Compliance
Compliance Corner: Hong Kong, BEA

The latest compliance news: regulatory developments, punishments, guidance, permissions and new product and service offerings.
Securities and Futures Commission
The Securities
and Futures Commission of Hong Kong has publicly reprimanded
the Bank of East Asia and fined it HK$4.2 million ($538,000) for
failing to segregate its clients' securities from proprietary
securities into separate accounts maintained at two external
custodians.
Regulations say that an intermediary (or associated entity) which
receives any client's securities must deposit them in a
segregated account (a trust or client account) established or
maintained in Hong Kong.
Between November 2015 and January 2016, the Hong Kong Monetary
Authority inspected the bank, and became concerned that the bank
wasn’t complying with the rules. The bank reported to the HKMA
about the matter in December 2016.
The SFC looked into the matter and found that the bank had failed
to segregate its clients' securities and proprietary securities
in accounts, and that it had at two external custodians, Central
Clearing and Settlement System (CCASS) and Sumitomo Mitsui
Banking Corporation in Tokyo (SMBC), between April 2003 and
December 2016.
Although the bank opened a custodial account and a number of
sub-accounts with CCASS in May 1992 to protect its clients'
securities and proprietary securities, it failed to segregate
those securities and instead kept them together in one account.
The bank then opened two accounts at SMBC in January 2003 and did
the same.
The SFC says that the bank has broken section 5(1), along with
General Principles 7 (on compliance) and 8 (on client assets) and
paragraphs 11 (on the handling of client assets) and 12.1 (on
compliance in general) of the code of conduct to which all firms
that the SFC regulates must adhere.