The Origin of the Species
FINRA started its existence as the successor to the National Association of Securities Dealers,
Inc. (NASD) and the member regulation, enforcement and arbitration operations of the New York
Stock Exchange. The merger was approved by the United States Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) on July 26, 2007.
The NASD was founded in 1939 and was registered with the SEC in response to the 1938
Maloney Act amendments to the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, which allowed it to supervise
the conduct of its members subject to the oversight of the SEC. In 1971, NASD launched a new
computerized stock trading system called the National Association of Securities Dealers
Automated Quotations (NASDAQ) stock market. The NYSE and AMEX stock exchanges merged
in 1998. Two years later, the NASDAQ underwent a major recapitalization and became an
independent entity from NASD. In July 2007, the SEC approved the formation of a new SRO to
be a successor to NASD. The NASD and the member regulation, enforcement and arbitration
functions of the New York Stock Exchange were then consolidated into the Financial Industry
Regulatory Authority (FINRA).
FINRA is a non-governmental, not-for-profit organization that regulates member brokerage firms
and exchange markets. The government agency which acts as the ultimate regulator of the
securities industry, including FINRA, is the Securities and Exchange Commission.
The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority is the largest independent regulator for all securities
firms doing business in the United States. FINRA's mission, as stated, is to protect investors by
making sure the United States securities industry operates fairly and honestly. FINRA oversees
over 3,900 brokerage firms, approximately 162,000 branch offices and approximately 640,000
registered securities representatives.
FINRA regulates trading in equities, corporate bonds, securities futures, and options. All firms
dealing in securities that are not regulated by another SRO, such as by the Municipal Securities
Rulemaking Board (MSRB), are required to be member firms of the FINRA.
Currently, FINRA has approximately 3,600 employees and operates from Washington, DC, and
New York, NY, with 16 regional offices around the country. According to Ray Pellecchia, spokesman at FINRA, the SRO's mission is focused on two goals - Investor Protection and Market Integrity. Pellecchia said it is dedicated to investor protection and market integrity through effective and efficient regulation and complementary compliance and technology-based services.
FINRA touches virtually every aspect of the securities business - from registering and educating
all industry participants to examining securities firms, writing rules, enforcing those rules and the
federal securities laws, and informing and educating the investing public. In addition, FINRA
provides surveillance and other regulatory services for equities and options markets, as well as
trade reporting and other industry utilities. FINRA also administers the largest dispute resolution
forum for investors and firms.
A very broad range of responsibilities to be sure. And in looking at some of the statements made
by outgoing FINRA president, Richard Ketchum, in his 2016 Regulatory and Examination
Priorities Letter, the SRO was going to focus on three more issues - supervision, risk
management and controls; and liquidity. Ketchum's letter also emphasized it wanted to look at
member firm's cultures, conflicts of interest and ethics.
This past May at the FINRA annual conference, Ketchum said the regulator would focus on
broker culture issues and how they impact the marketplace. FINRA has supported a "best
interests of the customer" standard for a number of years, and Ketchum believes that examining
corporate culture would be central in getting a glimpse into how brokers serve a customer's best
interests.
"It is the direction we must go. And we must get it right," Ketchum said.
Going forward, FINRA wants to also focus on data analytics as a tool to help it address poor
culture and compliance breakdowns.
This past May at its annual conference, Ketchum said FINRA will continue to focus on culture
issues will remain front and center for FINRA and other regulators. FINRA has supported a "best
interests of the customer" standard for a number of years, and I continue to believe that a best
interest standard for broker-dealers-under the securities laws-is the direction we must go. And
we must get it right.
Going forward, FINRA wants to also focus on data analytics as a tool to help it address poor
culture and compliance breakdowns that influence a poor culture.
Power Grab
That's a lot of governance. And usurped power for a non-government agency, according to
several market sources.
"So FINRA, in essence, is really the finance god of our markets," said James Angel, associate
professor of finance at the McDonough School of Business at Georgetown University. "But
should it be?"
Angel told Markets Media that he thought now it is time for a review of the SRO's mandate and
perhaps scale it back as to make the SRO a more effective regulator.
"As Robert Cook prepares to take over the reins there maybe now is the best time to stop and
ask the question, has FINRA strayed from its original purpose to where it is now? Is it time to hit
the reset button and fix what's wrong at FINRA to get her back to her original charter mandates?"
And Angel, as well as others, said that with Cook beginning his tenure as FINRA's president and
chief executive officer, effective August 15th, this could be the perfect time to examine the
regulator.
Cook is no stranger to the financial markets or regulation. He comes from Cleary Gottlieb Steen
& Hamilton LLP, where he has served as a partner in the firm's Washington, DC, office since
June 2013. While at Cleary Gottlieb, he has focused on the regulation of securities markets and
market intermediaries, including broker-dealers, exchanges, alternative trading systems and
clearing agencies. Prior to joining Cleary Gottlieb, Cook served as the director of the Division of
Trading and Markets (Division) of the SEC from 2010 to 2013. Under his direction, he ran the
review of equity market structure and its analysis of the Flash Crash of May 6, 2010. Prior to
joining the SEC, Cook served as a partner at Cleary Gottlieb since 2001, and joined the firm in
1992.
Requests by Markets Media to interview Cook to see what his focus for FINRA were declined.
But that didn't stop traders from voicing their opinions.
One trader told Markets Media that FINRA has assumed its "larger than life" role now as a result
of the SEC's inability to formally regulate the entire financial market system. The SEC, he said,
was simply too small and too underfunded to watch such a large marketplace.
"It's not hard to see how we got here," the trader said. "So the SEC kind of deals with the real big
ticket stuff and FINRA covers everything else. And there's a lot of everything else."
Another trader at a New Jersey-based broker dealer said that the while the SEC has legislative
oversight for FINRA, it was hard for the government agency to enforce its own will with the SRO
as public employees make smaller salaries and often don't want to jeopardize future job
prospects - with FINRA.
"It's so funny the way it works," the trader began. "You go and get experience in regulation by
working at the SEC for a few years. Then when you want to get paid you jump right over to
FINRA. Makes you wonder about the whole regulatory system's design."
De-Regulate the Regulator?
Georgetown's Angel made similar remarks. He proposed that the SEC focus on one part of
market regulation - such as the broker dealers. FINRA could watch another part of the
marketplace, such as the exchanges. Add a third group could watch the individual brokers.
These smaller regulators would then report to one umbrella or "uber" regulator.
"So yeah there are a lot of questions here, having to do with FINRA. And I think it's time for a
reexamination, "Angel said. "What should they be regulating? How should they be funded? How
should they be governed?"
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