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The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is slated to make a decision on whether it will update a roughly 30-year old set of proxy and investor shareholder rules at a meeting next Wednesday.
August 19 -
The regulator sanctioned the banking company for unethical CMO sales practices.
August 19 -
Two day traders have been arrested by Norwegian police for allegedly cracking an algorithm of US brokerage firm Timber Hill. The traders were purpoted be trying to manipulate the stock prices of three companies listed on the Oslo Stock Exchange.
August 19 -
Bank of America Merrill Lynch is set to pay $2.5 million in restitution and fines after failing to provide discounts to customers on a certain type of redeemable security, the brokerage industry's primary regulator said on Wednesday.
August 19 -
The Securities and Exchange Commission today for the first time charged a stateNew Jerseywith violating securities fraud laws by failing to disclose to bond investors that it was underfunding its two largest pension plans.
August 19 -
Bank of America Merrill Lynch is set to pay $2.5 million in restitution and fines after failing to provide discounts to customers on a certain type of redeemable security, the brokerage industry's primary regulator said on Wednesday.
August 18 -
The Securities and Exchange Commission is asking the Town of West Warwick, R.I. to fork over documents relating to its pension boards previous actions.
August 18 -
Although there were sharp disagreements at a Treasury Department conference Tuesday about what kind of role the government should take in the future of housing finance, one idea in particular seems to be gaining momentum: creating an insurance fund to back mortgage-backed securities. future-of-housing-finance
August 18 -
After leading the regulator's division of investment management for four years, Andrew J. Donohue announced he will leave in
August 17 -
The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority has fined three firms $242,500 for municipal rules violations. They include $150,000 against Raymond James Financial Services for supervisory failures related to so-called 529 college savings plans it sold to clients.
August 17 -
The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority is being told by some compliance and financial reporting experts that its proposed requirement for broker-dealers to cough up more detailed and frequent financial reports could be too cumbersome and costly to follow.
August 16 -
Independent member firms of FINRA have landed seats on the regulators board.
August 16 -
Martin Kanefsky, the former owner and chief executive officer of a Great Neck, N.Y.-based firm that helped municipal issuers secure guaranteed investment contracts for their bond proceeds, pleaded guilty to participating in two separate fraud conspiracies as well as wire fraud, the Justice Department announced Thursday night.
August 13 -
WASHINGTON — Martin Kanefsky, the former owner and chief executive officer of a Great Neck, N.Y.-based firm that helped municipal issuers secure guaranteed investment contracts for their bond proceeds, pleaded guilty to participating in two separate fraud conspiracies and wire fraud, the Justice Department announced Thursday night.
August 13 -
The Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association has asked the Securities and Exchange Commission to allow the use of "flash orders" in options markets.
August 13 -
The Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association has asked the Securities and Exchange Commission to allow the use of "flash orders" in options markets.
August 13 -
The FDIC will soon post bi-weekly records of closed-door meetings it holds with bankers and other stakeholders regarding regulatory reform, the agency said Thursday.
August 13 -
Nearly 1,200 banks have been hit with an enforcement action made public by federal regulators since the start of 2008, and that number is expected to climb at an accelerated rate.
August 13 -
WASHINGTON — Though the Dodd-Frank regulatory reform law designed separate rules for large and small institutions, covering everything from capital to stress tests to consumer protection, a consensus is growing that the higher standards for bigger institutions will eventually apply to everyone else.
August 13 -
Merrill Lynch agreed Wednesday to pay $728,260 in civil penalties for allowing unregistered client associates to sell securities in states where they were not permitted to do business, said New Jersey’s Attorney General Paula Dow. Client associates serve as sales assistant to one or more financial advisors.
August 12





