Finra fines Lincoln Financial broker-dealer $650,000 for failing to protect client data

Records of thousands of clients were exposed to foreign hackers, regulator claims.
JUN 23, 2016
One of Lincoln Financial Network's independent broker-dealers was fined $650,000 by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. for failing to reasonably safeguard confidential customer data and exposing thousands of clients' records to foreign hackers. Finra also found that the firm, Lincoln Financial Securities Corp., failed to reasonably retain reports of client account information and assets, known as consolidated reports in the industry. From at least 2011 to 2015, Lincoln Financial Securities failed to maintain and enforce a supervisory system reasonably designed to ensure the security of confidential customer information stored on electronic systems at the firm's branch offices, according to the Finra settlement released Monday. For example, “hackers with foreign internet protocol addresses were able to access a cloud server” at a branch of the firm, “exposing the confidential records and information of approximately 5,400 customers,” according to the settlement. And from the end of 2010 through the end of 2013, the firm failed to maintain and enforce a supervisory system reasonably designed to ensure the preservation, retention and review of consolidated reports produced by registered representatives and provided to clients, according to the settlement. As part of the settlement, the firm neither admitted nor denied the allegations, noted spokesman Michael Arcaro. “We are unaware of any misuse of customer information or harm to customers related to these issues,” he said. “Protecting our customers is of utmost importance to us, and we have enhanced, and are in the process of further enhancing, the firm's supervisory processes and procedures.” According to the most recent survey of independent broker-dealers by InvestmentNews, Lincoln Financial Network at the end of last year had 8,523 producing reps and total revenues of $854.6 million. Lincoln Financial Securities has more than 1,100 advisers. In the settlement, Finra noted that Lincoln Financial Securities in 2011 had similar problems with failing to establish adequate procedures to protect confidential customer information that was stored on its web-based electronic portfolio management system, along with other security-related violations. The firm at the time entered into a settlement that neither admitted nor denied Finra's findings and agreed to a $450,000 fine.

Latest News

What it really takes to serve ultra high net worth clients
What it really takes to serve ultra high net worth clients

Most firms think they are ready for the ultra high net worth market. Most are not.

Stifel settles another complaint involving former star Miami broker
Stifel settles another complaint involving former star Miami broker

Stifel has paid or is on the hook for close to a staggering $200 million in damages and settlements to former clients of Chuck Roberts.

Advisor moves: LPL firm Genesis Wealth adds $725M veteran from JPMorgan
Advisor moves: LPL firm Genesis Wealth adds $725M veteran from JPMorgan

UBS also expanded in the Southeast with six advisors overseeing more than $2 billion, while Osaic lured a $300 million family-led practice from Wells Fargo's FiNet.

Salesforce launches Agentic Advisor as AI notetakers threaten CRM dominance
Salesforce launches Agentic Advisor as AI notetakers threaten CRM dominance

The new AI workspace rollout promises to automate the full advisor workflow just as third-party tools wage a turf war for central control of wealth firms' tech stacks.

Advisor moves: LPL lands UBS veteran as &Partners grows by $1.6 billion
Advisor moves: LPL lands UBS veteran as &Partners grows by $1.6 billion

Mega-RIA picks up $250M advisor, while three firms head for &Partners.

SPONSORED Why direct indexing stopped being optional

Direct indexing is on pace to outgrow ETFs and mutual funds. Northern Trust's Ken Lassner explains why the advisors who get it wish they had started sooner.

SPONSORED Estate planning isn't a service add-on. It's your retention strategy.

As $84 trillion prepares to change hands, advisors who treat estate planning as peripheral are quietly building a sieve, not a book.