FINRA regulates brokerage firms doing business with the public in the United States. FINRA writes rules; examines for and enforces compliance with FINRA rules and federal securities laws; registers broker-dealer personnel and offers them education and training; and informs the investing public. FINRA provides surveillance and other regulatory services for equities and options markets, as well as trade reporting and other industry utilities. FINRA also administers a dispute resolution forum for investors and brokerage firms and their registered employees.
Some of the key topics identified in the Priorities Letter as areas of focus in 2018 are fraud, high-risk firms and brokers, operational and financial risks—including technology governance and cybersecurity—and market regulation. Other areas of priority in 2018 include:
- Sales practice risks, including recommendations of complex products to unsophisticated, vulnerable investors
- Protection of customer assets and the accuracy of firms’ financial data
- Market integrity, including best execution, manipulation across markets and products, and fixed income data integrity
FINRA flags the following significant new rules that are currently scheduled to become applicable in 2018.
- Financial Exploitation of Specified Adults – FINRA Rule 2165 will become effective February 5, 2018. The rule permits members to place temporary holds on disbursements of funds or securities from the accounts of specified customers where there is a reasonable belief of financial exploitation of these customers.
- Amendments to FINRA Rule 4512 (Customer Account Information) – An amendment to FINRA Rule 4512 requires members to make reasonable efforts to obtain the name of and contact information for a trusted contact person for a non-institutional customer’s account. The amendment will become effective February 5, 2018.
- Amendments to FINRA Rule 2232 (Customer Confirmations) – The amended FINRA Rule 2232 requires a member to disclose the amount of mark-up or mark-down it applies to trades with retail customers in corporate or agency debt securities if the member also executes offsetting principal trades in the same security on the same trading day. The amended rule also requires members to disclose two additional items on all retail customer confirmations for corporate and agency debt security trades: (1) a reference, and a hyperlink if the confirmation is electronic, to a web page hosted by FINRA that contains publicly available trading data for the specific security that was traded, and (2) the execution time of the transaction, expressed to the second. These amendments are scheduled to become effective on May 14, 2018.
- Margin Requirements for Covered Agency Transactions (Amendments to FINRA Rule 4210) – FINRA’s new margin requirements for Covered Agency Transactions are slated to become effective June 25, 2018. Covered Agency Transactions include (1) To Be Announced (TBA) transactions, inclusive of adjustable rate mortgage (ARM) transactions; (2) Specified Pool Transactions; and (3) transactions in Collateralized Mortgage Obligations (CMOs), issued in conformity with a program of an agency or Government-Sponsored Enterprise (GSE), with forward settlement dates. Members are reminded that the risk limit determination requirements under the amendments to Rule 4210 became effective on December 15, 2016.
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