Tag: Regulation (Page 1 of 2)

SEC Enforcement Chief Gurbir Grewal Is Now Resigning This Month

SEC Enforcement Chief Gurbir Grewal is now resigning this month after his role primarily in the ‘crackdown’ of cryptocurrencies.

Gurbir Grewal, the top enforcement official at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), is stepping down after playing a key role in cracking down on the cryptocurrency sector and monitoring Wall Street’s use of off-channel communications, per a Bloomberg report.

Since joining the SEC in 2021, Grewal has overseen the agency’s 1,300 enforcement attorneys, leading to numerous cases against various firms and financial professionals.

He was a frequent speaker at industry events, consistently emphasizing the importance of protecting investors.

“Every day, he has focused on how to best safeguard investors and ensure compliance with our established securities laws,” stated SEC Chair Gary Gensler.

“He has led a division that has acted impartially, following the facts and the law wherever they lead.”

Grewal is leaving to pursue a position in private practice, as confirmed by an unnamed source familiar with the situation.

The SEC has had notable confrontations with the finance industry, including hedge funds, brokerages, cryptocurrency firms, as well as retail investor criticism.

Most of the efforts that Grewal helped initiate while at the SEC included legal actions against crypto exchanges for allegedly trading unregistered securities.

The SEC has taken a strong stance on finance firms using unofficial communication methods like WhatsApp.

The agency has expressed concerns about bankers conducting transactions via personal devices, which complicates regulatory oversight.

Grewal, a former federal prosecutor, has overseen investigations resulting in billions of dollars in fines related to these WhatsApp probes.

In one high-profile case, he labeled a Colorado audit firm that evaluated Donald Trump’s social media company as a “sham audit mill,” leading to $14 million in penalties against the firm and its founder.

The audit firm, BF Borgers CPA PC, did not admit to or deny the SEC’s findings.

Following Grewal’s remarks, Trump Media & Technology Group Corp. appointed a new auditor shortly thereafter.

During his time at the SEC, Grewal authorized over 2,400 enforcement actions, resulting in more than $20 billion in disgorgement, prejudgment interest, and civil penalties.

The agency also awarded over $1 billion to whistleblowers during his time.

In 2023, the SEC imposed nearly $5 billion in fines and reimbursements to investors, while its enforcement actions in fiscal 2022 led to a record $6.4 billion in penalties, per Bloomberg.

Grewal, who previously served as the attorney general of New Jersey, will officially leave the SEC on October 11.

Sanjay Wadhwa, the division’s deputy director, will take over as acting director.

Wadhwa has been with the SEC’s enforcement unit since 2003 and was ‘instrumental’ in securing a record $92.8 million penalty against a billionaire hedge fund manager for insider trading in 2011.

David Oliwenstein, a partner at Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman and former SEC enforcement attorney, noted, “For any market participants thinking Grewal’s departure indicates a softening of enforcement, that would be incorrect.

Sanjay’s approach to enforcement is just as aggressive.”

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Also Read: TD Bank Now Gets Caught With Illegal Market Manipulation

Other Regulation News Today

Market News Today - SEC Enforcement Chief Gurbir Grewal Is Now Resigning This Month.
Market News Today – SEC Enforcement Chief Gurbir Grewal Is Now Resigning This Month.

TD Bank now gets caught with illegal market manipulation and has agreed to pay over $20 million under a deal with the SEC.

Investors are calling it ‘pay to play’.

The U.S. broker-dealer unit of Toronto Dominion Bank (TD Securities USA) has agreed to pay more than $20 million to resolve allegations of manipulating the U.S. Treasuries market.

This settlement comes as part of an agreement with U.S. authorities, concluding a lengthy investigation, per Reuters.

In a court filing on Monday, TD Securities admitted to engaging in spoofing practices within the U.S. Treasuries market as part of a deal with the U.S. Justice Department.

The firm also settled related civil charges with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

Additionally, the bank faced charges for not properly supervising its former head of the U.S. Treasuries trading desk.

From April 2018 to May 2019, a former employee manipulated the U.S. Treasury cash securities market by placing orders he had no intention of executing, a tactic known as “spoofing.”

This practice aims to create a misleading impression of market demand.

U.S. regulators have taken a strong stance against spoofing, which is designed to distort market activity.

However, the criminal bank has now been let go off what investors deem as ‘easily’.

Under the terms of TD’s agreement, the Justice Department will refrain from prosecuting the firm as long as it adheres to the three-year agreement and implements significant compliance improvements.

The DOJ decided not to appoint a third-party monitor for compliance, based on the company’s efforts to address the issues.

As part of the settlement, TD Securities will pay a $12.5 million criminal penalty related to civil investigations by the SEC and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA).

This amount is in addition to an approximately $9.5 million criminal penalty outlined in the agreement.

The bank will also compensate victims with $4.7 million and forfeit $1.4 million.

This settlement comes at a time when the Canadian bank is reportedly on the verge of pleading guilty to separate charges concerning its U.S. retail bank’s alleged failure to prevent money laundering linked to Chinese crime groups and illegal fentanyl sales, as reported by the Wall Street Journal last week.

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Also Read: TD Bank Customers Now Say They Cannot Access Their

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Market News Today - SEC Enforcement Chief Gurbir Grewal Is Now Resigning This Month.
Market News Today – SEC Enforcement Chief Gurbir Grewal Is Now Resigning This Month.

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A CEO Now Apologizes For Illegal Bond Market Manipulation

A CEO now apologizes for illegal bond market manipulation that took place in the Japanese futures market in 2021.

Kentaro Okuda, the CEO of Nomura Holdings Inc., publicly apologized during his first appearance following allegations that an employee manipulated the bond futures market.

Last week, Japan’s financial regulator suggested a fine for Nomura’s domestic securities unit for allegedly manipulating the prices of Japanese government bond futures in 2021.

As a result, Toyota Finance Corp. and several other companies have since decided to exclude Japan’s largest brokerage from their debt underwriting deals, according to Bloomberg.

“I would like to apologize for the trouble caused,” Okuda stated at a Nikkei financial forum in Tokyo on Wednesday.

This apology comes as Nomura seeks to take advantage of a resurgence in the Japanese bond market, spurred by changes in the country’s monetary policy.

The Securities and Exchange Surveillance Commission has recommended that the Financial Services Agency impose a fine of ¥21.8 million (approximately $152,000) on Nomura after discovering that a dealer profited from placing large orders for Japanese government bond (JGB) futures without the intention of actually buying or selling all of them.

The FSA typically enforces such penalties a few weeks later.

In a statement released last week, Nomura indicated that it has been working to improve its JGB futures trading operations since the incident and has committed to enhancing internal controls to prevent future occurrences.

In recent years, other securities firms, including those affiliated with Citigroup Inc. and Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc., have faced penalties for manipulating JGB futures prices.

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Also Read: TD Bank Now Gets Caught With Illegal Market Manipulation

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Market News Today - A CEO Now Apologizes For Illegal Bond Market Manipulation.
Market News Today – A CEO Now Apologizes For Illegal Bond Market Manipulation.

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Barclays Is Now Fined For Illegal Swap-Reporting Manipulation

Barclays is now fined for illegal swap-reporting manipulation, violating its power as a registered dealer with the CFTC.

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has announced the filing and settlement of charges against Barclays Bank PLC for breaching the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA) and CFTC regulations related to swap reporting.

As a registered swap dealer with the CFTC, Barclays is required to strictly adhere to these regulations.

Barclays will now pay a civil monetary penalty of $4 million, must cease any violations of the CEA and CFTC regulations, and comply with specific conditions outlined in the order.

Barclays has admitted to the facts presented and acknowledged that its actions violated the CEA and CFTC regulations, per Bloomberg.

Ian McGinley, Director of Enforcement, stated, “In the past year, the CFTC has imposed over $60 million in penalties on six registered swap dealers, including Barclays, due to swap data reporting violations.

This resolution, which includes admissions, underscores our commitment to making sure that the costs of non-compliance exceed the costs of adhering to the law.”

The order indicates that from 2018 to 2023, Barclays failed to report millions of swap transactions accurately or in a timely manner, violating CEA and CFTC regulations.

The reporting issues included:

  • Misreporting due to duplicate swap identifiers.
  • Incorrect reporting of primary economic terms.
  • Misreported time stamps.
  • Errors in continuation data reporting.
  • Late reporting.

Overall, Barclays did not accurately or promptly report over five million swap transactions during the specified period.

In accepting Barclays’ settlement offer (bribe), the CFTC acknowledged the bank’s “significant cooperation” during the investigation.

This cooperation included proactively identifying swap reporting issues and voluntarily providing detailed information about the violations, per Bloomberg.

The CFTC also recognized Barclays’ efforts to remediate the situation, which involved engaging third-party vendors to review and validate its swap reporting processes.

As a result of this cooperation and remediation, the CFTC reduced the civil monetary penalty.

The enforcement action was conducted by CFTC staff members Jason T. Wright, A. Daniel Ullman II, and Paul G. Hayeck, along with former staff member Lauren Bennett.

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Also Read: TD Bank Now Gets Caught With Illegal Market Manipulation

Other Regulation News Today

Market News Today - Barclays Is Now Fined For Illegal Swap-Reporting Manipulation.
Market News Today – Barclays Is Now Fined For Illegal Swap-Reporting Manipulation.

The SEC is now seeking to ban an oversight board for ‘massive fraud’, after obtaining a $250 million final judgement against the firm.

The Securities and Exchange Commission has charged Olayinka Oyebola and his accounting firm, Olayinka Oyebola & Co. (Chartered Accountants), with complicity in a significant securities fraud scheme orchestrated by businessman Mmobuosi Odogwu Banye, also known as Dozy Mmobuosi, along with three U.S. companies he controlled, referred to as the Tingo entities.

Recently, the SEC secured a final judgment of $250 million against Mmobuosi and the Tingo entities, per a press release.

The SEC’s complaint alleges that Oyebola and his firm knowingly neglected to act after discovering that Mmobuosi and the Tingo entities had fabricated several audit reports featuring Oyebola’s signature, which were submitted in SEC filings as if they were legitimately issued by his firm.

Oyebola is accused of making significant misstatements to the auditor of one of the Tingo entities and of helping Mmobuosi hide the fact that the audit reports were fraudulent.

This deception led auditors, investors, and regulators to rely on these false reports to their detriment.

The SEC claims that Oyebola’s actions facilitated Mmobuosi and the Tingo entities in executing a multi-year scheme to artificially inflate their financial metrics and defraud investors globally.

Antonia M. Apps, Director of the SEC’s New York Regional Office, stated, “As alleged, Oyebola and his firm violated the public trust and failed to fulfill their responsibilities as public accountants by assisting Mmobuosi and the Tingo entities in executing and concealing their fraud.

We will hold accountable those who undermine the integrity of public markets.”

The SEC’s complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, charges Oyebola and his firm with aiding and abetting violations of federal securities laws related to fraud committed by Mmobuosi and the Tingo entities.

Oyebola is also charged with helping Mmobuosi mislead auditors.

The SEC is seeking civil penalties and permanent injunctive relief, including a ban on Oyebola and his firm from serving as auditors for U.S. public companies or providing significant assistance in preparing SEC financial statements.

The investigation is being conducted by SEC staff members Michael DiBattista, Christopher Mele, Jeremy Brandt, Gerald Gross, and Rebecca Reilly, under the supervision of Tejal D. Shah.

The litigation is led by David Zetlin-Jones and DiBattista, supervised by Alexander Vasilescu, all from the New York Regional Office.

The SEC also acknowledges the assistance of the Israel Securities Authority.

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Also Read: TD Bank Customers Now Say They Cannot Access Their Money

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Market News Today - Barclays Is Now Fined For Illegal Swap-Reporting Manipulation.
Market News Today – Barclays Is Now Fined For Illegal Swap-Reporting Manipulation.

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SEC Now To Ban An Oversight Board For ‘Massive Fraud’

The SEC is now seeking to ban an oversight board for ‘massive fraud’, after obtaining a $250 million final judgement against the firm.

The Securities and Exchange Commission has charged Olayinka Oyebola and his accounting firm, Olayinka Oyebola & Co. (Chartered Accountants), with complicity in a significant securities fraud scheme orchestrated by businessman Mmobuosi Odogwu Banye, also known as Dozy Mmobuosi, along with three U.S. companies he controlled, referred to as the Tingo entities.

Recently, the SEC secured a final judgment of $250 million against Mmobuosi and the Tingo entities, per a press release.

The SEC’s complaint alleges that Oyebola and his firm knowingly neglected to act after discovering that Mmobuosi and the Tingo entities had fabricated several audit reports featuring Oyebola’s signature, which were submitted in SEC filings as if they were legitimately issued by his firm.

Oyebola is accused of making significant misstatements to the auditor of one of the Tingo entities and of helping Mmobuosi hide the fact that the audit reports were fraudulent.

This deception led auditors, investors, and regulators to rely on these false reports to their detriment.

The SEC claims that Oyebola’s actions facilitated Mmobuosi and the Tingo entities in executing a multi-year scheme to artificially inflate their financial metrics and defraud investors globally.

Antonia M. Apps, Director of the SEC’s New York Regional Office, stated, “As alleged, Oyebola and his firm violated the public trust and failed to fulfill their responsibilities as public accountants by assisting Mmobuosi and the Tingo entities in executing and concealing their fraud.

We will hold accountable those who undermine the integrity of public markets.”

The SEC’s complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, charges Oyebola and his firm with aiding and abetting violations of federal securities laws related to fraud committed by Mmobuosi and the Tingo entities.

Oyebola is also charged with helping Mmobuosi mislead auditors.

The SEC is seeking civil penalties and permanent injunctive relief, including a ban on Oyebola and his firm from serving as auditors for U.S. public companies or providing significant assistance in preparing SEC financial statements.

The investigation is being conducted by SEC staff members Michael DiBattista, Christopher Mele, Jeremy Brandt, Gerald Gross, and Rebecca Reilly, under the supervision of Tejal D. Shah.

The litigation is led by David Zetlin-Jones and DiBattista, supervised by Alexander Vasilescu, all from the New York Regional Office.

The SEC also acknowledges the assistance of the Israel Securities Authority.

For more Regulation News and updates like this, join the newsletter or opt-in for push notifications.

Also Read: TD Bank Now Gets Caught With Illegal Market Manipulation

Other Regulation News Today

Market News Today - SEC Now To Ban An Oversight Board For 'Massive Fraud'.
Market News Today – SEC Now To Ban An Oversight Board For ‘Massive Fraud’.

TD Bank now gets caught with illegal market manipulation and has agreed to pay over $20 million under a deal with the SEC.

Investors are calling it ‘pay to play’.

The U.S. broker-dealer unit of Toronto Dominion Bank (TD Securities USA) has agreed to pay more than $20 million to resolve allegations of manipulating the U.S. Treasuries market.

This settlement comes as part of an agreement with U.S. authorities, concluding a lengthy investigation, per Reuters.

In a court filing on Monday, TD Securities admitted to engaging in spoofing practices within the U.S. Treasuries market as part of a deal with the U.S. Justice Department.

The firm also settled related civil charges with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

Additionally, the bank faced charges for not properly supervising its former head of the U.S. Treasuries trading desk.

From April 2018 to May 2019, a former employee manipulated the U.S. Treasury cash securities market by placing orders he had no intention of executing, a tactic known as “spoofing.”

This practice aims to create a misleading impression of market demand.

U.S. regulators have taken a strong stance against spoofing, which is designed to distort market activity.

However, the criminal bank has now been let go off what investors deem as ‘easily’.

Under the terms of TD’s agreement, the Justice Department will refrain from prosecuting the firm as long as it adheres to the three-year agreement and implements significant compliance improvements.

The DOJ decided not to appoint a third-party monitor for compliance, based on the company’s efforts to address the issues.

As part of the settlement, TD Securities will pay a $12.5 million criminal penalty related to civil investigations by the SEC and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA).

This amount is in addition to an approximately $9.5 million criminal penalty outlined in the agreement.

The bank will also compensate victims with $4.7 million and forfeit $1.4 million.

This settlement comes at a time when the Canadian bank is reportedly on the verge of pleading guilty to separate charges concerning its U.S. retail bank’s alleged failure to prevent money laundering linked to Chinese crime groups and illegal fentanyl sales, as reported by the Wall Street Journal last week.

For more US Bank News and updates like this, join the newsletter or opt-in for push notifications.

Also Read: TD Bank Customers Now Say They Cannot Access Their Money

Market News Published Daily 📰

Market News Today - SEC Now To Ban An Oversight Board For 'Massive Fraud'.
Market News Today – SEC Now To Ban An Oversight Board For ‘Massive Fraud’.

Don’t forget to opt-in for push notifications so you don’t miss a single article!

Be sure to share this article with your community.

Also, thank you to all of our site sponsors.

This year we’ve been able to increase push notifications slots making it more convenient than ever for new readers to receive their daily market news and updates.

Our readers can now donate $3 per month to support independent journalism.

For daily news and updates on your favorite stories, opt-in for push notifications.

Follow Frank Nez on X (Twitter)Instagram, or Facebook.



TD Bank Now Gets Caught With Illegal Market Manipulation

TD Bank now gets caught with illegal market manipulation and has agreed to pay over $20 million under a deal with the SEC.

Investors are calling it ‘pay to play’.

The U.S. broker-dealer unit of Toronto Dominion Bank (TD Securities USA) has agreed to pay more than $20 million to resolve allegations of manipulating the U.S. Treasuries market.

This settlement comes as part of an agreement with U.S. authorities, concluding a lengthy investigation, per Reuters.

In a court filing on Monday, TD Securities admitted to engaging in spoofing practices within the U.S. Treasuries market as part of a deal with the U.S. Justice Department.

The firm also settled related civil charges with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

Additionally, the bank faced charges for not properly supervising its former head of the U.S. Treasuries trading desk.

From April 2018 to May 2019, a former employee manipulated the U.S. Treasury cash securities market by placing orders he had no intention of executing, a tactic known as “spoofing.”

This practice aims to create a misleading impression of market demand.

U.S. regulators have taken a strong stance against spoofing, which is designed to distort market activity.

However, the criminal bank has now been let go off what investors deem as ‘easily’.

Under the terms of TD’s agreement, the Justice Department will refrain from prosecuting the firm as long as it adheres to the three-year agreement and implements significant compliance improvements.

The DOJ decided not to appoint a third-party monitor for compliance, based on the company’s efforts to address the issues.

As part of the settlement, TD Securities will pay a $12.5 million criminal penalty related to civil investigations by the SEC and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA).

This amount is in addition to an approximately $9.5 million criminal penalty outlined in the agreement.

The bank will also compensate victims with $4.7 million and forfeit $1.4 million.

This settlement comes at a time when the Canadian bank is reportedly on the verge of pleading guilty to separate charges concerning its U.S. retail bank’s alleged failure to prevent money laundering linked to Chinese crime groups and illegal fentanyl sales, as reported by the Wall Street Journal last week.

For more US Bank News and updates like this, join the newsletter or opt-in for push notifications.

Also Read: TD Bank Customers Now Say They Cannot Access Their Money

Other Regulation News Today

Market News Today - TD Bank Now Gets Caught With Illegal Market Manipulation.
Market News Today – TD Bank Now Gets Caught With Illegal Market Manipulation.

Illegal short sellers will now face life sentence in prison after the National Assembly approved the amendment.

The National Assembly has approved an amendment to the Capital Markets Act aimed at enhancing penalties for illegal short selling, per Business Korea.

Under this new law, individuals who profit illegally from short selling exceeding 5 billion won (around $3.79 million) could face severe penalties, including prison sentences of up to life imprisonment.

On September 27, financial authorities confirmed that the amendment, designed to overhaul the short selling system, passed the National Assembly on September 26.

The legislation mandates that institutional investors must establish an electronic short selling system, and both institutional and corporate investors are now required to implement internal control standards.

Approximately 101 companies, representing 92% of domestic short selling transactions, must adopt these electronic systems.

These firms will also be obligated to report stock balances and over-the-counter (OTC) transactions to the exchange, increasing their compliance responsibilities under the newly instituted central monitoring system.

Securities firms will need to annually verify the internal controls and electronic systems of institutional and corporate investors, following a checklist, and report the findings to the Financial Supervisory Service (FSS).

Non-compliance could result in fines of up to 100 million won.

To standardize short selling conditions for individual and institutional investors, the repayment period for loan transactions related to short selling will also be constrained.

Violations of this rule will incur fines of up to 100 million won, with loan terms extendable in 90-day increments for a maximum of 12 months.

Additionally, the amendment seeks to deter repeated illegal short selling by increasing administrative penalties.

Fines for unfair trading and illegal short selling will rise from three to five times the illicit profit to four to six times.

Offenders earning over 5 billion won from illegal short selling may now face the same enhanced prison terms as those engaging in unfair trading.

Administrative sanctions will be broadened, allowing regulators to restrict trading of financial investment products for up to five years and limit the appointment or reappointment of executives at listed companies.

This aims to tackle the high recidivism rate among financial criminals by effectively barring them from the market for a specified duration.

To combat the concealment of illegal profits, accounts suspected of being involved in unfair trading or illegal short selling can be frozen for up to six months, with a possible extension of an additional six months.

The amended law will take effect on March 31 of next year, providing time for the implementation of the electronic short selling system, which is expected to be operational by then.

However, restrictions on trading financial products and executive appointments will begin six months after the law is enacted, following public consultations.

Upcoming revisions to the enforcement decree will lower the short selling disclosure threshold from 0.5% to 0.01% of outstanding shares and reduce the collateral ratio for individual short sellers to match that of institutional investors, with completion expected by next month.

A representative from the Financial Services Commission (FSC) noted that limiting the loan repayment period for short selling transactions to 12 months, along with finalizing amendments to the Financial Investment Business Regulations, will lower the collateral ratio for individual short sellers from 120% to 105%, leveling the playing field.

The FSC official added, “With the electronic short selling system set to launch in March, the improvements to the short selling framework will be fully realized.

Our goal is to restore investor confidence and enhance the competitiveness of the South Korean stock market.”

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Also Read: Glitch Now Traps Hedge Funds In A Massive Short Squeeze

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Market News Today - TD Bank Now Gets Caught With Illegal Market Manipulation.
Market News Today – TD Bank Now Gets Caught With Illegal Market Manipulation.

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Also, thank you to all of our site sponsors.

This year we’ve been able to increase push notifications slots making it more convenient than ever for new readers to receive their daily market news and updates.

Our readers can now donate $3 per month to support independent journalism.

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