Categories

SIFMA invokes fear of cyberterrorists in plea to fold CARDS

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. More on Investment News [...]

Self-directed IRAs hold risks for financial advisers

The year-end tax savings crunch is here. Better make sure your clients don’t get snared in a self-directed IRA scam. The North American Securities Administrators Association on Monday warned investors about the fact and fiction behind the duties of third-party custodians who handle self-directed individual retirement accounts. Though the warning is targeted toward investors, advisers should also listen up. More in Investment News [...]

Tattletales Embraced as Whistle-Blower Programs Gain Support

When we were children, one of the worst things to be known as was a tattletale. But as grown-ups, disclosing secrets that get others in trouble goes by a more favorable nickname: whistle-blower. Whistle-blowing as a means to police corporate misconduct is gaining support. The federal government has trumpeted its accomplishments in recovering money based on tips, and Congress seems poised to extend the incentives provided to those with information about wrongdoing. The Justice Department has heralded that it recovered $5.69 billion, a record amount, in civil fraud cases under the False Claims Act in its last fiscal year. The law, which dates to the Civil War, authorizes recovery of up to triple damages and civil penalties for the submission of false or fraudulent claims to the federal government. The two biggest contributors to the record recovery were $3.1 billion from banks for faulty mortgages that were federally insured and $2.3 billion for health care fraud under the Medicare and Medicaid programs. More in the New York Times [...]