Bank of America Corp's
Merrill Lynch brokerage unit will pay $415 million and admit to wrongdoing to
settle charges that it misused customer cash, the top U.S. securities regulator
said on Thursday.
The Securities and Exchange
Commission, in announcing what it said is the largest customer protection
settlement in the United States in the agency's history, said Merrill Lynch
kept billions of dollars at its own disposal that should have been deposited
into a reserve account that could help protect customers if the firm
unexpectedly failed.
Merrill Lynch violated an
SEC rule for protecting customers' assets by holding up to $58 billion a day in
a clearing account, Andrew Ceresney, the SEC's enforcement director, said in a
call with reporters.
The practice, which occurred
between 2009 to 2015, freed up billions of dollars per week for Merrill, which
financed the firm's trading activities for part of that time.
Firms typically park certain
funds in clearing accounts temporarily before transferring them elsewhere. But
a reserve account is for setting aside funds for a specific purpose, including
the return of customers' funds if a firm unexpectedly fails.
If Merrill Lynch's business
failed during those trades, customers would have been exposed to a massive shortfall
in the reserve account, the SEC said.
“While no customers were harmed and no losses
were incurred, our responsibility is to protect customer assets, and we have
dedicated significant resources to reviewing and enhancing our processes,"
Merrill Lynch spokesman William Halldin said in a statement.
"The issues related to
our procedures and controls have been corrected. We have cooperated fully with
the SEC staff throughout this investigation,” Halldin said.
At issue is an industry rule
requiring securities for which customers have fully paid to be held in accounts
that are not subject to liens. The measure shields customers from claims by
third parties should a firm collapse, the SEC said.
The clearing account in
which Merrill held the customers' funds was subject to a general lien, Ceresney
said. Some Merrill employees were aware of the lien as early as 2009, but the
firm did not take steps to fix the issue until the SEC brought it to attention,
Ceresney said.
The SEC is also suing
Merrill's former head of regulatory reporting, William Tirrell, who held the
position when Merrill was misusing customers' cash. Tirrell was responsible for
determining how much in assets to reserve for customers' benefit if Merrill's
business failed, the SEC said.
Tirrell failed to adequately
monitor the trades and provide specific information to Merrill's regulators
about the trades, the SEC said.
"While we are
disappointed that the SEC filed this action, Mr. Tirrell looks forward to the
opportunity to vindicate himself," said Steven Witzel, Tirrell's New
York-based lawyer.
Merrill Lynch also violated
a SEC rule by using language in severance agreements to stop employees from
coming forward to the SEC with information, the SEC said. The company has since
revised the agreements and launched a whistleblower training program for
employees.
The case came to light after
multiple former Bank of America executives reported the company's misconduct to
the SEC, said Jordan Thomas, the whistleblowers' New York lawyer.
Credit: Reuters
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