Legal
Legg Mason Unit Fined $21 Million By SEC

A California-based subsidiary of Legg Mason will pay more than $21 million to the US government to settle two cases that accuse the firm of concealing investor losses caused by improper investments and making trades that favored some clients over others.
A California-based subsidiary of Legg Mason will pay more
than $21 million to the US government to settle two cases that
accuse the firm of concealing investor losses caused by improper
investments and making trades that favored some clients over
others.
The Securities and Exchange Commission and the US department of
Labor said in a joint statement that Western Asset Management
Company must pay $17.4 million to harmed clients and $3.6 million
in penalties.
According to the regulators, Western Asset failed to disclose and
promptly correct a coding error that caused the improper
allocation of a restricted private investment to the accounts of
nearly 100 clients that then plummeted in value.
“When the coding error was discovered, Western Asset put its own
interests above its clients and avoided telling investors what
had caused losses in their accounts. By concealing the error,
Western Asset avoided reimbursing clients for their losses,” said
Michele Wein Layne, director of the SEC’s Los Angeles, CA,
regional office.
In a separate order involving a different set of client accounts,
the SEC found that Western Asset engaged in a type of illegal
cross-trading - the practice of moving a security from one client
account to another without exposing the transaction to the
market.
The regulators said that, because Western Asset arranged to cross
these securities at the bid price rather than a price
representing an average, the firm improperly allocated the full
benefit of the market savings on the trades to buying clients and
cost the selling clients approximately $6.2 million.