Compliance
Compliance Corner: SEC Sets Out Busy Year For Fines, Enforcement Actions

The US regulator has been flexing its muscles on a number of fronts, affecting sectors including wealth management.
The US Securities
and Exchange Commission filed 784 enforcement actions in its
financial year for 2023, rising 3 per cent from a year before,
and orders for $4.949 billion in financial remedies – its
second-highest figure – as the US regulator spelled out the
extent of its actions in what has been a turbulent period for
financial markets.
The watchdog said it filed 162 "follow-on" administrative
proceedings seeking to bar or suspend individuals from certain
functions in the securities markets based on criminal
convictions, civil injunctions, or other orders.
The SEC’s actions spanned the securities industry, from
billion-dollar frauds to emerging investor threats involving
crypto asset securities and cybersecurity. It charged violations
by public companies and investment firms as well as social media
influencers.
“The investing public benefits from the Division of Enforcement’s
work as a cop on the beat,” SEC chairman Gary Gensler,
said.
The financial remedies comprised $3.369 billion in disgorgement
and prejudgment interest and $1.580 billion in civil penalties.
The disgorgement and civil penalties ordered were the second
highest amounts on record. The SEC also obtained orders barring
133 individuals from serving as officers and directors of public
companies, the highest number of officer and director bars
obtained in a decade.
In addition, the SEC distributed $930 million to harmed
investors, it said.
Elsewhere, the SEC issued whistleblower awards totaling nearly
$600 million, the most ever awarded in one year, including a
record-breaking $279 million awarded to one whistleblower. The
Commission received more than 18,000 whistleblower tips in fiscal
year 2023, a record.
Among other actions, 25 advisory firms, broker-dealers, and/or
credit rating agencies, including Wells Fargo, HSBC, and Scotia
Capital, agreed to pay combined civil penalties totaling more
than $400 million to settle charges that they violated the
recordkeeping requirements of the federal securities laws; and
ABB Ltd, a global technology company, agreed to pay a $75 million
civil penalty to resolve charges arising out of an alleged
bribery scheme.
In addition, the SEC obtained judgments from federal courts
ordering:
Danske Bank, the Danish bank, to pay a $178.6 million civil
penalty to resolve charges that it misled investors about its
anti-money laundering compliance program and failed to disclose
risks posed by the program’s significant deficiencies; and
Vale, a mining company, to pay $55.9 million combined in a civil
penalty, disgorgement, and prejudgment interest to settle charges
for allegedly false and misleading disclosures about the safety
of its dams prior to a collapse that killed 270 people.
Marketing Rule
The SEC charged nine investment advisors. The SEC’s orders found
that each of the charged firms advertised hypothetical
performance to mass audiences on their websites without having
the required policies and procedures. Each of the firms settled
the charges, paying combined civil penalties of $850,000. In
addition, FinTech investment advisor Titan Global Capital
Management USA LLC agreed to pay more than $1 million combined in
a civil penalty, disgorgement, and prejudgment interest to settle
charges that it violated the marketing rule.