Sunday, August 31, 2014

SEC Charges Two Information Technology Executives With Mischaracterizing Resale Transactions to Increase Revenue




Press Releases





SEC Charges Two Information Technology Executives With Mischaracterizing Resale Transactions to Increase Revenue




The Securities and Exchange Commission today charged two executives at a Dallas-based information technology company with mischaracterizing an arrangement with an equipment manufacturer to purport that it was conducting so-called “resale transactions” to inflate the company’s reported revenue.





An SEC investigation found that then-CEO Lynn R. Blodgett and then-CFO Kevin R. Kyser caused the disclosure failures at Affiliated Computer Services (ACS), which has since been acquired by Xerox Corporation.  ACS provided business process outsourcing and information technology services.  Shortly before the end of its first quarter in fiscal year 2009, ACS faced a scenario where the company’s revenue was set to fall short of company guidance and consensus analyst expectations, so ACS arranged for an equipment manufacturer to re-direct through ACS pre-existing orders that the manufacturer already had received from one of its customers.  This gave the appearance that ACS was involved in resale transactions, but ACS in fact had no such involvement.  ACS went on to report $124.5 million in fiscal year 2009 revenue from these transactions as though it had resold the equipment itself. 





Blodgett and Kyser have agreed to pay nearly $675,000 to settle the SEC’s charges that they and ACS did not adequately describe the arrangement in its financial reporting, and the purported revenue in turn allowed ACS to publicly report inflated internal revenue growth (IRG).  Blodgett and Kyser emphasized the inflated IRG as a key metric in earnings releases and other public statements to investors, and a portion of their annual bonuses was linked to IRG.





“ACS positioned itself in the middle of pre-existing transactions without adding value, but still improperly reported the revenue. Blodgett and Kyser knew the truth about these deals, and they were responsible for ensuring that ACS accurately disclosed the full story to investors,” said David R. Woodcock, director of the SEC’s Fort Worth Regional Office and chair of the agency’s Financial Reporting and Audit Task Force.  “This enforcement action holds them accountable for failing to uphold that responsibility.”





Blodgett and Kyser consented to the SEC’s order to cease-and-desist from violating Sections 13(a), 13(b)(2)(A) and 13(b)(2)(B) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and Rules 12b-20, 13a-1, 13a-11, 13a-13, and 13a-14.  Without admitting or denying the findings, they have agreed to collectively disgorge IRG-related bonuses plus prejudgment interest totaling $569,327, and they each must pay $52,000 penalties.





The SEC’s investigation was conducted by James E. Etri, Todd B. Baker, and David R. King of the Fort Worth office.








Saturday, August 30, 2014

SEC Adopts Asset-Backed Securities Reform Rules




Press Releases





SEC Adopts Asset-Backed Securities Reform Rules




The Securities and Exchange Commission today adopted revisions to rules governing the disclosure, reporting, and offering process for asset-backed securities (ABS) to enhance transparency, better protect investors, and facilitate capital formation in the securitization market.





The new rules, among other things, require loan-level disclosure for certain assets, such as residential and commercial mortgages and automobile loans.  The rules also provide more time for investors to review and consider a securitization offering, revise the eligibility criteria for using an expedited offering process known as “shelf offerings,” and make important revisions to reporting requirements.





“These are strong reforms to protect America’s investors by enhancing the disclosure requirements for asset-backed securities and by making it easier for investors to review and access the information they need to make informed investment decisions,” said SEC Chair Mary Jo White.  “Unlike during the financial crisis, investors will now be able to independently conduct due diligence to better assess the credit risk of asset-backed securities.”





ABS are created by buying and bundling loans, such as residential and commercial mortgage loans, and auto loans and leases, and creating securities backed by those assets for sale to investors.  A bundle of loans is often divided into separate securities with varying levels of risk and returns.  Payments made by the borrowers on the underlying loans are passed on to investors in the ABS.





ABS holders suffered significant losses during the 2008 financial crisis.  The crisis revealed that many investors in the securitization market were not fully aware of the risks underlying the securitized assets and over-relied on ratings assigned by credit rating agencies, which in many cases did not appropriately evaluate the credit risk of the securities.  The crisis also exposed a lack of transparency and oversight by the principal officers in the securitization transactions.  The revised rules are designed to address these problems and to enhance investor protection.





The revised rules become effective 60 days after publication in the Federal Register.  Issuers must comply with new rules, forms, and disclosures other than the asset-level disclosure requirements no later than one year after the rules are published in the Federal Register.  Offerings of ABS backed by residential and commercial mortgages, auto loans, auto leases, and debt securities (including resecuritizations) must comply with the asset-level disclosure requirements no later than two years after the rules are published in the Federal Register.





*   *   *





FACT SHEET





Asset-backed securities are created by buying and bundling loans – such as residential mortgage loans, commercial mortgage loans or auto loans and leases – and creating securities backed by those assets that are then sold to investors.





Often a bundle of loans is divided into separate securities with different levels of risk and returns.  Payments on the loans are distributed to the holders of the lower-risk, lower-interest securities first, and then to the holders of the higher-risk securities.  Most public offerings of ABS are conducted through expedited SEC procedures known as “shelf offerings.”





During the financial crisis, ABS holders suffered significant losses and areas of the securitization market–particularly the non-governmental mortgage-backed securities market–have been relatively dormant ever since.  The crisis revealed that many investors were not fully aware of the risk in the underlying mortgages within the pools of securitized assets and unduly relied on credit ratings assigned by rating agencies, and in many cases rating agencies failed to accurately evaluate and rate the securitization structures.  Additionally, the crisis brought to light a lack of transparency in the securitized pools, a lack of oversight by senior management of the issuers, insufficient enforcement mechanisms related to representations and warranties made in the underlying contracts, and inadequate time for investors to make informed investment decisions.





SEC Proposals





In April 2010, the SEC proposed rules to revise the offering process, disclosure and reporting requirements for ABS.  Subsequent to that proposal, the Dodd-Frank Act was signed into law and addressed some of the same ABS concerns.  In light of the Dodd-Frank Act and comments received from the public in response to the 2010 proposal, the SEC re-proposed some of the April 2010 proposals in July 2011.  In February 2014, the Commission re-opened the comment period on the proposals to permit interested persons to comment on an approach for the dissemination of loan-level data.  The proposals sought to address the concerns highlighted by the financial crisis by, among other things, requiring additional disclosure, including the filing of tagged computer-readable, standardized loan-level information; revising the ABS shelf-eligibility criteria by replacing the investment grade ratings requirement with alternative criteria; and making other revisions to the offering and reporting requirements for ABS. 







The Final Rules:





Requiring Certain Asset Classes to Provide Asset-Level Information in a Standardized, Tagged Data Format





To provide increased transparency about the underlying assets of a securitization and to implement Section 942(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act, the final rules require issuers to provide standardized asset-level information for ABS backed by residential mortgages, commercial mortgages, auto loans, auto leases, and debt securities (including resecuritizations).  The rules require that the asset-level information be provided in a standardized, tagged data format called eXtensible Mark-up Language (XML), which allows investors to more easily analyze the data.  The rules also standardize the disclosure of the information by defining each data point and delineating the scope of the information required.  Although specific data requirements vary by asset class, the new asset-level disclosures generally will include information about:






  • Credit quality of obligors.


  • Collateral related to each asset.


  • Cash flows related to a particular asset, such as the terms, expected payment amounts, and whether and how payment terms change over time.





Asset-level information will be required in the offering prospectus and in ongoing reports.  Providing investors with access to standardized, comprehensive asset-level information that offers a more complete picture of the composition and characteristics of the pool assets and their performance allows investors to better understand, analyze and track the performance of ABS.  The Commission continues to consider the best approach for requiring information about underlying assets for the remaining asset classes covered by the 2010 proposal.





Providing Investors With More Time to Consider Transaction-Specific Information





The final rules require ABS issuers using a shelf registration statement to file a preliminary prospectus containing transaction-specific information at least three business days in advance of the first sale of securities in the offering.  This requirement gives investors additional time to analyze the specific structure, assets, and contractual rights for an ABS transaction.





Removing Investment Grade Ratings for ABS Shelf Eligibility





The final rules revise the eligibility criteria for shelf offerings of ABS.  The new proposed transaction requirements for ABS shelf eligibility replace the prior investment grade requirement and require:






  • The chief executive officer of the depositor to provide a certification at the time of each offering from a shelf registration statement about the disclosure contained in the prospectus and the structure of the securitization.


  • A provision in the transaction agreement for the review of the assets for compliance with the representations and warranties upon the occurrence of certain trigger events.


  • A dispute resolution provision in the underlying transaction documents.


  • Disclosure of investors’ requests to communicate with other investors.





The final rules also require other changes to the procedures and forms related to shelf offerings, including:






  • Permitting a pay-as-you-go registration fee alternative, allowing ABS issuers to pay registration fees at the time of filing the preliminary prospectus, as opposed to paying all registration fees upfront at the time of filing the registration statement.


  • Creating new Forms SF-1 and SF-3 for ABS issuers to replace current Forms S-1 and S-3 in order to distinguish ABS filers from corporate filers and tailor requirements for ABS offerings.


  • Revising the current practice of providing a base prospectus and prospectus supplement for ABS issuers and instead requiring that a single prospectus be filed for each takedown (however, it is permissible to highlight material changes from the preliminary prospectus in a separate supplement to the preliminary prospectus 48 hours prior to first sale).





Amendments to Prospectus Disclosure Requirements





The Commission approved amendments to the prospectus disclosure requirements for ABS, which include:






  • Expanded disclosure about transaction parties, including disclosure about a sponsor’s retained economic interest in an ABS transaction and financial information about parties obligated to repurchase assets.


  • A description of the provisions in the transaction agreements about modification of the terms of the underlying assets.


  • Filing of the transaction documents by the date of the final prospectus, which is a clarification of the current rules.





Revisions to Regulation AB





The Commission also approved other revisions to Regulation AB, including:






  • Standardization of certain static pool disclosure.


  • Revisions to the Regulation AB definition of an “asset-backed security.”


  • Specifying, in addition to the asset-level requirements, the disclosure that must be provided on an aggregate basis relating to the type and amount of assets that do not meet the underwriting criteria that is described in the prospectus.


  • Several changes to Forms 10-D, 10-K, and 8-K, including requiring explanatory disclosure in the Form 10-K about identified material instances of noncompliance with existing Regulation AB servicing criteria.








Friday, August 29, 2014

SEC Names James Schnurr As Chief Accountant




Press Releases





SEC Names James Schnurr As Chief Accountant




The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced it has named James Schnurr as its chief accountant. 





Mr. Schnurr will begin his new post in October.  He will replace Paul A. Beswick, who joined the SEC staff in September 2007 and has served as its chief accountant since 2012.





The SEC’s Office of the Chief Accountant is responsible for establishing and enforcing accounting and auditing policy as well as improving the professional performance of public company auditors.  The office works to enhance the transparency and relevancy of financial reporting and ensure that financial statements are presented fairly and have credibility.





“Jim’s broad expertise in accounting, reporting, and risk management will help foster investor confidence by holding companies accountable for their financial reporting requirements,” said SEC Chair Mary Jo White.  “His deep knowledge of accounting and auditing standards coupled with his extensive experience interacting with regulators and accounting and auditing standard setters will be invaluable to the Commission.”





Mr. Schnurr said, “I am honored to join the Commission staff to further the protection of investors in our capital markets.  I look forward to working with the Commissioners and the Commission’s talented staff to ensure that companies are providing accurate and complete financial information and that auditors are upholding the public trust in providing assurance to investors about that information.”





Mr. Schnurr recently retired from Deloitte LLP, where he was vice chairman and senior professional practice director and specialized in financial and SEC reporting for public companies.  He began his career at Deloitte in 1975 and became a partner in 1985.  He was a senior partner for mergers and acquisition services from 1994 to 2002 and a deputy managing partner of the firm’s professional practice from 2002 to 2009 where he was responsible for quality control and risk management of the firm’s audit and advisory services.  He also has served on various working and advisory groups of the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB), Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB), and American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA).





Mr. Schnurr received his undergraduate degree from the College of the Holy Cross and his MBA from Rutgers University.








Thursday, August 28, 2014

SEC Announces Pilot Plan to Assess Stock Market Tick Size Impact for Smaller Companies




Press Releases





SEC Announces Pilot Plan to Assess Stock Market Tick Size Impact for Smaller Companies




The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced that the national securities exchanges and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) filed a proposal to establish a national market system plan to implement a targeted 12-month pilot program that will widen minimum quoting and trading increments (tick sizes) for certain stocks with smaller capitalization.  The Commission plans to use the pilot program to assess whether such changes would enhance market quality for smaller capitalization stocks for the benefit of investors and issuers.





“This is an important step for a valuable initiative that could have meaningful implications for market quality,” said SEC Chair Mary Jo White.  “I look forward to the public comment on the proposal and the expeditious development of a final pilot program.”





In June, the Commission ordered the exchanges and FINRA to develop and file a proposal for a tick size pilot program.  The SEC will seek comment on the proposed plan, which will be subject to Commission approval following a 21-day public comment period.





The pilot program will include stocks with a market capitalization of $5 billion or less; an average daily trading volume of one million shares or less; and a closing share price of at least $2 per share.  The pilot will consist of one control group and three test groups with 400 securities in each test group selected by stratified sampling.






  • Pilot securities in the control group will be quoted at the current tick size increment of $0.01 per share, and trade at the increments currently permitted. The control group would represent a baseline for analysis during the pilot period.



  • Pilot securities in the first test group will be quoted in $0.05 minimum increments.  Trading would continue to occur at any price increment that is permitted today.



  • Pilot securities in the second test group will be quoted in $0.05 minimum increments, and traded in $0.05 minimum increments subject to certain exceptions.



  • Pilot securities in the third test group will be subject to the same minimum quoting and trading increments (and the same exceptions) as the second test group, but in addition would be subject to a “trade-at” requirement. In general, a “trade-at” requirement prevents price matching by a trading center that is not displaying the best bid or offer.





The pilot also directs the exchanges and FINRA to collect and transmit data to the Commission and make the data available to the public in an agreed-upon format.  After the end of the pilot period, the exchanges and FINRA will complete an assessment of the impact of the pilot and submit the assessment to the Commission.








Wednesday, August 27, 2014

SEC Adopts Credit Rating Agency Reform Rules




Press Releases





SEC Adopts Credit Rating Agency Reform Rules




The Securities and Exchange Commission today adopted new requirements for credit rating agencies to enhance governance, protect against conflicts of interest, and increase transparency to improve the quality of credit ratings and increase credit rating agency accountability.  The new rules and amendments, which implement 14 rulemaking requirements under the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, apply to credit rating agencies registered with the Commission as nationally recognized statistical rating organizations (NRSROs).





“This expansive package of reforms will strengthen the overall quality of credit ratings, enhance the transparency of credit rating agencies and increase their accountability,” said SEC Chair Mary Jo White. “Today’s reforms will help protect investors and markets against a repeat of the conduct and practices that were central to the financial crisis.”





The new requirements for NRSROs address internal controls, conflicts of interest, disclosure of credit rating performance statistics, procedures to protect the integrity and transparency of rating methodologies, disclosures to promote the transparency of credit ratings, and standards for training, experience, and competence of credit analysts.  The requirements provide for an annual certification by the CEO as to the effectiveness of internal controls and additional certifications to accompany credit ratings attesting that the rating was not influenced by other business activities.





The Commission also adopted requirements for issuers, underwriters, and third-party due diligence services to promote the transparency of the findings and conclusions of third-party due diligence regarding asset-backed securities.





Certain amendments will become effective 60 days after publication in the Federal Register.  The amendments with respect to the annual report on internal controls and the production and disclosure of performance statistics will be effective on Jan. 1, 2015, which means that the first internal controls report to be submitted by an NRSRO would cover the fiscal year that ends on or after Jan. 1, 2015, and the first annual certification on Form NRSRO relating to performance statistics is required for the annual certifications filed after the end of the 2015 calendar year. 





The following provisions are effective nine months after publication in the Federal Register: prohibiting the sales and marketing conflict; addressing look-back reviews to determine whether the credit analyst’s prospects of future employment influenced a credit rating; requiring the disclosure of rating histories; addressing rating methodologies; requiring the form and certification to accompany credit ratings; addressing issuer and underwriter disclosure of third-party due diligence findings; addressing the certification of a third-party due diligence provider; addressing NRSRO standards of training, experience, and competence; and addressing universal rating symbols.  This period is intended to provide time for NRSROs, issuers, underwriters, and providers of third-party due diligence services to prepare for the changes resulting from the new requirements.





*   *   *





FACT SHEET





May 2011 Proposals – The Commission proposed for comment amendments to existing rules and new rules in accordance with Title IX, Subtitle C of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act.  The amendments and new rules approved today finalize the May 2011 proposals.





The Dodd-Frank Act – Title IX, Subtitle C of the Dodd-Frank Act, among other things, established new self-executing requirements applicable to NRSROs and required that the Commission adopt rules applicable to NRSROs in a number of areas.  The NRSRO provisions in the Dodd-Frank Act augment the Credit Rating Agency Reform Act of 2006, which established a registration and oversight program for NRSROs through self-executing provisions added to the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the implementation of rules adopted by the Commission.  Title IX, Subtitle C of the Dodd-Frank Act also established a new requirement for issuers and underwriters of asset-backed securities to make publicly available the findings and conclusions of any third-party due diligence report obtained by the issuer or underwriter.  In addition, Title IX, Subtitle C of the Dodd-Frank Act provides that the Commission shall prescribe the format of a certification that providers of third-party due diligence services must provide to each NRSRO producing a credit rating for an ABS to which the due diligence services relate.





NRSROs – NRSROs are credit rating agencies registered with the Commission under section 15E of the Exchange Act.  An NRSRO can be registered in one or more of five classes of credit ratings: financial institutions, brokers, or dealers; insurance companies; corporate issuers; issuers of ABS; and issuers of government securities, municipal securities, or securities issued by a foreign government.  Currently, 10 credit rating agencies, including the three largest credit rating agencies (Moody’s, Standard & Poor’s and Fitch Group), are registered as NRSROs.







Highlights of the Amendments and New Rules





Factors an NRSRO must consider when establishing, maintaining, enforcing, and documenting an Internal Control Structure





The Dodd-Frank Act amended the Exchange Act to require an NRSRO to establish, maintain, enforce, and document an effective internal control structure governing the implementation of and adherence to policies, procedures, and methodologies for determining credit ratings, taking into consideration such factors as the Commission may prescribe, by rule.





The rule amendments require an NRSRO to consider certain identified factors.  In particular, with respect to establishing an internal control structure, the NRSRO must consider:






  • Controls reasonably designed to ensure that a newly developed methodology or proposed update to an in-use methodology for determining credit ratings is subject to an appropriate review process (for example, by persons who are independent from the persons that developed the methodology or methodology update) and to management approval prior to the new or updated methodology being employed by the NRSRO to determine credit ratings.



  • Controls reasonably designed to ensure that a newly developed methodology or update to an in-use methodology for determining credit ratings is disclosed to the public for consultation prior to the new or updated methodology being employed by the NRSRO to determine credit ratings, that the NRSRO makes comments received as part of the consultation publicly available, and that the NRSRO considers the comments before implementing the methodology.






  • Controls reasonably designed to ensure that in-use methodologies for determining credit ratings are periodically reviewed (for example, by persons who are independent from the persons who developed and/or use the methodology) in order to analyze whether the methodology should be updated.



  • Controls reasonably designed to ensure that market participants have an opportunity to provide comment on whether in-use methodologies for determining credit ratings should be updated, that the NRSRO makes any such comments received publicly available, and that the NRSRO considers the comments.






  • Controls reasonably designed to ensure that newly developed or updated quantitative models proposed to be incorporated into a credit rating methodology are evaluated and validated prior to being put into use.






  • Controls reasonably designed to ensure that quantitative models incorporated into in-use credit rating methodologies are periodically reviewed and back-tested.






  • Controls reasonably designed to ensure that an NRSRO engages in analysis before commencing the rating of a class of obligors, securities, or money market instruments the NRSRO has not previously rated to determine whether the NRSRO has sufficient competency, access to necessary information, and resources to rate the type of obligor, security, or money market instrument.






  • Controls reasonably designed to ensure that an NRSRO engages in analysis before commencing the rating of an “exotic” or “bespoke” type of obligor, security, or money market instrument to review the feasibility of determining a credit rating.






  • Controls reasonably designed to ensure that measures (for example, statistics) are used to evaluate the performance of credit ratings as part of the review of in-use methodologies for determining credit ratings to analyze whether the methodologies should be updated or the work of the analysts employing the methodologies should be reviewed.






  • Controls reasonably designed to ensure that, with respect to determining credit ratings, the work and conclusions of the lead credit analyst developing an initial credit rating or conducting surveillance on an existing credit rating is reviewed by other analysts, supervisors, or senior managers before a rating action is formally taken (for example, having the work reviewed through a rating committee process).






  • Controls reasonably designed to ensure that a credit analyst documents the steps taken in developing an initial credit rating or conducting surveillance on an existing credit rating with sufficient detail to permit an after-the-fact review or internal audit of the rating file to analyze whether the analyst adhered to the NRSRO’s procedures and methodologies for determining credit ratings.






  • Controls reasonably designed to ensure that the NRSRO conducts periodic reviews or internal audits of rating files to analyze whether analysts adhere to the NRSRO’s procedures and methodologies for determining credit ratings.





With respect to maintaining the internal control structure, the NRSRO must consider:






  • Controls reasonably designed to ensure that the NRSRO conducts periodic reviews of whether it has devoted sufficient resources to implement and operate the documented internal control structure as designed.



  • Controls reasonably designed to ensure that the NRSRO conducts periodic reviews or ongoing monitoring to evaluate the effectiveness of the internal control structure and whether it should be updated.



  • Controls reasonably designed to ensure that any identified deficiencies in the internal control structure are assessed and addressed on a timely basis.





When enforcing the internal control structure, the NRSRO must consider:






  • Controls designed to ensure that additional training is provided or discipline taken with respect to employees who fail to adhere to requirements imposed by the internal control structure.






  • Controls designed to ensure that a process is in place for employees to report failures to adhere to the internal control structure.





Report on the Effectiveness of the NRSRO’s Internal Control Structure





The Dodd-Frank Act also amended the Exchange Act to provide that the Commission shall prescribe rules requiring an NRSRO to annually submit to the Commission an internal controls report that contains information on management’s responsibilities relating to the internal control structure, the effectiveness of the internal control structure, and an attestation of the CEO or equivalent on the report. 





The rule amendments require an NRSRO to file an annual report with the Commission regarding the NRSRO’s internal control structure that contains a:






  • Description of the responsibility of management in establishing and maintaining an effective internal control structure.






  • Description of each material weakness in the internal control structure identified during the fiscal year, if any, and a description, if applicable, of how each identified material weakness was addressed.






  • Statement as to whether the internal control structure was effective as of the end of the fiscal year.





The amendments also provide that management is not permitted to conclude that the internal control structure of the NRSRO was effective as of the end of the fiscal year if there were one or more material weaknesses in the internal control structure as of the end of the fiscal year.  The amendments further prescribe when a material weakness exists for purposes of this reporting requirement.





NRSRO Conflicts Relating to Sales and Marketing Activities





The Dodd-Frank Act amended the Exchange Act to provide that the Commission shall issue rules to prevent an NRSRO’s sales and marketing considerations from influencing the production of credit ratings.  It also specifies that the Commission shall provide for exceptions for small NRSROs and for the suspension or revocation of an NRSRO’s registration for violating a rule addressing conflicts of interest. 





The rule amendments:






  • Prohibit an NRSRO from issuing or maintaining a credit rating where a person within the NRSRO who participates in determining or monitoring the credit rating, or developing or approving procedures or methodologies used for determining the credit rating, including qualitative and quantitative models also: participates in sales or marketing of a product or service of the NRSRO or a product or service of an affiliate of the NRSRO; or is influenced by sales or marketing considerations.






  • Provide that upon written application by an NRSRO, the Commission may exempt the NRSRO, either unconditionally or on specified terms and conditions, from the sales and marketing prohibition if the Commission finds that due to the small size of the NRSRO it is not appropriate to require the separation within the NRSRO of the production of credit ratings from sales and marketing activities and such exemption is in the public interest.






  • Establish an alternative rule-based finding that can be used by the Commission in a proceeding under section 15E(d)(1) of the Exchange Act to suspend or revoke the registration of an NRSRO (namely, if the Commission finds, in lieu of a finding specified under sections 15E(d)(1)(A), (B), (C), (D), (E), or (F) of the Exchange Act, that the NRSRO has violated a rule addressing conflicts of interest and that the violation affected a credit rating).





NRSRO Look-Back Reviews





The Dodd-Frank Act amended the Exchange Act to require an NRSRO to have policies and procedures for conducting a “look-back” review to determine whether the prospect of future employment by an issuer or underwriter influenced a credit analyst in determining a credit rating, and, if such influence is discovered, to revise the credit rating in accordance with rules the Commission shall prescribe. 



New Rule 17g-8 requires that the NRSRO’s look-back review procedures must address instances in which a review determines that a conflict of interest influenced a credit rating by including, at a minimum, procedures that are reasonably designed to ensure that the NRSRO will:






  • Promptly determine whether the current credit rating must be revised so that it no longer is influenced by a conflict of interest and is solely a product of the documented procedures and methodologies the NRSRO uses to determine credit ratings.






  • Promptly publish, based on the determination of whether the current credit rating must be revised, a revised credit rating or an affirmation of the credit rating and with either publication include disclosures about the existence and impact of the conflict of interest.






  • If the credit rating is not revised or affirmed within 15 calendar days of the date of the discovery that the credit rating was influenced by a conflict of interest, publish a rating action placing the credit rating on watch or review and include with the publication an explanation that the reason for the action is the discovery that the credit rating was influenced by a conflict of interest.





Public Disclosure of NRSRO Credit Rating Performance Statistics





The Dodd-Frank Act amended the Exchange Act to provide that the Commission, by rule, shall require NRSROs to publicly disclose information about their initial credit ratings and subsequent changes to the credit ratings to allow users of credit ratings to evaluate the accuracy and compare the performance of credit ratings across NRSROs. 





Before the SEC’s rule amendments approved today, NRSROs were required to disclose the percent of credit ratings in each class for which they are registered that over a one-year, three-year, and 10-year period were downgraded or upgraded (transition rates) or classified as a default (default rates). 





The rule amendments enhance the disclosures of transition and default rates by, among other things:






  • Standardizing the methodologies used by NRSROs in computing their transition and default rates.






  • Requiring transition and default rates for various subclasses of structured finance products (e.g., residential mortgage-backed securities and commercial mortgage-backed securities).






  • Standardizing the presentation of the transition and default rates in an easy to understand table.





Public Disclosure of NRSRO Credit Rating Histories





Before the SEC’s rule amendments, NRSROs were required to disclose in an XBRL format histories of their credit ratings (e.g., the initial credit rating and all subsequent modifications to the credit rating (such as upgrades and downgrades) and the dates of such actions).  The goal of the proposed amendments is to allow users of credit ratings to compare how different NRSROs rated an individual obligor, security, or money market instrument and how and when those ratings were changed over time.  The disclosure of rating histories also is designed to provide “raw data” that can be used by third parties to generate independent performance statistics such as transition and default rates.  The amendments increase the amount of information that must be disclosed by expanding the scope of the credit ratings that must be included in the histories and by adding additional data elements that must be disclosed in the rating history for a particular credit rating.



NRSRO Credit Rating Methodologies





The Dodd-Frank Act amended the Exchange Act to provide that the Commission shall prescribe rules with respect to the procedures and methodologies, including qualitative and quantitative data and models, used by NRSROs to determine credit ratings that require each NRSRO to ensure that certain objectives are met. 





Paragraph (a) of new Rule 17g-8 requires an NRSRO to have policies and procedures reasonably designed to ensure that:






  • The procedures and methodologies the NRSRO uses to determine credit ratings are approved by its board of directors or a body performing a function similar to that of a board of directors.






  • The procedures and methodologies the NRSRO uses to determine credit ratings are developed and modified in accordance with the policies and procedures of the NRSRO.






  • Material changes to the procedures and methodologies the NRSRO uses to determine credit ratings are:


    • Applied consistently to all current and future credit ratings to which the changed procedures or methodologies apply.



    • To the extent that the changes are to surveillance or monitoring procedures and methodologies, applied to current credit ratings to which the changed procedures or methodologies apply within a reasonable period of time, taking into consideration the number of credit ratings impacted, the complexity of the procedures and methodologies used to determine the credit ratings, and the type of obligor, security, or money market instrument being rated.





  • The NRSRO promptly publishes on an easily accessible portion of its corporate Internet website:






  • Material changes to the procedures and methodologies the NRSRO uses to determine credit ratings, the reason for the changes, and the likelihood the changes will result in changes to any current credit ratings.



  • Notice of the existence of a significant error identified in a procedure or methodology the NRSRO uses to determine credit ratings that may result in a change to current credit ratings.






  • The NRSRO discloses the version of a credit rating procedure or methodology used with respect to a particular credit rating.





Form and Certifications to Accompany Credit Ratings





The Dodd-Frank Act amended the Exchange Act to provide that the Commission shall require, by rule, NRSROs to disclose with the publication of a credit rating a form containing certain qualitative and quantitative information about the credit rating.  It also requires an NRSRO at the time it produces a credit rating to disclose any certifications from providers of third-party due diligence services with respect to ABS. 





The SEC’s rule amendments require an NRSRO to publish two items when taking certain rating actions: a form containing the quantitative and qualitative information about the credit rating specified in the statute; and any certification of a provider of third-party due diligence services received by the NRSRO that relates to the credit rating.  Under the new amendments, “rating action” includes preliminary credit ratings, initial credit ratings, upgrades and downgrades of credit ratings, and affirmations and withdrawals of credit ratings if they are the result of a review using the NRSRO’s procedures and methodologies for determining credit ratings.





The information that must be disclosed in the form includes:






  • The version of the procedure or methodology used to determine the credit rating.






  • The main assumptions and principles used in constructing the procedures and methodologies used to determine the credit rating.






  • The potential limitations of the credit rating, including the types of risks excluded from the credit rating that the NRSRO does not comment on, including, as applicable, liquidity, market, and other risks.






  • Information on the uncertainty of the credit rating, including information on the reliability, accuracy, and quality of the data relied on in determining the credit rating and a statement relating to the extent to which data essential to the determination of the credit rating were reliable or limited.






  • A description of the types of data about any obligor, issuer, security, or money market instrument that were relied upon for the purpose of determining the credit rating.






  • A statement containing an overall assessment of the quality of information available and considered in determining the credit rating for the obligor, security, or money market instrument, in relation to the quality of information available to the NRSRO in rating similar obligors, securities, or money market instruments.






  • Information relating to conflicts of interest, including whether the NRSRO was paid to determine the credit rating by the obligor being rated or the issuer, underwriter, depositor, or sponsor of the security or money market instrument being rated, or by another person.






  • An explanation or measure of the potential volatility of the credit rating.






  • Information on the content of the credit rating, including, if applicable, the historical performance of the credit rating and the expected probability of default and the expected loss in the event of default.






  • Information on the sensitivity of the credit rating to assumptions made by the NRSRO.






  • If the credit rating is assigned to an ABS, information on the representations, warranties, and enforcement mechanisms available to investors.





Issuer/Underwriter Disclosure of ABS Third-Party Due Diligence Report





The Dodd-Frank Act amended the Exchange Act to require the issuer or underwriter of an ABS to make publicly available the findings and conclusions of any third-party due diligence report obtained by the issuer or underwriter.  New Rule 15Ga-2 requires an issuer or underwriter of an ABS that is to be rated by an NRSRO to furnish Form ABS–15G on the EDGAR system containing the findings and conclusions of any third-party due diligence report obtained by the issuer or underwriter.  The rule applies to both registered and unregistered offerings of ABS.





Certification of ABS Third-Party Due Diligence Provider





The Dodd-Frank Act amended the Exchange Act to require a provider of third-party due diligence services for ABS to provide a written certification to any NRSRO that produces a credit rating to which the services relate and provides that the Commission shall establish the format and content of the written certification.  New Rule 17g-10 requires third-party due diligence providers to use new Form ABS Due Diligence-15E to make the written certification to be provided to the NRSRO.  The form elicits information about the due diligence including a description of the work performed, a summary of the findings and conclusions of the third party, and the identification of any relevant NRSRO due diligence criteria that the third party intended to meet in performing the due diligence.   The amendments require the NRSRO to disclose a certification (if it receives the certification) with each rating action to which the certification relates.





NRSRO Standards of Training, Experience, and Competence





The Dodd-Frank Act provides that the Commission shall issue rules reasonably designed to ensure that NRSRO credit analysts meet standards of training, experience, and competence necessary to produce accurate ratings for the categories of issuers whose securities the person rates and are tested for knowledge of the credit rating process. 





New Rule 17g-9 requires an NRSRO to:






  • Establish, maintain, enforce, and document standards of training, experience, and competence for the individuals it employs to participate in the determination of credit ratings that are reasonably designed to achieve the objective that the NRSRO produces accurate credit ratings in the classes of credit ratings for which the NRSRO is registered.






  • Consider the following when establishing the standards:






  • If the credit rating procedures and methodologies used by the individual involve qualitative analysis, the knowledge necessary to effectively evaluate and process the data relevant to the creditworthiness of the obligor being rated or the issuer of the securities or money market instruments being rated.



  • If the credit rating procedures and methodologies used by the individual involve quantitative analysis, the technical expertise necessary to understand any models and model inputs that are a part of the procedures and methodologies.



  • The classes and subclasses of credit ratings for which the individual participates in determining credit ratings and the factors relevant to such classes and subclasses, including the geographic location, sector, industry, regulatory and legal framework, and underlying assets applicable to the obligors or issuers in the classes and subclasses.



  • The complexity of the obligors, securities, or money market instruments for which the individual participates in determining credit ratings.






  • Include in the standards:


    • A requirement for periodic testing of the individuals employed by the NRSRO to participate in the determination of credit ratings on their knowledge of the procedures and methodologies used by the NRSRO to determine credit ratings in the classes and subclasses of credit ratings for which the individual participates in determining credit ratings.








  • A requirement that at least one individual with an appropriate level of experience in performing credit analysis, but not less than three years, participates in the determination of a credit rating.





Universal NRSRO Rating Symbols





The Dodd-Frank Act provides that the Commission shall by rule require each NRSRO to establish, maintain, and enforce written policies and procedures with respect to the use of rating symbols.  Paragraph (b) of new Rule 17g-8 requires an NRSRO to have policies and procedures that are reasonably designed to:






  • Assess the probability that an issuer of a security or money market instrument will default, fail to make timely payments, or otherwise not make payments to investors in accordance with the terms of the security or money market instrument.






  • Clearly define each symbol, number, or score in the rating scale used by the NRSRO to denote a credit rating category and notches within a category for each class of credit ratings for which the NRSRO is registered (including subclasses within each class) and to include such definitions in the performance measurement statistics that must be disclosed in Form NRSRO (the NRSRO registration form, which must be up-to-date and publicly disclosed).






  • Apply any symbol, number, or score in a manner that is consistent for all types of obligors, securities, and money market instruments for which the symbol, number, or score is used.








Tuesday, August 26, 2014

SEC Charges Investor Relations Firm Executive With Insider Trading Ahead of News Announcements By Clients




Press Releases





SEC Charges Investor Relations Firm Executive With Insider Trading Ahead of News Announcements By Clients




The Securities and Exchange Commission today charged a director of market intelligence at a Manhattan-based investor relations firm with insider trading ahead of impending news announcements by more than a dozen clients.  The charges were filed against Michael Anthony Dupre Lucarelli, who garnered nearly $1 million in illicit profits.





An SEC investigation and ongoing forensic analysis of Lucarelli’s work computers uncovered that he repeatedly accessed clients’ draft press releases stored on his firm’s computer network prior to public announcements.  The SEC alleges that Lucarelli, who had no legitimate work-related reason to access the draft press releases, routinely purchased stock or call options in advance of favorable news and sold short or bought put options ahead of unfavorable news. 





In a parallel action, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York today announced criminal charges against Lucarelli.





“Employees of investor relations firms have access to sensitive information about their clients, and exploiting that information for personal gain is not an option,” said Andrew M. Calamari, director of the SEC’s New York Regional Office.  





According to the SEC’s complaint filed in federal court in Manhattan, Lucarelli traded in securities belonging to companies that his firm was advising in advance of announcing their earnings or other significant events such as a merger or clinical drug trial result.  Lucarelli began taking a position in a client’s securities in the days immediately preceding the announcement, although in a few instances he began making his purchases weeks in advance.  Lucarelli started divesting himself of his position immediately after the announcement in order to reap instant profits.





The SEC further alleges that Lucarelli attempted to hide his illicit behavior by lying to brokerage firms where he set up his trading accounts.  Lucarelli purposely omitted listing his investor relations firm employment on account-opening applications and instead falsely stated that he was self-employed or retired.





“Lucarelli knew full well that he was prohibited from trading on information contained in draft press releases that had not yet been made public, but he brazenly gave himself a head start on the rest of the investors by trading based on the nonpublic details and exiting his holdings after the news came out,” said Sanjay Wadhwa, senior associate director of the SEC’s New York Regional Office.





The SEC’s complaint charges Lucarelli, who lives in Manhattan, with violating Section 17(a) of the Securities Act of 1933, Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5, and Section 14(e) of the Exchange Act and Rule 14e-3.





The SEC’s investigation, which is continuing, has been conducted by Jorge Tenreiro, Neil Hendelman, and Lara Shalov Mehraban.  The case has been supervised by Mr. Wadhwa.  The SEC appreciates the assistance of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, and Options Regulatory Surveillance Authority.








Saturday, August 23, 2014

California-Based Telecommunications Equipment Firm and Two Former Executives Charged in Revenue Recognition Scheme




Press Releases





California-Based Telecommunications Equipment Firm and Two Former Executives Charged in Revenue Recognition Scheme




The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced charges against a Newport Beach, Calif.-based telecommunications equipment company and two former executives accused of improperly recognizing as revenue more than a million dollars’ worth of inventory that was shipped to a Florida warehouse but not actually sold.





They’re also accused of defrauding an investor from whom they secured a $2 million loan for the company based on misstatements and omissions associated with the inventory shipments.





The SEC’s Enforcement Division alleges that AirTouch Communications Inc., former president and CEO Hideyuki Kanakubo, and former CFO Jerome Kaiser orchestrated a fraudulent revenue recognition scheme that violated Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), which establish that revenue cannot be recognized unless it is “realized or realizable” and “earned.”  When AirTouch reported net revenues of a little more than $1.03 million in its quarterly report for the third quarter of 2012, it included approximately $1.24 million in inventory that had been shipped to a company in Florida that agreed to warehouse AirTouch’s products in anticipation of future sales.  AirTouch’s revenue recognition was improper because the Florida company had not purchased the inventory, and AirTouch had not sold the inventory to any of its customers.  AirTouch would have had zero revenue to report for the quarter if it had not recorded the shipments as purported revenue from the Florida company.





“Kanakubo and Kaiser created a facade of sales activity in AirTouch’s quarterly report to falsely depict a healthy and growing company when in fact it was struggling without any positive revenue,” said Michele Layne, director of the SEC’s Los Angeles Regional Office.  “They also deceptively obtained financing from an investor based on a similar false portrayal of the company’s sales activity.”





According to the SEC’s order instituting an administrative proceeding, AirTouch develops and sells telecommunications equipment, including a product called the U250 SmartLinx that was designed in early 2012 for sale to Mexico’s largest provider of landline telephone services.  Later that year, AirTouch contacted the Florida company about the possibility of it warehousing U250 SmartLinx units for potential future sale to the Mexican entity or other AirTouch customers.  During contract negotiations for the warehousing arrangement, the CEO of the Florida company told Kanakubo that it would not buy the product from AirTouch, but rather warehouse the U250 SmartLinx inventory and provide logistics for eventual delivery to the Mexican entity or other AirTouch customers who purchased the product.  AirTouch shipped approximately $1.24 million of inventory to the Florida company.  Despite not receiving any payment from the Florida company or any commitment from the Mexican entity or any other customer that it would actually buy product, Kanakubo and Kaiser reported the shipped inventory as revenue on AirTouch’s Form 10-Q.  They also signed certifications falsely attesting to the accuracy of the company’s financial results.





The SEC’s Enforcement Division further alleges that Kanakubo and Kaiser made false and misleading statements and omissions to an investor they solicited for a $2 million short-term bridge loan to the company in exchange for a promissory note and a warrant to purchase common stock.  Among other things, Kanakubo falsely told the investor via e-mail that the inventory to be shipped by AirTouch to the Florida company pertained to an existing purchase order from the Mexican entity, and Kaiser did not disclose the existence of the agreement wherein the Florida company agreed merely to warehouse the inventory and provide associated fulfillment and logistics services.  On Oct. 17, 2012, AirTouch received the loan of $2 million from the investor, and two days later Kanakubo approved a $15,000 bonus payment to Kaiser for his work on raising capital.  The same day, Kanakubo authorized a $15,000 payment to himself in connection with unused vacation time. 





According to the SEC’s order, Kanakubo, who lives in Irvine, Calif., and Kaiser, who lives in Chowchilla, Calif., withheld key information about the inventory shipments to the Florida entity from AirTouch’s board of directors and controller as well as its outside independent accountant.





The SEC’s order alleges that AirTouch, Kanakubo, and Kaiser violated the antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws, and asserts that Kaiser’s violations constituted willful conduct.





The SEC’s investigation was conducted by Peter Altman, Rhoda Chang, and Diana Tani of the Los Angeles office.  The SEC’s litigation will be led by Amy Longo, Gary Leung, David VanHavermaat, and Mr. Altman.








Friday, August 22, 2014

Chief Information Officer Thomas Bayer to Leave SEC




Press Releases





Chief Information Officer Thomas Bayer to Leave SEC




The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced that its Chief Information Officer Thomas Bayer is planning to leave the agency in October.



Mr. Bayer has led the SEC’s Office of Information Technology (OIT) since October 2010, overseeing strategy, application development, infrastructure operations and engineering, user support, program management, capital planning, information security, and enterprise architecture. 



Under Mr. Bayer’s leadership, the SEC leveraged cloud-based technologies, enhanced security, standardized its enterprise platforms and dramatically reduced the cost of IT systems while enhancing free public access to the SEC’s more than 21 million corporate filings and other documents. 



“Tom’s leadership and vision have had a tremendous impact that will continue to shape the SEC for years to come,” said SEC Chair Mary Jo White.  “Tom’s legacy will be an SEC that increasingly leverages technology to protect investors and strengthen our markets.”



Mr. Bayer said, “It has been incredibly rewarding to work with so many talented and dedicated professionals in an organization that values, encourages and supports innovation.  I am both proud and humbled to have been a part of this exceptional agency and to support its vital mission.”



The technology improvements implemented by the Office of Information Technology during Mr. Bayer’s tenure significantly reduced operation and maintenance costs while enabling investors and market participants to access public company filings and other SEC information faster and more easily than ever before.  For example, the agency’s website now delivers documents three times faster and requires fewer resources to manage even as traffic more than doubled in the past two years to 35 million requests per day. 



Among key initiatives, Mr. Bayer launched a “Working Smarter” program that helped transform the efficiency and effectiveness of attorneys, accountants, analysts and other staff at the SEC by establishing innovative analytical systems along with automated workflow and data visualization tools.  Mr. Bayer also managed the technology development of the SEC’s Tips, Complaints and Referral (TCR) system and development of tools that put billions of records at the fingertips of SEC examiners, investigators, economists, analysts and other professionals.



In addition, Mr. Bayer established an IT Center of Excellence at the SEC to evaluate emerging technology trends in the capital markets and leverage these innovations to better serve investors. Mr. Bayer also led the implementation of an Enterprise Data Warehouse at the SEC to efficiently intake, store, and analyze 1,000 trillion bytes of data.



Before joining the SEC staff, Mr. Bayer was the Chief Executive Officer at Maris Technology Advisors, where he provided consulting services on technology strategy and program management to banking and financial services clients.  He also served as Chief Operations Officer and Chief Technology Officer at Brand Informatics, where he developed data collection, complex data analysis, and predictive data modeling for top financial services companies.  Mr. Bayer previously worked for CapitalOne, Inteliguard Corporation, and Citibank.



Mr. Bayer earned his bachelor’s degree in accounting, finance, and economics at Ohio State University.  He earned his master’s degree from Ohio State’s Fisher College of Business.










Thursday, August 21, 2014

Bank of America Admits Disclosure Failures to Settle SEC Charges




Press Releases





Bank of America Admits Disclosure Failures to Settle SEC Charges




The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced a settlement in which Bank of America admits that it failed to inform investors during the financial crisis about known uncertainties to future income from its exposure to repurchase claims on mortgage loans.





Bank of America also is resolving securities fraud charges that the SEC filed last year related to a residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) offering.





Bank of America has agreed to settle the two cases by paying $245 million as part of a major global settlement announced today by the U.S. Department of Justice in which Bank of America will pay $16.65 billion to resolve various investigations involving violations of laws regulated by other federal agencies.





“Bank of America failed to make accurate and complete disclosure to investors and its illegal conduct kept investors in the dark,” said Rhea Kemble Dignam, regional director of the SEC’s Atlanta office.  “Requiring an admission of wrongdoing as part of Bank of America’s agreement to resolve the SEC charges filed today provides an additional level of accountability for its violation of the federal securities laws.”





In new charges filed by the SEC today in a settled administrative proceeding, Bank of America admits that it failed to disclose known uncertainties regarding potential increased costs related to mortgage loan repurchase claims stemming from more than $2 trillion in residential mortgage sales from 2004 through the first half of 2008 by the bank and certain companies it acquired.  In connection with these sales, Bank of America made contractual representations and warranties about the underlying quality of the mortgage loans and underwriting.  In the event that a loan buyer claimed a breach of a representation or warranty, the bank could be obligated to repurchase the related mortgage loan at its outstanding unpaid principal balance. 





According to the SEC’s order, Regulation S-K requires public companies like Bank of America to disclose in the Management’s Discussion & Analysis (MD&A) section of its periodic financial reports any known uncertainties that it reasonably expects will have a material impact on income from continuing operations.  Bank of America failed to adhere to these requirements by not disclosing known uncertainties about the future costs of mortgage repurchase claims when filing its financial reports for the second and third quarters of 2009.  These uncertainties included whether Fannie Mae, a mortgage loan purchaser from Bank of America, had changed its repurchase claim practices after being put into conservatorship, the future volume of repurchase claims from Fannie Mae and certain monoline insurance companies that provided credit enhancements on certain mortgage loan sales, and the ultimate resolution of certain claims that Bank of America had reviewed and refused to repurchase but had not been rescinded by the claimants.





In the SEC’s original case against Bank of America filed in August 2013, the agency alleged that the bank in its own words “shifted the risk” for losses to investors when it failed to disclose that more than 70 percent of the mortgages backing the RMBS offering called BOAMS 2008-A originated through its “wholesale” channel of mortgage brokers unaffiliated with Bank of America entities.  Bank of America knew that such wholesale channel loans – described internally as “toxic waste” – presented vastly greater risks of severe delinquencies, early defaults, underwriting defects, and prepayment.





As part of the global settlement, Bank of America agreed to resolve the SEC’s original case by paying disgorgement of $109.22 million, prejudgment interest of $6.62 million, and a penalty of $109.22 million while consenting to permanent injunctions against violations of Sections 5, 17(a)(2), and 17(a)(3) of the Securities Act of 1933.  The settlement is subject to court approval.  To settle the new case, Bank of America agreed to pay a $20 million penalty while admitting to facts set out in the SEC’s order, which requires Bank of America to cease and desist from causing any violations and any future violations of Section 13(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rules 12b-20 and 13a-13. 





The SEC’s investigation into Bank of America’s MD&A-related violations was led by Mark A. Troszak, Kristin B. Wilhelm, and Peter J. Diskin in the SEC’s Atlanta office.  The investigation into Bank of America’s RMBS-related violations was led by Mark Eric Harrison and Aaron W. Lipson, and the litigation was led by Ms. Wilhelm with assistance from Mr. Harrison.  The investigations were supervised by Ms. Dignam and William P. Hicks, associate regional director for enforcement in the Atlanta office.  The SEC appreciates the assistance of the Justice Department and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of North Carolina.








Tuesday, August 19, 2014

SEC Announces Municipal Advisor Exam Initiative




Press Releases





SEC Announces Municipal Advisor Exam Initiative




The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced that its Office of Compliance Inspections and Examinations (OCIE) is launching an examination initiative directed at newly regulated municipal advisors.





SEC rules that took effect on July 1 generally require municipal advisors to register with the SEC through the SEC’s EDGAR system under the final registration process during a four-month phase-in period by October 31.  The examinations are designed to establish a presence with the newly regulated municipal advisors.  Over the next two years, OCIE plans to examine a significant percentage of these advisors using an approach that focuses on identified risks.  Areas targeted for scrutiny may include the municipal advisor’s compliance with its fiduciary duty to its municipal entity clients, books and recordkeeping obligations, disclosure, fair dealing, supervision, and employee qualifications and training. 





Additional details about the examinations are available in a letter released today.





“The municipal advisor examination initiative will focus on the areas that are most important to protecting issuers, investors, and municipal taxpayers,” said Kevin Goodman, national associate director of OCIE’s broker-dealer examination program. “We also will promote compliance by engaging these new municipal advisor registrants through outreach.” 





John Cross, director of the SEC’s Office of Municipal Securities, added, “The Office of Municipal Securities is committed to the protection of municipal issuers and investors.  We look forward to continuing to collaborate with OCIE to support this municipal advisor examination initiative and work closely with other market participants to ensure effective implementation of this important new regulatory regime for municipal advisors.”





The SEC is working with the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board (MSRB) and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) to facilitate a coordinated approach to oversight of municipal advisors.  OCIE will examine municipal advisors for compliance with applicable SEC rules and applicable final MSRB rules once the MSRB rules are approved by the SEC and become effective.





Starting later this year, OCIE in coordination with FINRA and the MSRB will hold a Compliance Outreach Program for newly regulated municipal advisors where they will learn more about the examination process and their obligations under the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act and related rules.








Monday, August 18, 2014

SEC Charges Former Bank Executive and Friend With Insider Trading Ahead of Acquisition




Press Releases





SEC Charges Former Bank Executive and Friend With Insider Trading Ahead of Acquisition




The Securities and Exchange Commission today charged a former bank executive in Massachusetts and his friend with insider trading in advance of the bank’s acquisition of another financial institution.





The SEC alleges that Patrick O’Neill, then a senior vice president at Eastern Bank, learned through his job responsibilities that his employer was planning to acquire Wainwright Bank & Trust Company.  O’Neill tipped Robert H. Bray, a fellow golfer with whom he socialized at a local country club.  In the two weeks preceding a public announcement about the planned acquisition, Bray sold his shares in other stocks to accumulate funds he used to purchase Wainwright securities.  Bray had never previously purchased Wainwright stock.  After the public announcement of the acquisition caused Wainwright’s stock price to increase nearly 100 percent, Bray sold all of his shares during the next few months for nearly $300,000 in illicit profits.





According to the SEC’s complaint filed in federal court in Boston, regulators began requesting information from Eastern Bank and others about trading in Wainwright stock a few months after the trades occurred, and O’Neill quit his job at Eastern Bank rather than respond to such inquiries.  O’Neill and Bray each were subpoenaed to testify in the SEC’s investigation but asserted their Fifth Amendment privileges against self-incrimination for every question asked of them, including whether they know one another.





“Country clubs or similar venues may give people a false sense of security that leads them to think they can get away with trading on unlawful stock tips,” said Paul G. Levenson, director of the SEC’s Boston Regional Office. “But as in any social setting, people who trade securities based on confidential information they receive are taking a huge risk that their illegal tipping and trading will be identified by the SEC.”





In a parallel action, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts today announced criminal charges against O’Neill.





The SEC’s complaint charges O’Neill, who lives in Belmont, Mass., and Bray, who lives in Cambridge, Mass., with violating the antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws and the SEC’s antifraud rule.  The complaint seeks disgorgement of ill-gotten gains plus interest and financial penalties as well as permanent injunctions against future violations of the antifraud provisions.





The SEC’s investigation was conducted by J. Lauchlan Wash of the Boston Regional Office and David London and Michele Perillo of the Enforcement Division’s Market Abuse Unit.  The SEC’s litigation will be led by Mr. London and Mr. Wash.  The SEC appreciates the assistance of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts, the Boston field office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.








Sunday, August 17, 2014

SEC Charges Atlanta-Based Accountant With Insider Trading on Confidential Information From Client




Press Releases





SEC Charges Atlanta-Based Accountant With Insider Trading on Confidential Information From Client




The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced charges against an accounting firm partner in Atlanta for insider trading in the stock of a restaurant company based on confidential information he learned from a client on the board of directors who came to him for tax advice in advance of a tender offer announcement.





SEC investigators also identified and charged three other traders who traded illegally on tips from the accountant.  The traders were discovered by comparing trading records from stock exchanges with names on the accountant’s client list.





The SEC alleges that Donald S. Toth disregarded his fiduciary duty to a client when he illicitly purchased stock in O’Charley’s Inc. – which operates or franchises restaurants under the brands O’Charley’s, Ninety Nine Restaurant, and Stoney River Legendary Steaks – after the client revealed to him in a tax-planning meeting that Fidelity National Financial was planning to purchase the company.  Toth contacted his financial advisor within the hour after this meeting with the O’Charley’s board member and began making plans to purchase 5,000 shares of O’Charley’s stock.  Toth also tipped two other clients, James A. Nash and Blair G. Schlossberg.  Nash purchased 10,000 shares and tipped others who separately traded.  Schlossberg tipped his business partner Moshe Manoah and they jointly invested in O’Charley’s stock using a brokerage account held in the name of Manoah’s wife. 





According to the SEC’s complaints filed against Toth, Nash, Schlossberg, and Manoah, when the tender offer was publicly announced approximately two months later, the price of O’Charley’s stock closed 42 percent higher than the previous trading day.  The insider trading activity garnered illegal profits of more than $160,000. 





The four have agreed to pay a combined total of more than $420,000 to settle the SEC’s charges.





“As an accountant, Toth had a duty to keep confidential the information shared by his client for tax-planning purposes, but instead he misused it for personal investments and provided the details to other clients for their misuse,” said William P. Hicks, associate director of enforcement in the SEC’s Atlanta Regional Office. 





The SEC’s complaints were filed against Toth and Nash yesterday in federal court in Atlanta and against Schlossberg and Manoah today in federal court in Tampa, Fla.  They are charged with violating Sections 10(b) and 14(e) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rules 10b-5 and 14e-3.  Without admitting or denying the allegations, they consented to the entry of judgments permanently enjoining them from violating these provisions of the securities laws.  The settlements are subject to court approval.





Toth, who lives in Atlanta, agreed to pay disgorgement of $19,036.00 in trading profits plus prejudgment interest of $1,224.09 and a penalty of $103,935.50 for a total of $124,195.59.





Nash, who lives in Buford, Ga., agreed to pay disgorgement of $52,500.00 – which represents his own trading profits and those of others who he tipped – plus prejudgment interest of $3,375.96 and a penalty of $52,500.00 for a total of $108.375.96.





Schlossberg, who lives in Holmes Beach, Fla., agreed to pay disgorgement of $46,358.50 in trading profits plus prejudgment interest of $2,981.02 and a penalty of $46,358.50 for a total of $95,698.02.





Manoah, who lives in Davie, Fla., agreed to pay disgorgement of $46,358.50 in trading profits plus prejudgment interest of $2,981.02 and a penalty of $46,358.50 for a total of $95,698.02.





The SEC’s investigation was conducted by Elizabeth P. Skola with assistance from Aaron W. Lipson and Robert Schroeder in the Atlanta Regional Office.  The SEC appreciates the assistance of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.








Saturday, August 16, 2014

SEC Announces Charges in Houston-Based Scheme Touting Technology to End Fracking




Press Releases





SEC Announces Charges in Houston-Based Scheme Touting Technology to End Fracking




The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced charges against a Houston-based penny stock company and four individuals behind a pump-and-dump scheme that misled investors to believe the company was on the brink of developing revolutionary technology to enable environmentally friendly oil-and-gas production.





The SEC alleges that Andrew I. Farmer orchestrated the scheme by creating a shell company called Chimera Energy, secretly obtaining control of all shares issued in an initial public offering (IPO) in late 2011, and launching an aggressive promotional campaign midway through 2012 to hype the stock to investors.  Chimera Energy issued around three dozen press releases in a two-month period about its supposed licensing and development of technology to extract shale oil without the perceived environmental impact of hydraulic fracturing known as fracking.  However, Chimera Energy did not actually license or even possess the technology it touted and had not achieved the claimed results in commercially developing it.  While the stock was being pumped by the false claims, entities controlled by Farmer dumped more than 6 million shares on the public markets for illicit proceeds of more than $4.5 million.





The SEC suspended trading in Chimera Energy stock in 2012 and prevented Farmer and his associates from dumping additional shares or misleading new investors into their scheme.





In addition to Chimera Energy and Farmer, the SEC’s complaint charges a pair of figurehead CEOs installed by Farmer.  The SEC alleges that Charles E. Grob Jr. and Baldemar Rios approved the misleading press releases and operated Chimera Energy at the minimum level necessary to lend the company a veneer of legitimacy while concealing Farmer’s involvement altogether.  The SEC’s complaint also charges Carolyn Austin with helping Farmer profit from his scheme by dumping shares of Chimera Energy stock in the midst of the promotional efforts.





“Farmer and his accomplices secretly rigged the market for Chimera Energy stock and illegally profited by exaggerating the company’s capabilities and technology,” said David Woodcock, director of the SEC’s Fort Worth Regional Office.  “They seized on fracking as a topic of public discourse and aggressively touted an entirely fictitious business to attract unwitting investors.” 





According to the SEC’s complaint filed yesterday in federal court in Houston, Farmer obtained control of all 5 million shares of Chimera Energy stock issued in the IPO by disguising his ownership through the use of nominee shareholders.  Farmer’s name and the nature of his control over the company were not disclosed to investors in any of Chimera Energy’s public filings.  Following the IPO, Farmer directed the press release barrage along with an Internet advertising campaign designed to increase investor awareness of Chimera Energy’s claims.  The initial press release issued by the company on July 30, 2012, sported the headline: CHMR Unveils Breakthrough Shale Oil Extraction Method to Safely and Effectively Replace Hydraulic Fracturing.





The SEC alleges that Chimera Energy disclosed in public filings that an entity named China Inland had granted the company an “exclusive license to develop and commercialize cutting edge technologies related to Non-Hydraulic Extraction.”  The technology that China Inland purportedly licensed to Chimera Energy was described as an “environmentally friendly oil & gas extraction procedure for shale to replace hydraulic fracturing.”  The SEC’s investigation found that the purported acquisition of a license to develop such technology and the license agreement itself are entirely fictitious.  No legitimate entity known as China Inland even exists. 





The SEC’s complaint charges Chimera Energy, Farmer, Grob, Rios, and Austin with securities fraud, registration violations, and reporting violations.  The SEC seeks permanent injunctions, disgorgement with prejudgment interest and financial penalties, penny stock bars, and officer-and-director bars.





The SEC’s investigation, which is continuing, has been conducted by Nikolay Vydashenko and Eric Werner in the Fort Worth Regional Office.  The SEC’s litigation will be led by Matthew Gulde and Mr. Vydashenko.  The SEC appreciates the assistance of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.










Friday, August 15, 2014

Robert Keyes, Senior Officer in New York Regional Office, to Retire After Nearly 22 Years of Federal Service




Press Releases





Robert Keyes, Senior Officer in New York Regional Office, to Retire After Nearly 22 Years of Federal Service




The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced that Robert J. Keyes, a senior officer in the New York Regional Office, will retire at the end of this month following 22 years of federal service, including the past 18 at the SEC.





Mr. Keyes has been serving as the associate regional director and chief of regional office operations in the New York office since 2010, when he was promoted to the newly created position to help improve the efficiency of the office.  He has advised the regional director and other senior officers on a broad range of operational management issues including budgeting, collections and distributions, and the handling of tips, complaints, and referrals.  Mr. Keyes has particularly helped increase the New York office’s effectiveness in managing its heavy enforcement and examination caseload while establishing a deeper collaboration between its enforcement and exam efforts.





“Rob’s pioneering work has significantly improved the way we manage our office, and his efforts have substantially influenced how other regional offices operate as well,” said Andrew M. Calamari, director of the SEC’s New York Regional Office.  “Rob has helped transform the way that we do our work, and he will be sorely missed.”





Mr. Keyes also has supervised the assistant regional directors for the New York office’s enforcement accountants and enforcement investigators as well as an assistant regional director charged with oversight of regional market risks.  He has fostered substantial outreach to fellow law enforcement at the federal, state, and local levels as well as other regulators and the self-regulatory organizations.  Mr. Keyes also supervises the office’s administrative, information technology, and records management functions.  He has served as a mentor to professionals throughout the SEC, and has been unwaveringly supportive of diversity events in the New York office.





“It has been a privilege to serve the American public while working with the talented SEC staff in New York, Washington D.C., and regional offices around the country,” said Mr. Keyes.  “As I embark on a new and exciting phase of my life, I know I will recall with admiration and pride the people at this agency and their dedication to the SEC’s important mission.”





Mr. Keyes arrived at the SEC in 1996 and worked in the agency’s Washington D.C. headquarters for his first six years with the agency, primarily in the Division of Enforcement but also for a period in the Office of International Affairs.  He moved to the New York office in 2002 and became a branch chief in 2004 and an assistant regional director in 2005.  Mr. Keyes worked on and supervised a number of enforcement cases, including matters involving insider trading, Ponzi schemes, and financial reporting fraud.  His leadership on one particular fraud case helped lead to the return to investors of approximately $200 million that wrongdoers had concealed in a foreign bank.





The other federal service performed by Mr. Keyes occurred during a four-year period when he served as a deputy clerk at the federal courts in Washington D.C. before and while attending law school.





Before joining the SEC staff, Mr. Keyes was a partner in the law firm of Comey Boyd & Luskin in Washington.  Earlier in his career, Mr. Keyes was an associate at the law firm of Pettit & Martin in San Francisco.  He received his B.A. degree from St. Mary’s Seminary and University in Baltimore in 1974, his M.Div. from the University of St. Michael’s College in Toronto in 1977, and his J.D. degree cum laude from Georgetown University Law Center in 1986.