Compliance
Compliance Corner: SEC, Interactive Brokers

The latest compliance news: regulatory developments, punishments, guidance, permissions and new product and service offerings.
Interactive Brokers, SEC
The Securities
and Exchange Commission, the US regulator, yesterday said
that Interactive Brokers will pay an $11.5 million penalty to
settle charges for repeatedly failing to file Suspicious Activity
Reports for US microcap securities trades that it executed on
behalf of its customers.
In parallel actions, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority
and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission unveiled settlements
with the firm related to anti-money laundering failures in which
the registered broker-dealer agreed to pay penalties of $15
million and $11.5 million, respectively, for a total of $38
million in penalties paid to the three agencies.
Broker-dealers must file SARs for transactions suspected of
involving fraud or showing a lack of an apparent lawful business
purpose. According to the SEC’s order, over a one-year period,
Interactive Brokers failed to file more than 150 SARs to flag
potential manipulation of microcap securities in its customers’
accounts, some of the trading accounting for a significant
portion of the daily volume in certain of the microcap
issuers.
Interactive Brokers did not recognize “red flags” concerning
these transactions, failed to properly investigate suspicious
activity as required by its written supervisory procedures, and
failed to file SARs in a timely fashion even when suspicious
transactions were flagged by compliance personnel.
“SAR filings are an essential tool in assisting regulators and
law enforcement [agencies] to detect potential violations of the
securities laws, particularly in the microcap space,” Marc P
Berger, director of the SEC’s New York regional office, said.
“Today’s multi-agency settlement reflects the seriousness we
place on broker-dealers complying with their SAR reporting
obligations and maintaining appropriate anti-money laundering
controls.”