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This is a photo of the National Register of Historic Places listing with reference number 7000063

Saturday, October 12, 2013

SEC LAUNCHES NEW MARKET STRUCTURE WEBSITE

FROM:  SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 

The Securities and Exchange Commission today unveiled a dynamic new website to provide investors and others with the ability to interactively explore a range of new market metrics and access empirical research and analyses that further inform the broader public debate on market structure.

The new website located at www.sec.gov/marketstructure will serve as a central location for the SEC to publicly share evolving data, research, and analysis as the agency continues its review of the equity of market structure.  The data and related observations address the nature and quality of displayed liquidity across the full range of U.S.-listed equities – from the lifetime of quotes and the speed of the market to the nature of order cancellations.

“We are launching what we believe to be a game changer that focuses the market structure debate as never before on data and analysis rather than anecdote,” said SEC Chair Mary Jo White, who unveiled the website at an SEC news conference.  She was joined by officials from the agency’s Division of Trading and Markets and its Division of Economic and Risk Analysis.

“We’ve made great strides here at the SEC transforming how we take in market data, store it, and share it throughout the agency,” Chair White said.  “By also making this information publicly accessible, two great things should happen.  It should increase efficiency so people don’t have to struggle to find this information.  And it should spur innovation by unlocking the power of data and research to unlock a wealth of ideas from investors, market participants, and academics.”

Earlier this year, the SEC launched its internal Market Information Data Analytics System (MIDAS), which for the first time provided the SEC with data about every displayed order posted on national exchanges.  Every day, MIDAS collects one billion records time-stamped to the microsecond.  The information comes from the consolidated tapes and proprietary feeds of each exchange and includes posted orders and quotes, modifications and cancellations, and trade executions both on- and off-exchange.

Typically, only sophisticated market participants have had access to all of this data, and even fewer have had the ability to process it.  Through MIDAS, experts at the SEC have been extensively studying this data, and their research already has produced important results to help inform the agency’s thinking on market structure.

The next step in this market structure initiative is to disseminate the aggregated data and related observations drawn from MIDAS to the public.  The SEC’s new website allows users to explore key market metrics and trends based on aggregate analyses of tens of billions of MIDAS records over the last year. With the click of a mouse, results are available in clear, easy-to-read charts and graphs.

Among the MIDAS-collected data that is generally unavailable on the public consolidated tape that the SEC’s new website will be making available broadly:

Ratios related to the number and volume of orders that are canceled instead of traded.

Percentage of on-exchange trades and volume that are not disseminated on the public tape (odd-lot trades).

Percentage of on-exchange trades and volume that are the result of hidden orders.
Quarterly distributions analyzing the lifetime of quotes ranging from one millionth of a second to one day.

The new website contains an interactive charting tool that allows users to compare and contrast data series according to the type of security, market capitalization, volatility, price, and turnover.  Users also can explore detailed quote-life distributions, and download data series and quote-life distributions to perform their own analyses.  Methodology documents that detail all calculations are provided.

The new website also features staff research papers based on a variety of data sources, and staff reviews that identify and assemble information from the expanding economic literature on market structure topics.  One paper using order audit trail data on off-exchange trading provides key metrics describing the underlying nature of off-exchange trading by the 44 alternative trading systems that trade equity securities. The primary observation of SEC staff is that ATS trading looks very similar in many respects to exchange trading.  Another paper summarizes current studies that address market fragmentation – both visible and dark.

The new website is just the beginning of this initiative with more studies and analyses to come.  SEC staff is looking forward to receiving feedback about the website and its implications.

Joining Chair White to announce the launch of the SEC’s market structure data and analysis website were Division of Trading and Markets Acting Director John Ramsay, Division of Economic and Risk Analysis Director Craig Lewis, and Office of Analytics and Research Associate Director Gregg Berman.

JUDGEMENT OBTAINED IN CASE INVOLVING DUMPING OF LOSING TRADES UPON CLIENTS

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
SEC Obtains Judgments By Consent Against Charles J. Dushek, Charles S. Dushek, and Capital Management Associates, Inc.

The Securities and Exchange Commission announced today that on October 9, 2013, the Honorable Gary Feinerman of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois entered judgments against defendants Charles J. Dushek, Charles S. Dushek, and Capital Management Associates, Inc.  The judgments, to which the defendants consented without admitting or denying the allegations in the Complaint, permanently enjoin the defendants from future violations of certain antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws and order each defendant to pay disgorgement, prejudgment interest, and civil penalties in an amount to be determined by the court.

In its Complaint, the Commission alleges that the Dusheks used their Lisle, Illinois-based investment advisory firm, Capital Management Associates, Inc. (CMA), to defraud CMA clients by conducting a “cherry picking” scheme that garnered the Dusheks nearly $2 million in illicit profits.  The Complaint alleges that the Dusheks placed millions of dollars in securities trades without designating in advance whether they were trading personal funds or client funds.  They delayed allocating the trades so they could cherry pick winning trades for their personal accounts and dump losing trades on the accounts of unwitting clients at CMA.  Meanwhile, CMA misrepresented the firm’s proprietary trading activities to clients.

The judgments permanently enjoin each of the defendants from violating Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5 thereunder, and Sections 206(1) and (2) of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940.  The judgments also order each of the defendants to pay disgorgement, prejudgment interest thereon, and civil penalties, but leave the determination of the amount of such monetary relief to the court upon the Commission’s motion.


Friday, October 11, 2013

SEC CHAIR MARY JO WHITE'S REMARKS AT THE SECURITIES ENFORCEMENT FORUM

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
Remarks at the Securities Enforcement Forum
 Chair Mary Jo White
Washington D.C.
Oct. 9, 2013

It is a pleasure to be here.  The website posting for this event says I am talking about “the most important issues” that you as inside and outside counsel will face.

So what exactly are those issues?

Let me spare you any suspense – we want you to start thinking that every issue you face in the SEC’s space is a very important one.

There is a good reason for my saying that.  One of our goals is to see that the SEC’s enforcement program is – and is perceived to be – everywhere, pursuing all types of violations of our federal securities laws, big and small.

Striving to be Everywhere

I mentioned this goal in a speech I gave two weeks ago in Chicago.  There were questions raised afterwards about what I really meant.  Today I will flesh out the theme.

In the first instance, we of course recognize that our resources are not infinite.  Indeed, they are not nearly sufficient to the enormity and scope of the responsibility we have.  But we are making better and better use of our resources, new data tools and other “force multipliers.”

In today’s fast moving, complex and changing markets, it is important that we strive to be everywhere to enforce our securities laws and to protect investors.

It is important because investors in our markets want to know that there is a strong cop on the beat – not just someone sitting in the station house waiting for a call, but patrolling the streets and checking on things.

They want to know that would-be fraudsters are spending more time looking over their shoulders, and less time stepping over the line.

Investors do not want someone who ignores minor violations, and waits for the big one that brings media attention.

Instead, they want someone who understands that even the smallest infractions have victims, and that the smallest infractions are very often just the first step toward bigger ones down the road.

They deserve an SEC that looks at its enforcement mission in exactly that way.

This approach is not unlike the one taken in the nineties by then New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani and Police Commissioner Bill Bratton, back when I was the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York.

They essentially declared that no infraction was too small to be uncovered and punished.  And, so the NYPD pursued infractions of law at every level – from street corner squeegee men to graffiti artists to subway turnstile jumpers to the biggest crimes in the city. [1]    The strategy was simple.  They wanted to avoid an environment of disorder that would encourage more serious crimes to flourish.  They wanted to send a message of law and order.

The underpinning for this strategy was outlined in an article, which many of you will have read or heard of, titled, “Broken Windows.” [2]    The theory is that when a window is broken and someone fixes it – it is a sign that disorder will not be tolerated.  But, when a broken window is not fixed, it “is a signal that no one cares, and so breaking more windows costs nothing.” [3]

The same theory can be applied to our securities markets – minor violations that are overlooked or ignored can feed bigger ones, and, perhaps more importantly, can foster a culture where laws are increasingly treated as toothless guidelines.  And so, I believe it is important to pursue even the smallest infractions.  Retail investors, in particular, need to be protected from unscrupulous advisers and brokers, whatever their size and the size of the violation that victimizes the investor.

That is why George Canellos and Andrew Ceresney, our co-directors of the Division of Enforcement, are working to build upon the strength of the division by ensuring that we pursue all types of wrongdoing.  Not just the biggest frauds, but also violations such as control failures, negligence-based offenses, and even violations of prophylactic rules with no intent requirement, such as the series of Rule 105 cases that we recently brought.  I’ll say more about these cases in a minute.

But this does not mean we will not continue our vigorous pursuit of the bigger violations.  Cases like the ones we brought recently against the likes of SAC Capital, Harbinger, J.P. Morgan, Oppenheimer, and the City of Miami not to mention the scores of significant financial crisis cases have always been, and will continue to be, important cases for us.

I believe the SEC should strive to be that kind of cop – to be the agency that covers the entire neighborhood and pursues every level of violation.

An agency that also makes you feel like we are everywhere.  And we will do our best not to disappoint.

We recognize that we cannot literally be on every corner, looking over the shoulder of every trader, or watching each CFO as they certify their financial results.

But we can allocate our resources in such a way so that market participants understand we are at least looking and pursuing charges in all directions.

So how are we doing that?

First, we are expanding our field of vision and reach – by leveraging the strength of our exam program, incentivizing individuals to step forward, collaborating with our regulatory colleagues, and harnessing the power of our enhanced technological capabilities.

Second, we are focusing on deficient gatekeepers – pursuing those who should be serving as the neighborhood watch, but who fail to do their jobs.

Third, we are looking for the “broken windows” in our markets – and not overlooking the small violations to avoid breeding an environment of indifference to our rules.

And finally we are continuing to prioritize the bigger cases – pursuing and punishing major offenses by significant and high-profile market participants, sending a strong message of deterrence to the industry and boosting the confidence of investors.

We can do this because we have an extraordinary team at the SEC – a team, as many of you know, that has had great successes over the past several years – both with respect to cases related and unrelated to the financial crisis.[4]

Because of the many policy changes and structural enhancements in recent years, I began my tenure as Chair with an enforcement team that I believe to be the finest in all of government.  We have an extremely strong platform on which to build.

Expanding our Reach

Striving to “be everywhere” is finding a way to have a presence that exceeds our physical footprint and to be felt and feared in more areas than market participants would normally expect that our resources would allow.  And here is some of what we have been doing.

Leveraging Our Exam Program

We are taking advantage of the boots we have on the ground at registered entities – broker-dealers, investment advisers and exchanges – to enhance our presence in the marketplace.  Those boots are part of our National Exam Program, which, executing on its core function, allows us to work with registrants to improve compliance, understand and monitor the latest risks posed by and facing these entities, and provide effective oversight.

But at the same time, our exam program gives us a real-time look into developing industry practices that may sometimes constitute violations that warrant further investigation and enforcement action.

More than ever before, the exam and enforcement teams are able to move quickly and effectively in response to suspected violations.  Right now, for example, we have initiatives in the asset management and broker-dealer space where this coordination is happening.

Whistleblower

Another tool that we are using with growing frequency and success is our whistleblower authority, which enables us to award those who come forward with evidence of wrongdoing.

As you know, the SEC’s whistleblower program allows us to give monetary rewards for valuable information about securities law violations.  And, it has rapidly become a tremendously effective force-multiplier, generating high quality tips and, in some cases, virtual blueprints laying out an entire enterprise, directing us to the heart of an alleged fraud.

Just last week, one whistleblower was paid more than $14 million – the largest amount to date – for providing our investigators with this kind of very specific, timely and credible tip that we expect the whistleblower program to incentivize.  The tip led directly to the opening of an investigation, and allowed us to bring, in just a few short months, a case that resulted in the return of tens of millions of dollars to investors. [5]

That is the benefit of significant whistleblower incentives.

They persuade people to step forward.

They put fraudulent conduct on our radar that we may not have found ourselves, or as quickly.

And they deter wrongdoing by making would-be violators ask themselves – who else is watching me?

The program also incentivizes companies to report misconduct before a whistleblower comes to us first.

When our whistleblower program was being set up, many in the securities bar – perhaps some here today – worried that the program would undermine internal compliance efforts.  It seems, however, that the program may be having the opposite effect.

Today, we hear that companies are beefing up their internal compliance function and making it clear to their own employees that internal reporting will be treated seriously and fairly.  And most in-house whistleblowers that come to us went the internal route first.

We believe this program is already a success.  And, as more awards are made, we expect more people to come forward, which will dramatically broaden our presence.

Collaboration

Of course, we are not alone in our enforcement effort.  We collaborate continuously and effectively with our partners at the Department of Justice, FINRA, and the state securities regulators.  We have, for example, worked side-by-side with the criminal authorities on the high profile insider trading cases of the last couple years; our Rule 105 initiative involved close coordination with FINRA whose market surveillance efforts often spot troublesome trades; and we work with our state partners in many areas, including the regulation of unregistered offerings.

Technology

Whistleblower incentives, examiners and collaborating with our various law enforcement partners are not the only force multipliers in our toolbox.  We also are leveraging technology to make it easier for us to spot fraud early on.

Insider trading is a case in point.

Over the last four years, we have filed an unprecedented number of insider trading actions – some 200 actions – against more than 450 individuals and firms charging illicit trading gains of nearly $1 billion.  In these types of cases, one of the most challenging issues is establishing the relationship between tippee and tipper.

So to deal with that, we have developed what we call the Advanced Bluesheet Analysis Program (ABAP).

This program analyzes data provided to us by market participants on specific securities transactions.  It identifies suspicious trading before market-moving events.  It also shows the relationships among the different players that are involved in the trading – relationships that might not have been apparent at first.

We plan to step up our use of this program, but we have already seen significant results on the insider trading front.

The technology we are using is assisting us in many areas.  We are using data analytics and related technology to enable us to conduct predictive analysis and spot trends, streamline our investigative efforts and leverage new data sources such as Form PF, which collects information from private funds – hedge funds, private equity funds – on, among other things, the type and size of assets they hold.

Pursuing Gatekeepers

In addition to finding ways to be more places, we also are focusing more on those who play the role of gatekeepers in our financial system.

Cases against delinquent gatekeepers remind them, and the industry, of the important responsibilities that gatekeepers share with us to protect investors.

Investment Company Boards

Recently, for instance, we brought actions related to the investor protection role played by the boards that oversee investment funds.  One such action involved trustees whose responsibilities include approving investment advisory contracts on behalf of a mutual fund’s shareholders.  The Commission’s case, which was settled, charged that the review of the contract by the trustees of the funds was inadequate.  The core of the claim was that the reports to shareholders from the trustees contained misleading information or omitted material information about how the trustees evaluated certain factors in reaching their decision to approve the contracts on behalf of the funds.[6]  

Investment company boards serve as critical gatekeepers and we will focus on ensuring that they appropriately perform their duties.

It has been suggested that our focus on gatekeepers may drive away those who would otherwise serve in these roles, for fear of being second-guessed or blamed for every issue that arises.  I hear and I am sensitive to that concern.  But this is my response: first, being a director or in any similar role where you owe a fiduciary duty is not for the uninitiated or the faint of heart.  And, second, we will not be looking to charge a gatekeeper that did her job by asking the hard questions, demanding answers, looking for red flags and raising her hand.

Operation Broken Gate

We are also continuing our focus on auditors.  Auditors serve as critical gatekeepers – experts charged with making sure that the processes that companies use to prepare and report financial information are ones that are built on strength and integrity.  Investors rely on auditors and need them to do their job and do it very well.

As part of this focus, we recently launched Operation Broken Gate – an initiative to identify auditors who neglect their duties and the required auditing standards.  This initiative probes the quality of audits and determines whether the auditors missed or ignored red flags; whether they have proper documentation; and, whether they followed their professional standards.[7]

Just last week, this initiative produced its first set of charges against three auditors. Two of them have already been suspended from the industry.  You should expect more of these cases.[8]

Fixing Broken Windows

As I have said, we are casting our nets wider, and using nets with smaller spaces, paying attention to violations and violators regardless of size.

We are able to do this by streamlining our investigations, particularly those involving strict liability violations where we do not need to prove intent, like the Rule 105 cases.

The idea is to bring these cases quickly and establish a consistent approach to disgorgement and penalties, which allows us to incentivize parties to settle quickly.

Rule 105 of Regulation M

We used this new streamlined approach most recently when we brought actions against nearly two dozen firms for violating Rule 105 of Regulation M.

For those of you who do not know what it is, Rule 105 is a provision of the Exchange Act.  It is an important rule that bans firms from improperly participating in public offerings soon after short selling those same stocks.

The rule is intended to protect a stock offering from potential manipulation by short sellers who artificially depress market prices and, in the process, guarantee themselves a profit while reducing the company’s offering proceeds and diluting shareholder value.

We obtained disgorgement from nearly two dozen firms ranging from $4,000 to more than $2.5 million – showing that no amount is too small to escape our attention, and that going after smaller infractions will not distract us from larger ones.[9]  Even the cases with modest disgorgement amounts still translated into some sizeable sanctions, as we obtained a minimum penalty of $65,000 for the smallest violations.

In the process, we sent a message that we will not tolerate any violations – big or small – that threaten the integrity of the capital raising process.  And we think that the message is being heard.

Microcap

We also continue to make clear to the microcap community that, there too, we are watching and acting.

Abuses in this area frequently involve entities that use false or misleading marketing campaigns and manipulative trading strategies, largely at the expense of less sophisticated investors. Over time, these abuses have proliferated due to the increased use of the Internet and, in particular, social media to publicize fraudulent schemes and lure in unsuspecting investors.

To stay on top of this, the division recently created a Microcap Fraud Task Force to ensure that the appropriate expertise and attention be brought to bear on these types of frauds.[10]

This task force targets broker-dealers, transfer agents, attorneys, accountants and other market participants who unfortunately often have key roles in facilitating these schemes.  The Task Force’s aim is to develop real-time enforcement so that we can stop schemes in their early stages, with tools like trading suspensions and asset freezes.  These cases also often involve cooperation with criminal authorities.

Prioritizing the Bigger Cases

All of this talk about being everywhere should not be taken to suggest that the SEC’s investigative flashlight will shine only or mostly into the dark corners and hidden nooks of the financial system.

Quite the opposite. It is critical that we continue to focus on the larger, tougher, and more complicated cases.

There are many examples that I could cite, and you may have read about some of the Enforcement Division’s recent successes, but I will today just add a few words about our newly created Financial Reporting and Audit Task Force.[11]

This task force brings together an expert group of attorneys and accountants who are developing state-of-the art techniques for identifying and uncovering accounting fraud.  This group relies on the latest data analytic tools to identify high-risk companies, as well as on “street sweeps,” where appropriate.  These cases often involve large, resource intensive investigations that I know keep many in this audience busy.

In all our cases, we will strive for settlements that have a deterrent effect, and where appropriate, the added measure of public accountability that an admission often brings.[12]

In addition, we will continue to aggressively seek monetary penalties whether against corporations or individuals.  Strong penalties play an important role in a strong enforcement program.

With respect to corporate penalties, it is important to note that the decision to seek a corporate penalty, and how high it is, is something that is left to my judgment and that of each of my fellow Commissioners after a consideration of all the facts.  And we will all have our own perspectives on this issue.  In the end, each of us will, within our legal authority, exercise our individual discretion in making this assessment.

One final note, I appreciate that some in the defense bar may not want the SEC to be a tough cop, and believe that the SEC, as a regulator, should play more of a remedial role.

I disagree with the first half of this observation.  The SEC is, in very important part, a law enforcement agency, and should be seen by investors to be “their cop.”  And, the SEC must continue to be the tough cop because in many cases, particularly when there is no criminal violation, it is the only agency that can play that role.

Although some of those who defend parties against SEC actions may have forgotten it was Congress in 1990 that gave the SEC broad authority to assess penalties and to punish the wrongdoer.  Taking actions as simply a regulatory body is not enough to achieve its goals.  The SEC must employ its tools to achieve the maximum amount of deterrence.

Let me not finish these remarks, however, without making clear that a critical part of a strong enforcement program is also to act only when the evidence justifies acting and to always go about our investigations and cases fairly, and with the mindset of doing the right thing in the right way.

Conclusion

So to conclude, I recognize the SEC cannot literally be everywhere, but we will be in more places than ever before.  Our aim is also to create an environment where you think we are everywhere – using collaborative efforts, whistleblowers and computer technology to expand our reach, focusing on gatekeepers to make them think twice about shirking responsibilities, and ensuring that even the small violations face consequences.

Investors feel more confident about participating in our markets if they know we are doing more than waiting for something to happen, if they know we are trying to be one step ahead of the fraudsters, rather than one step behind, and if they know we are out there protecting them and the integrity of our markets.  They deserve no less.

Thank you.



Thursday, October 10, 2013

SEC CHARGES FLORIDA RESIDENT FOR ROLE IN FRAUD SCHEME TARGETING COLOMBIAN-AMERICAN COMMUNITY

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
SEC Charges South Florida Resident in Ponzi Scheme Targeting Colombian-American Community

The Securities and Exchange Commission today charged a South Florida resident with conducting a Ponzi scheme and affinity fraud that targeted the Colombian-American community, among others. The SEC alleges that Jenny E. Coplan raised approximately $4 million from more than 90 investors, many of whom were Colombian-Americans and Colombians, primarily living in Florida but also in California, Georgia, Texas, Canada, and Colombia. The SEC alleges that Coplan actively solicited investors through personal discussions with individuals both over the phone and in person. According to the SEC's complaint filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida, Coplan falsely told investors that her company Immigration General Services, LLC operated through an investment broker that would invest funds in immigration bail bonds. Further, Coplan promised investors interest payments ranging from 60 to 108 percent annually and falsely told prospective investors this was a safe investment and their money was FDIC insured. According to the complaint, Coplan never placed investors' funds with an investment broker to make a profit. Instead, the SEC alleges that Coplan, to conceal her unlawful conduct, paid purported profits to earlier investors using funds from newer investors in classic Ponzi scheme fashion and misappropriated approximately $878,000 of investors' funds for her own personal use.

In a parallel action, the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Florida today announced criminal charges against Coplan.

According to the SEC's complaint, Coplan conducted the scheme from at least January 2009 to October 2011. Coplan, who resides in Tamarac, Florida, and her company Immigration Services have never been registered with the SEC to offer securities.

The SEC further alleges that Coplan created fictitious investor statements that were sent to investors to hide Coplan's misuse of investor money and lead investors to believe their investments were growing. The SEC's complaint charges Coplan with violating Sections 5(a), 5(c) and 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933, and Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5 thereunder. The SEC's complaint also charges Coplan with violations of Section 15(a) of the Exchange Act. The SEC's complaint seeks disgorgement of ill-gotten gains, financial penalties, and injunctive relief against Coplan to enjoin her from future violations of the federal securities laws.

The SEC's investigation was conducted in the Miami Regional Office by Senior Counsel Jorge L. Riera and Accountant Karaz S. Zaki under the supervision of Assistant Regional Director Elisha L. Frank. Amie Riggle Berlin will lead the SEC's litigation. The SEC acknowledges the assistance and cooperation of the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Florida, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

COMPANY WILL PAY $275,000 TO SETTLE CHARGES OF VIOLATING MINIMUM FINANCIAL REQUIREMENT RULES

FROM:  U.S. COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION 
FXDirectDealer, LLC Ordered to Pay $275,000 Penalty to Settle CFTC Charges of Violating Minimum Financial Requirement Rules

Washington, DC - The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) today issued an Order filing and simultaneously settling charges that, between November 2010 and December 2012, FXDirectDealer, LLC (FXDD), a CFTC-registered Retail Foreign Exchange Dealer (RFED) and Futures Commission Merchant (FCM) headquartered in New York, New York, failed to comply with minimum financial requirements for RFEDs and FCMs. FXDD has been registered with the CFTC as an FCM since December 10, 2009 and as an RFED since September 2, 2010.

Effective October 18, 2010, the CFTC adopted comprehensive rules to protect members of the public who buy foreign currency (forex) contracts from, or sell forex contracts to, forex firms. Under these rules, RFEDs and FCMs that offer or engage in retail forex transactions must at all times maintain adjusted net capital of $20 million, or more in certain circumstances.

According to the CFTC Order, FXDD did not maintain its required adjusted net capital during at least 18 separate months between November 2010 and December 2012, with month-end adjusted net capital computations showing that FXDD was undercapitalized by more than $7.5 million at one point. Because FXDD reported its adjusted net capital on a consolidated basis with its subsidiary, FXDD apparently did not realize that, on the required stand-alone basis, it failed to satisfy its adjusted net capital requirements throughout most of this period, the Order finds.

The Order imposes a $275,000 civil monetary penalty and a cease and desist order against FXDD for its violations. The Order notes that in settling this matter, the CFTC took into account FXDD’s cooperation and the corrective action it undertook after its deficiencies were discovered.

The CFTC thanks the National Futures Association for its assistance.

CFTC Division of Enforcement staff members responsible for this case are Rachel Hayes, Thomas Simek, Charles Marvine, Rick Glaser, and Richard Wagner. Kevin Piccoli, Ronald Carletta, Robert Loeber, and Nicholas Chiacchere of the CFTC’s Division of Swap Dealer and Intermediary Oversight also assisted in this matter.

Monday, October 7, 2013

FIRMS AND OWNER AGREE TO PAY OVER $1 MILLION TO SETTLE SEC CHARGES

FROM:  U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 

The Securities and Exchange Commission today sanctioned an Omaha, Neb.-based investment advisory firm and its owner for failing to seek the most beneficial terms reasonably available when investing in mutual fund shares for three funds that they managed.

An SEC investigation found that Manarin Investment Counsel Ltd. and Roland R. Manarin violated their obligation to seek what is known as “best execution” by consistently selecting higher cost mutual fund shares for the three fund clients even though cheaper shares in the same mutual funds were available.  As a result, the clients paid avoidable fees on their mutual fund holdings, which were passed through to a brokerage firm owned by Manarin in a practice inconsistent with the disclosures they made to investors.  The brokerage firm also is charged with violations.

Manarin and his firms agreed to pay more than $1 million to settle the charges.

“Investment advisers must fulfill their fiduciary duty of best execution when selecting mutual fund shares for their clients,” said Marshall S. Sprung, co-chief of the SEC Enforcement Division’s Asset Management Unit.  “Manarin and his firm breached that duty by choosing more expensive shares that would pay higher fees to an affiliate when their clients were eligible to own lower-cost shares in the very same mutual funds.”

According to the SEC’s order instituting settled administrative proceedings, Manarin Investment Counsel provides investment advice to a mutual fund called Lifetime Achievement Fund (LAF) as well as two private funds known as Pyramid I Limited Partnership and Pyramid II Limited Partnership.  As “funds-of-funds” they invest their assets principally in the shares of various mutual funds.

The SEC’s order finds that from 2000 to 2010, Manarin and his investment advisory firm caused these fund clients to invest in “Class A” mutual fund shares when they were eligible to own lower-cost “institutional” shares in the same mutual funds.  Because they owned “Class A” shares, the clients paid ongoing 12b-1 fees on their mutual fund holdings for distribution and shareholder services.  Such fees often could have been avoided had Manarin and his firm purchased institutional shares on the clients’ behalf.  Instead, the unnecessary fees were passed through to Manarin’s broker-dealer Manarin Securities Corp.  Although Manarin’s brokerage firm eventually refunded 12b-1 fees paid by LAF, it did not refund fees to the Pyramid funds.  From June 2000 to October 2010, Manarin Securities Corp. received approximately $685,000 in 12b-1 fees from mutual funds in which the Pyramid funds could have purchased institutional shares.

The SEC’s order finds that by failing to seek best execution when selecting among available mutual fund share classes, Manarin and his investment advisory firm violated their fiduciary duty as investment advisers under Section 206(2) of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940.  Because their ongoing practice was inconsistent with disclosures in LAF’s registration statement and the offering memoranda for the two Pyramid funds, the order finds that Manarin and his investment advisory firm violated Section 206(4) of the Advisers Act and Rule 206(4)-8.  The SEC’s order also finds that Manarin violated Section 34(b) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, and that he and both firms violated Section 17(a)(2) of the Securities Act of 1933.  The SEC’s order further finds that Manarin’s brokerage firm charged commissions to LAF that exceeded the usual and customary amounts charged by broker-dealers for transactions in shares of exchange-traded funds – in violation of Section 17(e)(2)(A) of the Investment Company Act.

Manarin and his brokerage firm agreed to pay disgorgement of $685,006.90 and prejudgment interest of $267,741.72.  Manarin agreed to pay a $100,000 penalty.  Without admitting or denying the SEC’s findings, Manarin and his firms also consented to censures and cease-and-desist orders.

The SEC’s investigation was conducted by Coates Lear and Kurt Gottschall of the Asset Management Unit in the Denver Regional Office.  Examinations of the firms were conducted by Susan Day, Philip Perrone, and Nicholas Madsen of the Denver office’s investment adviser/investment company and broker-dealer examination programs.