Finra agrees to three proxy proposals – but shoots down 'say on pay'

The industry self-regulator agreed to three of seven proxy proposals from Amerivet Securities, but it rejected a plan to let members vote on the pay of the agency's top officials. Not surprisingly, Amerivet says this battle is not over.
OCT 15, 2010
The Finra board of governors has agreed to take action on three of seven proxy proposals approved by members last month. In an e-mail message sent to member firms Tuesday, Finra chief executive Richard Ketchum said the regulator would be disclosing its executives' pay on a more timely basis, offering more disclosures about Finra board actions, and publishing the names of the money management firms that it hires to manage its portfolio. Those actions were among the seven proxy items put forth by Amerivet Securities Inc., and overwhelmingly approved by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc.'s broker-dealer firms. Mr. Ketchum said Finra would not be acting on the remaining four proxy items: giving members a "say on pay" for top Finra officials; conducting an inquiry into any potential involvement by Finra board members with the Bernard Madoff firms; creating an independent inspector general, and releasing an Internal Revenue Service opinion letter concerning NASD's $35,000 payment to members following its 2007 merger with the regulatory arm of the New York Stock Exchange. Mr. Ketchum gave Finra's rationale for rejecting the other proxy items approved by members at its meeting this month:
  • The say-on-pay proposal had the "potential to create the perception that regulated entities had the power to improperly intimidate regulatory staff," Mr. Ketchum wrote.
  • The question of any potential ties between Finra officials and Madoff firms was reviewed last year by a Finra committee.
  • An inspector general for Finra is not needed since the organization is overseen by the Securities and Exchange Commission.
  • The IRS letter was subject to seal by a federal court, and so would remain private. Board members were briefed about the letter by Finra attorneys prior to making the decision not to release it, Mr. Ketchum wrote.
Making board minutes public would "affect the candor of board discussions," he wrote. Instead, Finra will publish on its website the "rulemaking items discussed and decisions the Board has reached on new rules," Mr. Ketchum wrote in his e-mail. Mr. Ketchum wrote that although Finra rejected making board minutes public, arguing it would "affect the candor of board discussions," the authority will publish on its website the "rulemaking items discussed and decisions the Board has reached on new rules." Amerivet's attorneys dismissed Finra's response as an "illusory change." Finra's board" ignored the mandate of its members and did not grant even one of the reforms as proposed," said Amerivet's attorney Jonathan Cuneo, founding member of Cuneo Gilbert & LaDuca LLP, in a statement. "Amerivet will continue to fight for reform at Finra through the judicial system and by sponsorship of reform proposals," he said. Finra spokeswoman Nancy Condon was not immediately available for comment. [Mr. Ketchum's e-mail can be viewed here.]

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