Robinhood fined $45M for multiple violations of securities law

Robinhood fined $45M for multiple violations of securities law
SEC says 10 separate provisions of the law were violated by two firms.
JAN 14, 2025

Robinhood has agreed to pay $45 million after the SEC found 10 separate securities law violations by two of its broker-dealers.

Robinhood Securities LLC and Robinhood Financial LLC were found to have contravened a range of rules over several years:

  • Suspicious Activity Reporting: From January 2020 through March 2022, Robinhood failed to timely investigate suspicious transactions, resulting in systematic failures to timely file suspicious activity reports.
  • Identity Theft Protection: From April 2019 to July 2022, Robinhood failed to implement adequate policies and procedures designed to protect their customers from the risk of identity theft.
  • Unauthorized Access to Robinhood Systems: From June 2021 through November 2021, Robinhood failed to adequately address known risks posed by a cybersecurity vulnerability related to remote access to their systems. In November 2021, a third party obtained unauthorized access and downloaded information related to millions of individuals who had provided that information to Robinhood.
  • Off-Channel Communications: Robinhood had longstanding failures to maintain and preserve electronic communications in violation of the recordkeeping provisions of the federal securities laws. Both firms admitted the findings in the order concerning their off-channel communications failures.
  • Retention of Brokerage Data: Robinhood failed to maintain copies of core operational databases in a manner that ensured legally required records were protected from deletion or modification for the required length of time.
  • Failure to Maintain Customer Communications: Robinhood failed to maintain some of their communications with their brokerage customers as legally required between 2020 and 2021.

There were additional violations that were detailed in the SEC Order which applied only to Robinhood Securities. These related to its blue sheet data filings and fractional share trading and stock lending.

“It is essential to the Commission’s broader efforts to protect investors and promote the integrity and fairness of our markets that broker-dealers satisfy their legal obligations when carrying out their various market functions,” said Sanjay Wadhwa, acting director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement. “Today’s order finds that two Robinhood firms failed to observe a broad array of significant regulatory requirements, including failing to accurately report trading activity, comply with short sale rules, submit timely suspicious activity reports, maintain books and records, and safeguard customer information.”

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