Wall Street still has comms problem despite $2B in fines

Wall Street still has comms problem despite $2B in fines
Traders continue sharing information using unauthorized messaging platforms.
DEC 05, 2023
By  Bloomberg

Wall Street is still struggling to keep track of the myriad ways bankers are communicating with one another, even after shelling out more than $2 billion in penalties over staffers’ use of WhatsApp and other unauthorized messaging services. 

That’s according to data compiled by the technology firm Global Relay, which says it works closely with banks including Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Morgan Stanley and UBS Group. The firm found that two-thirds of financial firms aren’t capturing LinkedIn communications data from their staff and just 3% have been able to monitor employees’ use of Zoom Video Communications Inc.’s conferencing technology. 

LinkedIn is “not the kind of platform you’d expect to be on the regulatory radar but I think it’s going to be,” Alex Viall, chief strategy officer at Global Relay, said in a telephone interview. “It’s very prevalent and very trusted and I don’t think many compliance teams are going to expect that.”

The report is based on data that Global Relay collected from over 10,000 banks, broker-dealers, fund managers and other regulated financial services firms.

Finance firms are required to closely monitor communications in order to limit any improper conduct. That system has long been challenged by the proliferation of mobile-messaging apps but it was further upended during the pandemic, when many staffers were forced to work from home for months on end. 

“LinkedIn appears to be a likely next focus,” Rob Mason, director of regulatory intelligence at Global Relay, said in a statement. “Some firms are ahead of the game and are already capturing communications – they have clearly learned from past scandals – but the majority need to rethink their approach before it’s too late.”

Last year, U.S. regulators reached settlements with a dozen banks in a sprawling probe into how global financial firms failed to monitor employees’ communications, with total penalties in the matter reaching more than $2 billion at that time. Since then, major hedge funds have been asked by regulators to review employees’ personal mobile phones as part of the mushrooming probe. And in September a fresh slate of Wall Street firms, including major brokerages, agreed to pay tens of millions of dollars to US regulators over the matter. 

Latest News

Goldman Sachs: RIA M&A market defies corporate slowdown
Goldman Sachs: RIA M&A market defies corporate slowdown

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.

HNW women face hurdles in great wealth transfer, report suggests
HNW women face hurdles in great wealth transfer, report suggests

UBS research finds lack of planning and communication as key challenges for high-net-worth widows and next-generation women in navigating inheritances.

Blackstone, Vanguard, Wellington fire first joint shot into interval fund space
Blackstone, Vanguard, Wellington fire first joint shot into interval fund space

The proposed "all markets" fund is structured to enable quarterly redemptions, driven by investments in public equities, fixed income, and private market assets.

LPL faces states’ regulatory actions on emails, chat app snafus
LPL faces states’ regulatory actions on emails, chat app snafus

The firm has been dogged by compliance issues for years, resulting in multiple fines by various regulatory bodies.

SPONSORED The evolution of private credit

From direct lending to asset-based finance to commercial real estate debt.

SPONSORED Compliance in real time: Technology's expanding role in RIA oversight

RIAs face rising regulatory pressure in 2025. Forward-looking firms are responding with embedded technology, not more paperwork.