State regulators say a Finra expungement proposal is a step in the right direction but falls short of what’s needed to curb abuses of the process, which allows brokers to clear customer disputes from their record.
Last month, Finra filed a proposal with the Securities and Exchange Commission that would implement reforms, such as establishing a special roster of arbitrators to hear expungement requests, requiring a unanimous vote by arbitrators to approve expungement and allowing state regulators to participate in expungement hearings.
The proposal was a revised version of one the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. withdrew in July 2021 after SEC staff indicated the agency had concerns about it. Finra’s modifications have drawn support from some expungement critics.
But the North American Securities Administrators Association is not yet on board.
“We still don’t think that that proposal has gone far enough,” Maryland Securities Commissioner Melanie Senter Lubin, the outgoing NASAA president, said Sunday at the organization’s annual conference in Nashville, Tennessee.
The problem is that expungement has become too easy for brokers to obtain, Lubin said. It should be “hardwired into the process and the rule” that expungement is “an extraordinary remedy.”
Involving state regulators in expungement hearings is a good move, but it’s not fully detailed in the proposal, she said.
“That is a step,” Lubin said. “We’re not quite sure how that’s going to play out.”
Lubin’s misgivings about the proposal are outlined in NASAA’s Sept. 6 comment letter to the SEC, whose comment period on the Finra proposal concluded earlier this month. The SEC must approve Finra rule proposals.
The main problem is the Finra approach tightens up expungement rules but doesn’t fundamentally overhaul the system, Lubin said.
“It really still doesn’t solve the problem,” she said. “We’re looking forward to continuing to work with Finra to come up with a better solution to the expungement problem. We’ll see what happens down the road.”
Recruited assets, organic growth both powered ahead
Goldman Sachs' Padi Raphael, Global Co-Head of Third-Party Wealth, said the "door is always open" regarding a potential RIA referral program, as the firm looks to serve the "mega trend" of growing wealth from independent advisors.
UBS research finds lack of planning and communication as key challenges for high-net-worth widows and next-generation women in navigating inheritances.
The proposed "all markets" fund is structured to enable quarterly redemptions, driven by investments in public equities, fixed income, and private market assets.
The firm has been dogged by compliance issues for years, resulting in multiple fines by various regulatory bodies.
From direct lending to asset-based finance to commercial real estate debt.
RIAs face rising regulatory pressure in 2025. Forward-looking firms are responding with embedded technology, not more paperwork.