misconduct. Further, the underlying allegations in the termination
disclosures may be associated with other disclosure events, such as
those associated with customer settlements or awards, regulatory
actions or civil judicial actions, which are already included in the
proposed criteria. Where so, the underlying conduct posing potential
future customer harm would be captured in the proposed criteria. As a
result, FINRA did not include termination disclosures as specified risk
events. Accordingly, FINRA considered the remaining five categories of
disclosure events listed in Exhibit 3a.
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\99\ Termination disclosures involve situations where the
individual voluntarily resigned, was discharged, or was permitted to
resign after allegations.
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Within each disclosure category included in the proposed criteria,
FINRA considered whether pending matters should be included or if the
criteria should be restricted to final matters that have reached a
resolution not in favor of the broker. Pending matters may be
associated with an emerging pattern of customer harm and capture timely
information of potential ongoing or recent misconduct. However, pending
matters may also include disclosure events that remain unresolved or
subsequently get dismissed because they lack merit or suitable
evidence. FINRA excluded pending matters in the current proposal
because the potential adverse impacts on the individuals who may be
identified because of pending matters would likely outweigh the benefit
of including pending matters.\100\
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\100\ For example, individuals who may be identified on a fixed
numeric threshold based upon pending matters could find it difficult
to become owners, control persons, principals, or registered persons
of a member firm while these matters are pending, even if such
matters are subsequently dismissed. See also Exhibit 3c.
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Exhibit 3a shows the five categories of disclosure events that were
considered and the subcategories that were included in the proposed
criteria. For criminal matters, FINRA considered whether criminal
charges that do not result in a conviction or a plea of guilty or nolo
contendere (no contest) should be included in the proposed criteria.
These events correspond to criminal matters in which the associated
charges
[[Page 20761]]
were subsequently dismissed or withdrawn and, as a result, are not
necessarily evidence of misconduct. Accordingly, FINRA only included
criminal convictions, including pleas of guilty or nolo contendere (no
contest), in the proposed criteria.
For customer settlements and awards, FINRA considered whether
settlements and awards in which the broker was not ``named'' should be
considered as a specified risk event. These ``subject of'' customer
settlements and awards correspond to events where the customer
initiates a claim against the firm and does not specifically name the
broker, but the firm identifies the broker as required by the Uniform
Registration Forms.\101\ In these cases, the broker is not party to the
proceedings or settlement. There may be conflicts of interest between
the firm and the broker such that the claim may be attributed to the
broker without the ability of that broker to directly participate in
the resolution. Accordingly, FINRA excluded ``subject of'' customer
settlements and awards from the proposed criteria. FINRA recognizes
that excluding these events may also undercount instances where the
broker may have been responsible for the alleged customer harm.
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\101\ For example, the Instructions to Form U4 provide that the
answer to Questions 14I(4) or 14I(5) should be ``yes'' if the broker
was not named as a respondent/defendant but (1) the Statement of
Claim or Complaint specifically mentions the individual by name and
alleges the broker was involved in one or more sales practice
violations or (2) the Statement of Claim or Complaint does not
mention the broker by name, but the firm has made a good faith
determination that the sales practice violation(s) alleged involves
one or more particular brokers.
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For civil judicial actions and regulatory actions, FINRA considered
whether all sanctions associated with final matters should be included
in the proposed criteria or whether certain less severe sanctions
should be excluded. Final regulatory action or civil judicial action
disclosures may be associated with a wide variety of activities,
ranging from material customer harm to more technical rule violations,
such as a failure to make timely filings or other events not directly
related to customer harm. However, due to the way in which such
information is currently reported, it is not straightforward to
distinguish regulatory or civil judicial actions associated with
customer harm from other such actions.\102\ In the absence of a
reliable way to identify regulatory and civil judicial actions
associated with customer harm, FINRA considered using a proxy of
severity of the underlying sanctions as a way to exclude events that
are likely not associated with material customer harm. Therefore, FINRA
is proposing to include regulatory actions or civil judicial actions
that are associated with more severe sanctions, such as bars,
suspensions or monetary sanctions above a de minimis dollar threshold
of $15,000. FINRA notes that relying strictly on a proxy for severity
would likely exclude certain regulatory actions or civil judicial
actions that are associated with customer harm, and may include certain
regulatory actions or civil judicial actions that are not associated
with customer harm.
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\102\ For example, the Uniform Registration Forms contain
information in disclosure reporting pages that could be useful in
identifying regulatory actions or civil judicial actions associated
with customer harm, but it is stored as ``free-text'' and,
therefore, cannot be reliably compared across disclosures.
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FINRA also considered several alternative de minimis dollar
thresholds for disclosure events included in the proposed criteria. For
example, FINRA considered higher dollar thresholds of $25,000, $50,000
and $100,000 for customer settlements, customer awards, and monetary
sanctions associated with regulatory actions and civil judicial
actions. A dollar threshold may capture a dimension of severity of the
alleged customer harm. The Uniform Registration Forms establish a de
minimis dollar reporting threshold of $10,000 for complaints filed
prior to 2009 and $15,000 afterwards. The reporting threshold may,
however, be low and possibly include instances where the payment was
made to end the complaint and minimize litigation costs. However, the
dollar threshold does not account for the value of the customers'
accounts, and there are likely cases where even low dollar amounts
represent remuneration of a significant portion of customer
investments. Accordingly, a dollar threshold may be both under-
inclusive and over-inclusive, and as a result FINRA considered a range
of alternative thresholds. Increasing the dollar threshold from $15,000
to $25,000, $50,000 and $100,000 would decrease the number of
individuals impacted by this proposal from 110-215 individuals each
year over the review period (as explained above) to 108-207
individuals, 103-197 individuals and 97-180 individuals each year,
respectively. Finally, FINRA notes that establishing a de minimis
dollar threshold that is different than the current reporting
requirements could increase confusion among investors and registered
persons and would likely create additional incentives for brokers and
firms to keep future settlements below the dollar level that would
trigger the restrictions, to the detriment of customers.
b. Alternatives Associated With the Counting Criteria
FINRA considered a range of alternative criteria for counting
criminal matters or specified risk events. For example, FINRA
considered whether the counting criteria for final criminal matters
should be two or more final criminal matters or one final criminal
matter and another specified risk event. This alternative would
effectively count final criminal matters the same way as other
specified risk events. FINRA believes that final criminal matters are
generally more directly tied to serious misconduct than some of the
other specified risk events. Accordingly, FINRA believes that one final
criminal matter, as defined by this proposal, should be sufficient to
trigger the proposed criteria.\103\
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\103\ FINRA recognizes that final criminal matters include
felony convictions that may not be investment related (e.g., a
conviction associated with multiple DUIs).
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FINRA also considered alternative criteria for counting specified
risk events. For example, FINRA considered decreasing the proposed
threshold from two specified risk events to one. This alternative would
change the proposed criteria to one or more final criminal matters or
one (instead of two) or more specified risk events during the prior
five-year period. This approach would increase the number of
individuals impacted by this proposal from 110-215 individuals to 341-
675 individuals each year, over the review period. FINRA also
considered increasing the proposed threshold from two specified risk
events to three, thereby changing the proposed criteria to one or more
final criminal matter or three (instead of two) or more specified risk
events during the prior five-year period. This approach would decrease
the number of individuals impacted by this proposal from 110-215
individuals to 86-161 individuals each year, over the review period.
For the reasons explained above, FINRA considered alternative criteria
for counting specified risk events, but chose the specification in the
current proposal.
c. Alternatives Associated With the Time Period Over Which the
Disclosure Events Are Counted
FINRA also considered alternative criteria for the time period over
which final criminal matters and specified risk events are counted. For
example, FINRA considered whether final criminal matters or specified
risk events should
[[Page 20762]]
be counted over the individual's entire reporting period or counted
only over a more recent period. Based on its experience, FINRA believes
that events that are more than ten years old do not necessarily pose
the same level of possible future risk to customers as more recent
events. Further, counting final criminal matters or specified risk
events over an individual's entire reporting period would imply that
individuals with such events would be subject to the criteria for their
entire career, even if they subsequently worked without being
associated with any future events. Accordingly, FINRA decided to
include final criminal matters or specified risk events occurring only
in a more recent period.
FINRA also considered a threshold based on a five-year lookback
period for final criminal matters, but a five-to-ten year lookback
period for specified risk events. Specifically, FINRA considered a
threshold that would be met if the individual had one specified risk
event having resolved during the previous ten years, and a second
specified risk event resolved during the previous five years, or if the
individual had one or more final criminal matters resolved in the prior
five-year period. This approach would increase the number of
individuals impacted by this proposal from 110-215 individuals to 127-
236 individuals each year, over the review period. For the reasons
explained above, FINRA considered alternative criteria for the lookback
period for specified risk events, but chose the specification in the
current proposal.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the Proposed
Rule Change Received From Members, Participants, or Others
The proposed rule change was published for comment in Regulatory
Notice 18-16 (April 2018). Thirteen comments were received in response
to the Regulatory Notice.\104\ A copy of the Regulatory Notice is
attached as Exhibit 2a [sic]. A list of commenters is attached as
Exhibit 2b [sic]. Copies of the comment letters received in response to
the Regulatory Notice are attached as Exhibit 2c [sic]. Of the 13
comment letters received, eight were generally in favor of the proposed
rule change, two were generally opposed, and one stated that the
proposal was an improvement over the status quo but that significantly
more action would be needed to protect investors.
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\104\ All references to commenters are to the comment letters as
listed in Exhibit 2b.
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FINRA has considered the comments received. In light of some of
those comments, FINRA has made some modifications to the proposal. The
comments and FINRA's responses are set forth in detail below.
General Support for and Opposition to the Proposal
Five commenters expressed general support for the proposed rule
changes in Regulatory Notice 18-16, but all had suggestions on how
aspects of the proposal should be modified.\105\ Two commenters
expressed support for the proposed amendments, subject to certain
modifications.\106\ One commenter expressed general support for the
proposed amendments except the proposed amendments to the Rule 1000
Series.\107\ Two commenters suggested different approaches that FINRA
could take.\108\ One commenter expressed opposition to specific aspects
of the proposal.\109\ One commenter opined that the proposal has
numerous deficiencies and offered remedies.\110\ All of these
commenters' suggestions are discussed in more detail below.
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\105\ MML, NASAA, PIABA, SIFMA, Wulff Hansen.
\106\ Cambridge, FSI.
\107\ Janney.
\108\ Better Markets, IBN.
\109\ Luxor.
\110\ Network 1.
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Proposed Amendments to the FINRA Rules 9200 and 9300 Series To Enhance
Investor Protection During the Pendency of an Appeal or Call-for-Review
Proceeding
[rtarr8] Conditions or Restrictions
The proposed amendments to the Rule 9200 and 9300 Series would
allow a Hearing Officer to impose conditions or restrictions on the
activities of a respondent during the pendency of an appeal to the NAC
from, or call for NAC review of, a disciplinary decision.
Some commenters expressed support for these specific proposals. FSI
commented that permitting Hearing Officers to impose conditions and
restrictions strikes the appropriate balance between the member's
rights and investor protection concerns. NASAA supported imposing
temporary remedies on parties that lose at the hearing level, writing
that it would align FINRA's procedures with federal and state law.
PIABA wrote that a disciplinary respondent should not be permitted to
conduct business as usual during a disciplinary appeal.
Several commenters requested that a disciplined respondent and
firms that associate with a disciplined respondent have an opportunity
to propose to the Hearing Officers the conditions and restrictions that
should be imposed.\111\ Cambridge stated that this opportunity would
help ensure that conditions and restrictions are not overly broad and
account for a firm's size, resources and ability to supervise, and that
it would alleviate concerns about potential lost income, lost
opportunities and lost clients that could result from the conditions or
restrictions. SIFMA wrote that this opportunity would help ensure that
any conditions and restrictions imposed are reasonably necessary for
the nature and scale of the misconduct at issue and tailored to a
firm's business model, and that it would reduce the number of motions
to modify or remove conditions or restrictions.
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\111\ Cambridge, FSI, SIFMA.
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While FINRA appreciates the comments, FINRA notes that the proposal
allows an individual respondent to make arguments concerning the
potential conditions and restrictions to the Hearing Officer. In this
regard, nothing in the proposed rule change prevents a respondent in a
disciplinary proceeding from proposing, in opposition or response to a
motion for conditions or restrictions, the conditions and restrictions
that could or should be imposed. Likewise, nothing prevents an
individual respondent, during the underlying disciplinary proceeding
itself, from introducing relevant evidence. Moreover, FINRA rules only
give named parties the right to participate in a FINRA disciplinary
proceeding, and the complaint issued against an individual respondent
will not always name that person's employing firm as a respondent.
However, in light of these comments, FINRA is proposing to modify the
proposed rule as set forth in Regulatory Notice 18-16 to clarify that a
respondent's opposition or other response to a motion for conditions or
restrictions must explain why no conditions or restrictions should be
imposed or specify alternate conditions or restrictions that are sought
to be imposed and explain why the conditions or restrictions are
reasonably necessary for the purpose of preventing customer harm.
Cambridge stated that the proposal does not address the recourse
available for damages that could result from any conditions or
restrictions imposed, in the event the underlying disciplinary decision
is reversed on appeal. FINRA believes the proposal mitigates such
risks. The standard for imposing conditions or restrictions--those that
the Hearing Officer considers reasonably necessary for the purpose of
preventing customer harm--and the ability to
[[Page 20763]]
request an expedited proceeding before the Review Subcommittee for
prompt review of any conditions or restrictions imposed would act to
ensure the conditions and restrictions imposed are reasonably tailored
to address the potential concerns. The Hearing Officer that imposes
conditions or restrictions in the first instance would be knowledgeable
about the case and, therefore, well-suited to craft restrictions or
conditions that are tailored to addressing the potential customer harm.
And if a respondent believes that the conditions or restrictions
imposed are too burdensome, the respondent would be permitted to
request an expedited review and stay the conditions or restrictions.
Better Markets suggested that Hearing Officers should be required,
not just permitted, to impose conditions or restrictions that are
necessary to protect investors pending an appeal to the NAC. FINRA
believes, however, that it is more appropriate to give Hearing Officers
discretion. There may be situations when conditions or restrictions may
be deemed not necessary, such as when a respondent firm or a respondent
individual's employing firm has already undertaken substantial
subsequent remedial measures or when the violations at issue do not
involve the risk of customer harm.
FSI and Luxor opposed the standard in proposed FINRA Rule 9285(a)
that the Hearing Officer may impose conditions or restrictions that it
considers ``reasonably necessary for the purpose of preventing customer
harm.'' FSI opined that that standard could lead to conditions or
restrictions that are unduly burdensome or unrelated to the misconduct,
and it suggested that the standard also require that the conditions and
restrictions be ``reasonably designed to prevent further violations of
the rule or rules the Hearing Panel or Hearing Officer [in the
underlying disciplinary proceeding] has found to have been violated.''
FSI further suggested that, when imposing conditions or restrictions,
Hearing Officers be required to consider the firm's size, resources and
overall ability to supervise the registered representative's compliance
with the conditions or restrictions. Luxor wrote that the proposed
standard would have a chilling effect on a respondent's right to appeal
because, depending on the conditions and restrictions imposed, the
respondent may be unable to afford legal representation or may suffer
irreversible damage to a book of business.
FINRA's proposed standard, however, is consistent with the rules of
other self-regulatory organizations.\112\ Moreover, FINRA believes that
the proposed standard--both its use of the term ``reasonably
necessary'' and its emphasis on ``for the purpose of preventing
customer harm''--provides sufficient and appropriate limiting
parameters. FINRA also believes that requiring that conditions or
restrictions be reasonably designed to prevent further violations of
the rule or rules found to have been violated in the underlying
disciplinary decision, as FSI suggests, may not allow the Hearing
Officer to adequately address the investor protection concerns that
have been raised by the activities of the respondent. As FINRA
explained above (and in Regulatory Notice 18-16), the conditions and
restrictions imposed should target the misconduct demonstrated in the
disciplinary proceeding and be tailored to the specific risks posed by
the member firm or broker. With regard to FSI's suggestions to amend
the standard to require consideration of numerous additional factors,
FINRA believes that, for investor protection purposes, the primary
driver of the conditions or restrictions should be what is reasonably
necessary to prevent customer harm, not the size of the respondent's
employing firm or its claims about its resources. FINRA believes that
the proposed standard--coupled with the parties' ability to participate
in the process, the knowledge of the Hearing Officers, and the
availability of an expedited review--are appropriate to yield
conditions or restrictions that are targeted at the specific,
identifiable risks presented to customers and that are not overly
burdensome. FINRA further proposes, that in light of this and other
comments, to clarify the process for imposing conditions and
restrictions during the pendency of an appeal. Specifically, FINRA is
proposing to modify the proposed rule as set forth in Regulatory Notice
18-16 to clarify when and how parties can seek to impose reasonably
necessary conditions and restrictions following a disciplinary decision
by a Hearing Panel or Hearing Officer, the process for a respondent to
request an appeal through an expedited proceeding of such conditions
and restrictions, and to further clarify that such conditions and
restrictions would be stayed during such expedited proceeding.
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\112\ See BOX Rule 12110 (``Pending effectiveness of a decision
imposing a sanction on the Respondent, the person, committee or
panel issuing the decision (the `adjudicator') may impose such
conditions and restrictions on the activities of the Respondent as
it considers reasonably necessary for the protection of investors
and the Exchange.''); CBOE Rule 13.11(b) (``Pending effectiveness of
a decision imposing a sanction on the Respondent, the Hearing Panel
or the CRO, as applicable, may impose such conditions and
restrictions on the activities of the Respondent as the Hearing
Panel or the CRO, as applicable, considers reasonably necessary for
the protection of investors and the Exchange''); CBOE BZX Rule 8.11
(``Pending effectiveness of a decision imposing a penalty on the
Respondent, the CRO, Hearing Panel or committee of the Board, as
applicable, may impose such conditions and restrictions on the
activities of the Respondent as he, she or it considers reasonably
necessary for the protection of investors, creditors and the
Exchange.''); MIAX Options Rule 1011(b) (``Pending effectiveness of
a decision imposing a sanction on the Respondent, the person,
committee or panel issuing the decision (the `adjudicator') may
impose such conditions and restrictions on the activities of the
Respondent as it considers reasonably necessary for the protection
of investors and the Exchange.'').
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Several commenters requested that a different burden be applied in
proposed Rule 9285(b)(2) for seeking the modification or removal of
conditions or restrictions.\113\ PIABA suggested that, to modify or
remove conditions or restrictions, the respondent should be required to
provide clear and convincing evidence of a manifest error by the trier
of fact and show the likelihood of success of the underlying appeal.
Cambridge and FSI suggested that the respondent should have to show
that the Hearing Officer committed an error, that the conditions or
restrictions are overly broad, or that they are not narrowly tailored
to prevent future occurrences of the underlying violations.
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\113\ Cambridge, FSI, PIABA.
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FINRA declines these comments. As explained above, the burden in
proposed Rule 9285(b)(2) is that the respondent would have to
demonstrate that the conditions or restrictions imposed are not
reasonably necessary for the purpose of preventing customer harm. This
burden is consistent with the standard set forth in proposed Rule
9285(a) for establishing conditions and restrictions in the first
place. Furthermore, FINRA believes that, for fairness reasons, a
respondent's ability to seek the modification or removal of conditions
or restrictions should not be constrained by the underlying merits of
the respondent's disciplinary appeal. Because there would be a
separate, specific standard for the imposition of conditions or
restrictions--i.e., those that the Hearing Officer considers reasonably
necessary for the purpose of preventing customer harm--any conditions
or restrictions imposed could be erroneous for a reason that is
entirely unrelated to whether a respondent's underlying appeal has a
likelihood of success. Likewise, FINRA does not
[[Page 20764]]
support establishing a burden of proof that would be more difficult to
meet, such as a ``clear and convincing evidence of a manifest error by
the trier of fact'' standard. Thus, FINRA has retained that aspect of
the standard proposed in Regulatory Notice 18-16 that would require a
respondent to demonstrate, when moving to modify or remove conditions
or restrictions, that the conditions or restrictions imposed are not
reasonably necessary for the purpose of preventing customer harm.
PIABA and Better Markets wrote about the provisions in proposed
Rule 9285(b) that would allow a respondent to seek expedited review of
an order imposing conditions or restrictions. PIABA supported the
proposed expedited review process. Better Markets, on the other hand,
wrote that expedited reviews would add burdens to the NAC and cause
delays in processing underlying disciplinary appeals. FINRA has
retained the proposed expedited review process. FINRA has added the
expedited review process to make the overall process more fair for the
respondents involved. It also will further investor protection: Because
the filing of a motion to modify or remove conditions or restrictions
would stay the effectiveness of the conditions or restrictions, an
expedited review would allow properly imposed conditions and
restrictions to become effective sooner. Moreover, because proposed
Rule 9285(b) would assign the NAC's Review Subcommittee--and not the
NAC itself--to decide motions to modify or remove conditions or
restrictions and establish a 30-day deadline for doing so, FINRA
expects that the expedited review process will not result in materially
longer times for the NAC to process underlying disciplinary appeals.
Several commenters disagreed with how, pursuant to proposed Rule
9285(b), a motion to modify or remove conditions or restrictions would
effect a stay of the conditions or restrictions. Better Markets and
NASAA suggested that, for investor protection reasons, there should be
no stays. NASAA further commented that permitting stays would be
inconsistent with how proposed Rule 9285(b) would require firms to
establish heightened supervision over individuals who appeal
disciplinary decisions. Luxor, on the other hand, essentially sought to
expand stays, writing that no conditions and restrictions should be
imposed during a disciplinary appeal except upon a showing by FINRA of
clear and convincing evidence of imminent harm to the public.
In light of the conflicting comments and FINRA's belief that the
stay provision strikes the right balance, FINRA is proposing to retain
the proposed stay provision. It appropriately balances the investor-
protection benefits of imposing reasonably necessary conditions and
restrictions with the Exchange Act requirement that FINRA provide a
fair procedure in disciplinary proceedings. A stay of appropriately
issued conditions or restrictions would be in place only during the
relatively short duration of an expedited proceeding. Moreover, FINRA
does not agree that having a temporary stay of conditions or
restrictions during the expedited proceeding process and requiring
firms to establish heightened supervision plans during the pendency of
appeals are inconsistent. Proposed Rule 9285(e) would require a
disciplined respondent's member firm to establish a reasonably designed
heightened supervision plan regardless of whether a Hearing Officer
imposes conditions and restrictions.\114\ Thus, there is no reason for
a respondent's firm to delay adopting a heightened supervision plan
while any conditions or restrictions are stayed pending an expedited
review. Moreover, proposed Rule 9285(e) contemplates that a
respondent's firm would need to create an amended plan of heightened
supervision that takes into account any conditions or restrictions
imposed after the initial plan is adopted.
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\114\ See also Regulatory Notice 18-15 (April 2018) (Guidance on
Implementing Effective Heightened Supervisory Procedures for
Associated Persons with a History of Past Misconduct).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
PIABA wrote that the proposal should require that an individual
respondent's employing firm be notified immediately of any conditions
or restrictions imposed. FINRA generally agrees with this comment and,
as explained above, has modified the proposal to require that the
Office of Hearing Officers or the Office of General Counsel, as
appropriate, provide a copy of the order imposing conditions and
restrictions to each FINRA member with which the respondent is
associated. This would be similar to how FINRA rules currently require
that copies of disciplinary decisions be provided to each FINRA member
with which a respondent is associated.\115\
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\115\ See Rule 9268(d).
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[rtarr8] Heightened Supervision of Disciplined Respondents
FINRA also received comments concerning the proposed amendments to
require, in the event of an appeal or call for review, that an
individual respondent's member firm adopt heightened supervisory
procedures for that individual respondent.
Better Markets and PIABA expressed support for requiring firms to
adopt written plans of heightened supervision while a disciplinary
appeal is pending.
FSI and SIFMA stated that requiring firms to adopt written plans of
heightened supervision within ten days of any appeal or call for review
is an insufficiently short amount of time, and that firms should have
30 days. FINRA believes, however, that the ten-day period is
appropriate under the circumstances. The longer the time period without
a plan of heightened supervision in place, the greater the risk to
investors. Retaining the shorter, ten-day deadline will allow the
investor-protection benefits of the heightened supervision plans to be
in place sooner. FINRA also believes that the ten-day period is
sufficient because a firm should be aware of the potential need to
adopt a heightened supervision plan well in advance of when it would be
required to do so. In this regard, Form U4 requires that registered
persons report when they are the subject of a regulatory complaint that
could result in an affirmative answer to other Form U4 disclosure
questions that ask about self-regulatory organization findings and
disciplinary actions, and FINRA rules require that the Office of
Hearing Officers promptly provide a copy of a disciplinary decision to
each member with which a respondent is associated. Furthermore, the
ten-day deadline for adopting a heightened supervision plan would begin
only when the respondent appeals the decision to the NAC or when the
matter is called for review. FINRA Rules 9311 and 9312 provide 25 days
to file an appeal and 25 to 45 days to call a case for review.
PIABA suggested that a firm required to adopt a plan of heightened
supervision pursuant to proposed Rule 9285 also should be required to
document its enforcement of that plan. FINRA has previously indicated
that documenting the enforcement of a heightened supervision plan could
be a useful element of such a plan.\116\ Instead of singling out
additional provisions like these in the rule text, however, FINRA
believes that its published notices provide a thorough source of
guidance on heightened supervision plans, including what provisions
should
[[Page 20765]]
be included at a minimum, and what other provisions can be part of an
effective plan.\117\ As needed or appropriate, FINRA would be able to
update its published guidance to account for the heightened supervision
plans required by the proposed rule change.
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\116\ See Notice to Members 97-19 (April 1997) (advising that
firms could require supervisors of registered representatives
subject to special supervisory arrangements to provide a sign-off on
daily activity or to periodically attest in writing that they have
carried out the terms of the special supervision).
\117\ See Notice to Members 97-17 (April 1997); Regulatory
Notice 18-15 (April 2018).
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Luxor suggested that heightened supervision plans would not be
necessary where a Hearing Officer imposes conditions or restrictions.
FINRA believes that even when conditions and restrictions are imposed,
the respondent's member firm would still need to address, in a
heightened supervision plan, how it would implement and execute those
conditions and restrictions. Furthermore, heightened supervision plans
would be needed to address activities that are not subject to any
imposed conditions or restrictions.
Proposed Amendments to the FINRA Rule 9520 Series To Require Automatic
Interim Plans of Heightened Supervision of a Disqualified Person During
the Period When FINRA Is Reviewing an Eligibility Application
Several commenters specifically approved of the proposed amendments
to Rule 9522, which would require a member firm to adopt interim
heightened supervisory procedures for a disqualified person during the
pendency of the firm's SD Application to continue associating with that
disqualified person. NASAA commented that this regulatory gap should be
closed. PIABA commented that there is an obvious benefit to the
proposal.
Better Markets suggested that firms should be required to adopt a
plan of heightened supervision immediately when an associated person is
found to have committed acts that are grounds for becoming
disqualified, even pending the associated person's appeal of the
underlying disqualifying event. While FINRA agrees that there may be
benefits to requiring firms to place a disqualified associated person
on a heightened supervision plan immediately and before the filing of
an application to continue associating with that person, FINRA believes
the timing requirement of the proposed rule--to require such a plan
once a firm has made a determination to seek approval for continued
association with the disqualified associated person--strikes the
appropriate balance.
Network 1 wrote that requiring firms to expend resources on
developing heightened supervision plans for disqualified persons while
an SD Application is pending is a disincentive to hiring the person at
all. While FINRA recognizes that the requirement to develop and
implement an interim heightened supervision plan in these circumstances
may deter some firms from retaining or hiring a disqualified person,
FINRA believes that if a firm elects to sponsor a disqualified person
it needs to provide greater oversight of the activities of such person
during the pendency of the SD Application, thereby reducing the
potential risk of customer harm during this period. Moreover, if the SD
Application is approved by FINRA, the firm would in almost all cases be
required to prepare a plan of heightened supervision.
Aderant noted that although proposed Rule 9522(g) sets a ten-day
deadline to remedy a substantially incomplete application that seeks
the continued associated of a disqualified person, the version proposed
in Regulatory Notice 18-16 did not identify the specific event that
triggers the ten-day deadline. FINRA agrees that a modification is
appropriate and has revised proposed Rule 9522(g) to establish that the
event triggering the ten-day deadline is service of the notice of
delinquency.
Proposed Amendments to FINRA Rule 8312
The proposed amendments to FINRA Rule 8312 would remove the
requirement that the only means through which persons can request
information as to whether a particular member is subject to the
provisions of the Taping Rule is a telephonic inquiry via the
BrokerCheck toll-free telephone listing. The proposed amended rule
would permit FINRA to release this information through BrokerCheck
regardless of how it is requested.
NASAA agreed with this proposal, stating that it would advance
investor protection.
Other commenters opposed it. Luxor wrote that the proposal is
punitive, will disproportionately cause reputational damage to small
firms, and will create a perception that a taping firm and its
representatives are to be viewed negatively simply by association with
behavior that occurred at other firms and other persons. Network 1
commented that there is little likelihood the public will understand
the difference between a taping firm and a disciplined firm. FINRA
notes that Rule 8312 already provides, however, that FINRA will release
whether a particular member firm is subject to the Taping Rule in
response to telephonic inquiries via the BrokerCheck toll-free
telephone listing. The proposed amendments--which will only remove the
telephonic inquiry limitation--will simply make it easier for investors
to obtain this same information by expanding the means through which
investors can access it. Moreover, the comment that the proposed
amendments would have a disproportionate effect on small firms has no
basis; there is currently only one firm subject to the Taping Rule.
Several comments raised concerns regarding the content of the
proposed BrokerCheck disclosure relating to taping firms. Better
Markets and PIABA requested that the disclosure be explained in
BrokerCheck and include a specific narrative description of why the
disclosure is being made. NASAA suggested that the proposed BrokerCheck
disclosure appear only on the BrokerCheck reports of the few firms that
are subject to the Taping Rule. NASAA further commented that the
disclosure should identify the firm as subject to the Taping Rule and
explain in plain English what that means. Network 1 and Better Markets
raised concerns as to how the proposed amendments would impact the
information disclosed through BrokerCheck concerning individuals.
Network 1 requested that FINRA amend the proposal to ensure that the
information disclosed on BrokerCheck not communicate any ``guilt by
association'' for persons who are employees of taping firms and who
have ``clean records.'' Better Markets, on the other hand, suggested
that the BrokerCheck profiles of individual brokers should denote when
they are associated with taping firms.
FINRA appreciates the concerns expressed and agrees that the
BrokerCheck disclosure of a firm as being subject to the Taping Rule
should include a clear explanation of what that means, to help
investors understand why the taping firm is subject to heightened
procedures and incent them to research the background of a broker
associated with the taping firm.
Proposed Amendments to the FINRA Rule 1000 Series To Impose Additional
Obligations on Member Firms That Associate With Persons With a
Significant History of Past Misconduct
[rtarr8] General Comments
The proposed amendments to the FINRA Rule 1010 Series would require
a member firm to submit a letter to Member Regulation seeking a
materiality consultation when a natural person that has, in the prior
five years, one or more ``final criminal matters'' or two or more
``specified risk events''
[[Page 20766]]
seeks to become an owner, control person, principal or registered
person.
Several commenters expressed general support for the proposed
amendments to the Rule 1000 Series.\118\ Better Markets characterized
requiring materiality consultations before hiring as an important
regulatory innovation. NASAA described the proposal as a reasonable
means of getting Member Regulation more involved in members' decisions
to associate with individuals who have significant disciplinary
histories. PIABA wrote that the proposed amendments would promote
investor protection, adequately apply stronger standards for continuing
membership, and remind firms of the need to keep new representatives
with significant disciplinary histories under a well-defined, well-
enforced supervisory plan.
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\118\ Better Markets, Cambridge, NASAA, PIABA.
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Janney and SIFMA commented that the proposed rule requiring
materiality consultations is contrary to the spirit of FINRA's current
guidance about materiality consultations, which they assert focuses on
changes to a firm's business model and not the activity or
employability of individuals. FINRA disagrees with this assertion and
believes the proposed rule is consistent with FINRA rules governing the
membership application process, which considers, among other things,
firms' hiring decisions and individuals' past activities. For example,
the safe harbor in IM-1011-1 is premised on the notion that hiring a
certain number of associated persons involved in sales can be a
material change in business operations that requires the filing of a
CMA, and the safe harbor is not available to a member firm or a
principal of a firm that has a specified disciplinary history.
Likewise, FINRA rules require Member Regulation to consider, in new
membership applications and CMAs, a variety of criminal, civil,
regulatory, and arbitration events when assessing whether an applicant
and its associated persons are capable of complying with federal
securities laws, the rules and regulations thereunder, and FINRA
rules.\119\
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\119\ See Rule 1014(a)(3).
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Several commenters expressed concern about the possible negative
impact of the proposed rule on a firm's hiring practices and the
ability of individuals with such events to be hired. Luxor commented
that the proposed rule changes are unnecessary, because FINRA can
contact a firm when it has hired ``high-risk brokers.'' Luxor also
commented that if a person has a license to operate and has not been
barred or otherwise precluded from operating, no additional
consultation should be required when a firm wishes to hire that person.
Janney stated that the investing public and the markets would be better
protected by FINRA taking contemporaneous action, instead of disrupting
the hiring practices of an unrelated firm as many as five years after
the underlying disclosure events in proposed Rule 1017(a)(7) and IM-
1011-3 have occurred. Janney also expressed the view that it appears
that FINRA would like to review transitions specifically in the context
of an affiliation change, and the proposed rule would create the
ability to prevent transition of a registered representative without
taking enforcement action.
FINRA believes the proposed rule is necessary to ensure that FINRA
has a more meaningful regulatory touchpoint at the time an individual
with a significant history of misconduct seeks to become an owner,
control person, principal or registered person of a member firm. The
proposal would apply in the limited circumstance where such individual
meets the required thresholds for disclosure events. FINRA believes
requiring firms to ask FINRA for a materiality consultation, for
example, when it is planning to hire a particular individual that meets
the required thresholds, would allow FINRA the opportunity to
meaningfully assess the underlying disciplinary events and review the
firm's supervisory practices and internal controls. The ability of
FINRA to conduct this review contemporaneously furthers investor
protection. Moreover, nothing in the proposed rule precludes FINRA from
taking enforcement action when necessary or appropriate.
[rtarr8] Definitions and Criteria That Would Require a Materiality
Consultation
FINRA received numerous comments concerning the definitions in
proposed Rule 1011 of ``final criminal matter'' and ``specified risk
event'' and the criteria in proposed Rule 1017(a)(7) that would trigger
the need to request a materiality consultation. Some commenters
expressly supported the proposed definitions and criteria.\120\ FSI
wrote that the numeric parameters and proposed criteria are sound and
reasonable, and it supported how the ``specified risk events'' are
final and investment- or regulatory-related. NASAA wrote that the
proposed definition of ``final criminal matter'' appropriately captures
the scope of disclosable criminal events on the Uniform Registration
Forms. PIABA wrote that the criteria and definitions are appropriate
and clear enough to avoid confusion, and that the minor compliance
costs will be far outweighed by the increased investor protections.
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\120\ FSI, NASAA, PIABA.
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Other commenters suggested alternatives to the proposed definitions
and criteria. For example:
Some commenters proposed that the definition of ``final
criminal matter'' include only investment- or fraud-related criminal
matters \121\ or matters that would generate a risk of customer
harm.\122\
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\121\ Luxor, Wulff Hansen.
\122\ MML. This commenter also requested guidance concerning
whether ``final criminal matter'' would include situations where a
person receives a deferred sentence and can clear a conviction
through compliance with a court-ordered program. Per the proposed
definition, whether a ``final criminal matter'' would count for
purposes of proposed Rule 1017(a)(7) and IM-1011-3 would depend on
whether the matter ``is disclosed, or was required to be disclosed,
on the applicable Uniform Registration Forms.'' The setting aside of
a conviction does not necessarily mean that it need not be reported
on, or that the matter should be expunged from, the Uniform
Registration Forms. See, e.g., Form U4 and U5 Interpretive Questions
and Answers, https://www.finra.org/sites/default/files/Interpretive-Guidance-final-03.05.15.pdf (Questions 14A and 14B, Interpretive
Question and Answer 2, stating that ``[e]ach order setting aside a
conviction will be reviewed by RAD staff to determine if the
conviction must be reported'').
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Several commenters proposed that the definition of
``specified risk event'' use a dollar threshold that is either higher
\123\ or lower \124\ than $15,000.
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\123\ Cambridge, IBN, Janney, MML. Cambridge asserted that some
unfair high-risk characterizations resulting from a $15,000
threshold would involve control persons, principals and registered
persons who are required to disclose events due to a managerial role
but are ``likely not directly involved in'' the underlying
violations in those disclosed events. FINRA notes that the proposed
definition of ``specified risk event'' does not include final awards
or settlements where the person was not named but is only the
``subject of.''
\124\ Better Markets.
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Some commenters proposed that the final awards and
settlements that are counted as ``specified risk events'' be broadened
\125\ or narrowed.\126\
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\125\ NASAA.
\126\ Luxor, Network 1.
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Several commenters proposed changes to how ``specified
risk events'' would be counted.\127\
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\127\ Luxor, MML, Wulff Hansen.
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Some commenters suggested that lookback periods for events
that would trigger a materiality consultation be either shortened \128\
or increased.\129\
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\128\ Luxor.
\129\ NASAA.
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Luxor wrote that additional factors should be included in
the criteria for whether a materiality consultation is required,
including the length of time the individual has been in the industry,
[[Page 20767]]
the number of events during that period, and the circumstances of those
events.
Several commenters suggested narrowing the kinds of
business expansions that would require materiality consultations.\130\
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\130\ Janney, Luxor, MML, SIFMA, Wulff Hansen.
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After considering all the commenters' suggested alternative
definitions and criteria, FINRA has decided to retain the definitions
of ``final criminal matter'' and ``specified risk events'' and the
criteria that would trigger a materiality consultation that it proposed
in Regulatory Notice 18-16. Many of the comments concern issues that
FINRA already considered and addressed in the economic assessment in
Regulatory Notice 18-16, and the comments have not persuaded FINRA that
any changes to the definitions or criteria would be more efficient or
effective at addressing the potential for future customer harm
presented. As FINRA explained in Regulatory Notice 18-16, the primary
benefit of the proposed rule change would be to reduce the potential
risk of future customer harm by individuals who meet the proposed
criteria and seek to become an owner, control person, principal or
registered person of a member firm. The proposed rule change would
further promote investor protection by applying stronger standards for
changes to a current member firm's ownership, control or business
operations, including the potential that such changes would require the
filing and approval of a CMA. In developing this proposal, one of the
guiding principles was to provide transparency regarding the proposal's
application, so that firms could largely identify with available data
the specific set of disclosure events that would count towards the
proposed criteria and whether a proposed business change would trigger
the need for a materiality consultation. This is why FINRA's proposal
is based mostly on events disclosed on the Uniform Registration Forms,
which are generally available to firms and FINRA.
While FINRA generally agrees with the comments that the proposed
materiality consultation process should account for situations where
numerous ``specified risk events'' are related,\131\ it does not
believe that modifying the rule-based criteria is the best way to do
so. Rather, FINRA believes the materiality consultation process should
allow it to assess an individual's particular events. Moreover, based
on experience gained through the materiality consultations, FINRA may
be able to develop guidance for the Department concerning situations
involving the ``specified risk events'' that could affect whether a
proposed business expansion is or is not material.
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\131\ MML, Wulff Hansen.
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Wulff Hansen suggested that a materiality consultation should be
required when a person having two or more ``specified risk events'' is
already associated with a member and seeks to become an owner or
control person. FINRA notes that the proposed rule already would
require materiality consultations for internal moves. As explained
above, however, the proposed rule would not apply when a person who
meets the proposed criteria in proposed Rule 1017(a)(7) is already a
principal at a member firm and seeks to add an additional principal
registration at that same firm. In that instance, the proposed rule
amendments would not require a materiality consultation.
[rtarr8] Materiality Consultation Procedures
FSI and Janney requested that FINRA develop additional procedures
for the materiality consultation process. For example, these commenters
wrote that FINRA should establish time frames for FINRA staff to issue
a decision in a materiality consultation, with one commenter explaining
that time deadlines would allow firms to minimize litigation risks when
making hiring decisions. FSI asked that FINRA consider establishing
rule-based remedies for firms that disagree with FINRA staff's
materiality consultation decisions, and a rule-based requirement that
FINRA explain in writing a decision that requires a firm to file a
CMA.\132\ MML suggested that the proposed rule should outline the
issues that would be central to the Department's materiality
determination and clarify the proposed requirement that a member submit
a written letter to the Department in a ``manner prescribed by FINRA.''
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\132\ FSI also wrote that additional procedures would be
appropriate because the materiality consultations would be a rule-
based requirement, not voluntary.
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In general, FINRA believes that additional rule-based procedures
for the materiality consultation process would undermine its
informality, flexibility and expedited nature. By analogy, FINRA's
existing materiality consultation process has no written-decision
requirement and no appeal process. Nevertheless, FINRA believes it
would be helpful to provide guidance about the materiality consultation
process that would be required by the proposed rule, to supplement the
already published guidance about FINRA's existing materiality
consultation process.\133\ For that reason, FINRA has explained in
detail--both in Regulatory Notice 18-16 and above--the kinds of
information that the firm should provide when seeking a materiality
consultation required by proposed Rule 1017(a)(7) and what information
would be relevant to the Department's materiality decision. FINRA also
will provide more guidance as necessary as to what firms should provide
when seeking the materiality consultation required by the proposed rule
amendments.
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\133\ See The Materiality Consultation Process for CMAs, https://www.finra.org/rules-guidance/guidance/materiality-consultation-process. FINRA's existing guidance provides that a materiality
consultation submission should include, but is not limited to, the
following: (i) A description of the proposed change in business
sufficient for staff to understand the scope of the business and how
it will be conducted; (ii) why the firm believes that the proposed
new business or product is similar in scope or nature to their
existing business; (iii) the anticipated impact the change will have
to the firm's supervisory structure; (iv) any impact the proposed
change will have to the firm's capital or liquidity; (v) the nature
and scope of updates required to written supervisory procedures,
systems and firm operations; (vi) any recent disciplinary matters
that relate to the proposed activities as well as how the firm's
overall regulatory history may impact the ability of the firm to
effectively conduct the activity; and (vii) any relevant
documentation to support the proposal.
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Miscellaneous Comments
SIFMA requested that FINRA provide a notification to firms of
registered persons who have ``specified risk events,'' similar to how
FINRA provides information gathered in its public records searches for
information relating to bankruptcies, judgments and liens, asserting
that individuals may not identify and disclose ``specified risk
events'' to firms in a timely manner. FINRA appreciates this
suggestion, but notes that the events included in the definition are
derived from the Uniform Registration Forms and, therefore, firms
should generally be able to conduct appropriate due diligence to
identify such individuals. Indeed, FINRA Rule 3110(e) already requires
firms to establish and implement written procedures reasonably designed
to verify the accuracy and completeness of the information contain in
an applicant's initial or transfer Form U4, which would include
verifying the accuracy and completeness of answers and disclosures
concerning ``final criminal matters'' and the events covered by the
definition of ``specified risk events.''
Cambridge commented that persons should have the opportunity to
confidentially submit an application seeking a materiality consultation
to ``pre-qualify'' a transition from one firm
[[Page 20768]]
to another and gain confidence that they are free to make such a
transfer. FINRA does not believe, however, that prequalification of a
person with a significant history of misconduct would be appropriate,
or even possible, in the absence of additional information about, among
other things, the specific context in which the person would be
associated with a new firm and the activities and history of such
proposed new firm.
Better Markets opined that the proposed rule change would reflect
an improvement over the status quo but is still insufficient, and that
FINRA should do more to reduce the number of brokers with a significant
history of misconduct and the prevalence of recidivism. Specifically,
Better Markets wrote that FINRA should ban brokers with two criminal
convictions or three ``specified risk events'' at a $5,000 level
(instead of the proposed $15,000 level) and immediately and permanently
expel a firm where more than 20% of its brokers have three or more
``specified risk events.'' Better Markets also suggested that FINRA
engage in more investor education on the topic of recidivist brokers,
design a user-friendly disclosure system that clearly identifies
brokers with a demonstrable pattern of violations, and repeal the part
of FINRA Rule 9311 that stays a Hearing Panel or Hearing Officer
decision pending an appeal to the NAC.
FINRA's efforts to address the risks posed by brokers with a
significant history of misconduct are ongoing, and FINRA appreciates
comments on additional steps that FINRA might take. Some of Better
Markets' suggestions, however, amount to a request that FINRA create
new categories of ``statutory disqualification.'' Federal law defines
the types of misconduct that presumptively disqualify a broker from
associating with a firm, and amending what qualifies as a statutory
disqualification is beyond FINRA's jurisdiction. In addition, FINRA
does not agree that repealing the provision in Rule 9311(b) that stays
the effect of a Hearing Panel or Hearing Officer decision would be
appropriate at this time. FINRA's rule that stays the effect of a
Hearing Panel or Hearing Officer decision is consistent with rules of
other self-regulatory organizations and the SEC.\134\ Moreover, the
proposed rule change would protect investors during a disciplinary
appeal by empowering Hearing Officers to impose conditions and
restrictions that they consider reasonably necessary for the purpose of
preventing customer harm.
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\134\ See, e.g., 17 CFR 201.360(d) (providing that an SEC ALJ's
initial decision shall not become final as to a party or person who
timely files a petition for review); CBOE Rule 13.11(b) (providing
that sanctions shall not become effective until the Exchange review
process is completed or the decision otherwise becomes final);
NASDAQ PHLX Rule 9311(b) (providing that an appeal to the Exchange
Review Council from a disciplinary decision shall operate as a stay
until the Exchange Review Council issues a decision); NYSE CHX
Article 12, Rule 6 (providing that the enforcement of any orders or
penalties shall be stayed upon the filing of a notice of appeal
pending the outcome of final review by a Judiciary Committee or the
Board of Directors).
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Miscellaneous Comments Outside the Scope of the Proposal
Some comments raised concerns regarding broader issues, such as
arbitration proceedings and public disclosure of arbitration
settlements,\135\ the composition of Hearing Panels in FINRA's
disciplinary proceedings,\136\ questions about whether firms are
permitted to pay disqualified persons consistent with FINRA Rule
8311,\137\ various Constitutional protections that FINRA should adopt
in investigations and disciplinary proceedings,\138\ and how FINRA
might improve the Taping Rule to prevent non-compliance with that
rule.\139\ FINRA believes, however, that these comments are all outside
the scope of the proposal.
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\135\ IBN suggested that FINRA should have local arbitration
hearings, with panels composed of local representatives and local
firms, and that FINRA should eliminate mandatory arbitration or
require arbitrators to be lawyers and follow the rule of law.
Network 1 commented that FINRA should consider the ``prejudicial
effect'' on brokers of the six-year limitations period for filing an
arbitration claim and of nuisance-value arbitration actions brought
by non-attorney representatives; that references to arbitration
claims brought by a non-attorney representative that are settled or
that result in an award in favor of the broker should be removed
from the broker's public record; and that an arbitration claim
brought by a non-attorney representative that results in a
settlement should not be made available to the public at all.
\136\ Network 1 commented that FINRA adjudicatory panels should
include one attorney with a demonstrated history of representing
brokers or member firms, securities industry experience, and
knowledge of securities laws, regulations and rules and industry
practices in the investment banking and securities businesses. It
also commented that FINRA should establish a process for soliciting
``bona fide neutrals'' to sit on adjudicatory panels.
\137\ Network 1.
\138\ Network 1.
\139\ NASAA.
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III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Within 45 days of the date of publication of this notice in the
Federal Register or within such longer period (i) as the Commission may
designate up to 90 days of such date if it finds such longer period to
be appropriate and publishes its reasons for so finding or (ii) as to
which the self-regulatory organization consents, the Commission will:
(A) By order approve or disapprove such proposed rule change, or
(B) institute proceedings to determine whether the proposed rule
change should be disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views and
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act. Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
Use the Commission's internet comment form (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml); or
Send an email to [email protected]. Please include
File Number SR-FINRA-2020-011 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Secretary, Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-FINRA-2020-011. This
file number should be included on the subject line if email is used. To
help the Commission process and review your comments more efficiently,
please use only one method. The Commission will post all comments on
the Commission's internet website (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml).
Copies of the submission, all subsequent amendments, all written
statements with respect to the proposed rule change that are filed with
the Commission, and all written communications relating to the proposed
rule change between the Commission and any person, other than those
that may be withheld from the public in accordance with the provisions
of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be available for website viewing and printing in
the Commission's Public Reference Room, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC
20549, on official business days between the hours of 10 a.m. and 3
p.m. Copies of such filing also will be available for inspection and
copying at the principal office of FINRA. All comments received will be
posted without change. Persons submitting comments are cautioned that
we do not redact or edit personal identifying information from comment
submissions. You should submit only information that you wish to make
available publicly. All submissions should refer to File Number SR-
FINRA-
[[Page 20769]]
2020-011 and should be submitted on or before May 5, 2020.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\140\
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\140\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020-07777 Filed 4-13-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P