SIFMA invokes fear of cyberterrorists in plea to fold CARDS

Major Wall Street interest group cites cost, regulatory creep and impact on civil liberties in attack on Finra's data-gathering proposal.
DEC 05, 2014
An influential Wall Street interest group told Finra on Monday to withdraw its proposal for a massive customer-data-collection system. In a Dec. 1 comment letter, the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association said the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. does not have the authority to pursue the initiative, known as the Comprehensive Automated Risk Data System. It also said CARDS would substantially increase regulatory costs for financial firms while potentially exposing sensitive customer information to cyberattacks. “SIFMA believes that Finra's CARDS proposal would impose undue costs and burdens on the member firms, and is an attempt to diagnose a regulatory ill without appropriately accounting for the impact on investor privacy and civil liberties, and should not be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission,” wrote Ira Hammerman, SIFMA executive vice president and general counsel. Mr. Hammerman continued: “Most troubling is that CARDS would require the continued and regular disclosure to Finra of the most intimate financial details for every investor's securities account, would be aggregated and stored on Finra's computer system, thereby creating a centralized, prime target for computer hackers and nation-state sponsored cyberterrorists.” As for the price tag, an IBM analysis conducted on SIFMA's behalf of 16 firms representing both large and small enterprises showed that the mean cost for a financial firm to implement CARDS would be $3.4 million, and the annual cost to run and maintain the system would be $1.8 million. “CARDS would require another new, expensive and standardized technology system to be built by the industry while the industry already produces mass quantities of data and reports to Finra, the SEC and other self-regulatory organizations on a regular basis,” Mr. Hammerman wrote. The system also would encourage regulatory creep by Finra, Mr. Hammerman suggested. Under current rules, brokerages are responsible for monitoring the activities of their advisers and detecting sales-practice abuses, while Finra reviews supervisory systems. CARDS could put Finra in a different position by giving it “every trade, every account balance and every money movement of every customer of a broker-dealer.” “CARDS would drastically change that paradigm and potentially position Finra as the first level resource for regulator supervision of activity at the individual account level,” Mr. Hammerman wrote. SIFMA's frontal attack on CARDS contrasted with the comment letter submitted Monday by the Financial Services Institute. The FSI, an organization representing independent broker-dealers, did not call for Finra to scuttle the CARDS proposal, although it outlined several recommendations to improve it. “FSI members support Finra's investor protection goals, and are interested in providing essential input and suggestions for Finra to create a system that will allow it to achieve its vision,” wrote David Bellaire, FSI executive vice president and general counsel. Monday was the deadline for comment letters about Finra's implementation proposal for CARDS. Finra has made the system a priority. Under CARDS, Finra would regularly collect reams of customer-account data from clearing firms and brokerages, a process Finra said would enable it to detect more quickly dangerous industry trends and harmful product-sales practices. Finra, the industry-funded broker-dealer regulator, modified the CARDS proposal, originally floated in December 2013, to ensure it would not collect information that could identify individual investors. It also said it would conduct a thorough cost-benefit analysis. The CARDS proposal would have to be approved by the SEC before it is implemented. Like FSI, SIFMA suggested Finra expand its consolidated audit trail system with new “data fields” rather than set up CARDS separately.

Latest News

Slow is smooth, smooth is fast
Slow is smooth, smooth is fast

Chasing productivity is one thing, but when you're cutting corners, missing details, and making mistakes, it's time to take a step back.

Edward Jones layoffs about to hit employees, home office staff
Edward Jones layoffs about to hit employees, home office staff

It is not clear how many employees will be affected, but none of the private partnership’s 20,000 financial advisors will see their jobs at risk.

CFP Board hails record July exam turnout with 3,214 test-takers
CFP Board hails record July exam turnout with 3,214 test-takers

The historic summer sitting saw a roughly two-thirds pass rate, with most CFP hopefuls falling in the under-40 age group.

Founder of water vending machine company, portfolio manager, charged in $275M Ponzi scheme
Founder of water vending machine company, portfolio manager, charged in $275M Ponzi scheme

"The greed and deception of this Ponzi scheme has resulted in the same way they have throughout history," said Daniel Brubaker, U.S. Postal Inspection Service inspector in charge.

Advisor moves: Raymond James, Wells Fargo reel in billion dollar-plus advisor teams
Advisor moves: Raymond James, Wells Fargo reel in billion dollar-plus advisor teams

Elsewhere, an advisor formerly with a Commonwealth affiliate firm is launching her own independent practice with an Osaic OSJ.

SPONSORED Delivering family office services critical to advisor success

Stan Gregor, Chairman & CEO of Summit Financial Holdings, explores how RIAs can meet growing demand for family office-style services among mass affluent clients through tax-first planning, technology, and collaboration—positioning firms for long-term success

SPONSORED Passing on more than wealth: why purpose should be part of every estate plan

Chris Vizzi, Co-Founder & Partner of South Coast Investment Advisors, LLC, shares how 2025 estate tax changes—$13.99M per person—offer more than tax savings. Learn how to pass on purpose, values, and vision to unite generations and give wealth lasting meaning