Three Wells Fargo units agreed to pay a total of $125 million to the Securities and Exchange Commission, and BNP will pay $35 million, the regulator said Tuesday. The two lenders will pay $75 million each over similar violations by their derivatives brokers, the
In all, the CFTC announced penalties of $266 million on Tuesday, while the SEC said firms had agreed to pay it $289 million. Total fines for the probes into messaging practices have now crossed $2.5 billion since December 2021, making this one of the biggest financial enforcement efforts of the past decade.
What began as a look at trading desks’ use of chat apps has expanded into a look into all of finance’s use of any kind of communication tool that doesn’t save records appropriately. Hedge funds and private equity firms
Wells Fargo spokesperson Laurie Kight said in a statement that the company was pleased to resolve the matter. BNP declined to comment.
SEC officials said they were well aware of other companies that weren’t complying. “So here are three takeaways for those firms who haven’t yet done so: self-report, cooperate and remediate,” said
Tuesday’s slate of penalties is nowhere near the end of regulators’ efforts to crack down on Wall Street’s use of unmonitored messaging apps. A wide swath of firms have disclosed that regulators are looking at their messaging practices, including banks
Financial firms are required to monitor and save communications involving their business to head off improper conduct. When they don’t, regulators say it’s significantly harder to investigate wrongdoing. Their work is made even more difficult when bankers use messaging tools that delete communications automatically.
Investigations Harder
Tuesday’s actions follow a string of cases released last September. At the time, the SEC announced $1.1 billion in fines against companies including
On Tuesday, the SEC said that its investigation “uncovered pervasive and longstanding off-channel communications.” As part of the settlements, the companies admitted that their employees had used platforms like iMessage, WhatsApp and Signal to discuss business. The companies didn’t maintain sufficient records, according to the SEC. The CFTC said it found similar violations.
Other notable firms that agreed to settle on Tuesday included units of
A BMO spokesperson said the company has “made significant enhancements to our compliance procedures in recent years,” and was pleased to have resolved the probe. Mizuho, SocGen,
(Updates with SEC quote and information on probes beginning in sixth paragraph.)
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Stephanie Stoughton
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