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Articles Posted in Regulatory Audits & Investigations

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A Raft of Risks: Assessing FINRA’s New Alert on Exchange Traded Notes

Headline news charting the dramatic peaks and valleys of select Credit Suisse and Barclays properties prompted the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. (FINRA) to issue a July warning to investors detailing the potential risks inherent to exchange-traded notes (or ETNs). The investor alert, entitled “Exchange Traded Notes – Avoid Unpleasant…

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Peregrine Captured Mid-Flight: PFGBest Brings New Focus to Futures Industry Regulation

After years of concerns raised but never fully investigated by futures industry regulation, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and National Futures Association (NFA) took enforcement action July 9th against brokerage firm Peregrine Financial Group, also known as PFGBest. Peregrine founder Russell Wasendorf subsequently confessed to committing acts of embezzlement…

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Drawing Outside the Lines: Contrasts in Evolving Definitions of “Insider Trading”

Professor of economics Peter J. Henning wrote July 30th for the New York Times of the ever-changing definition of what classifies as “insider trading” in today’s market. Henning’s approach is at once streamlined and nuanced, walking us through a user-friendly tutorial of how and why fiduciary duties are upheld. Because…

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‘Federal Ex’ Pressed: What Tim Geithner’s Testimony Illustrates About Regulation Reform

Recent front page woes of JPMorgan Chase and MFGlobal – as well as Barclays manipulation of Libor interest rates – have spurred debate as to whether our regulatory bodies are failing to meet watchdog standards of prosecuting financial crimes on Wall Street, and to what degree offending banks and brokers…

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Moving Units: What JPMorgan Can Teach Us About Banks Selling Their Own Mutual Funds

Last week’s July 3rd edition of the New York Times reports that past and present brokers from mutual fund giant JPMorgan Chase were encouraged to favor JPMorgan products in their financial advisement to customers, even when competitor products were better performing or better suited to a consumer’s budget. Moreover, JPMorgan…

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Regulation Emancipation: How Fining Barclays Created New Support for Increased CFTC Capability

The New York Times‘s Dealbook section last week reports that the Commodity Futures Trading Commission has fined financial services giant Barclays $200 million, effective June 27th, as a result of the company’s attempts to manipulate a key interest rate – the London Interbank Offered Rate, or “Libor”. To learn more…

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Unfriended: Grasping the Class Action Lawsuit of NY Investors Against Facebook and Its Underwriters

Three New York investors have filed a class action complaint – dated May 23rd – against Facebook and chief executive Mark Zuckerberg, in addition to lead underwriter Morgan Stanley and an array of secondary underwriters (including JPMorgan Chase, Barclays Capital, Goldman Sachs, and Merrill Lynch) claiming that negative information about…

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Hedging Their Bets: Understanding Corporate Loopholes in the Dodd-Frank Act

Since the financial crisis of 2008 collapse of Lehman Brothers and beyond, the need for regulators to create new means of quelling excessive risk has been met with questions remain as to how effective these rules have been. Many of the new post-crisis rules have not yet gone into effect,…

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FINRA Fines Brookstone Securities $1 Million Dollars and Permanently Bars Two Individuals for Fraudulent Sales of CMOs

The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (“FINRA”), issued a news release on June 4, 2012 announcing that a FINRA hearing panel fined Brookstone Securities $1 million for the fraudulent sales of Collateralized Mortgage Obligations to elderly investors. In addition, FINRA ordered restitution from the firm and the individuals involved and permanently…

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