On Monday, The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) said that it would give firms greater flexibility in administering agents working remotely and in migrating staff to transitory areas. The regulator also said it would consider granting increases for firms that need more opportunity to react to requests and document cutoff times or examinations.
Financial Professionals Working Remotely Equals Compliance Risk
In reaction to the appearance of the pandemic coronavirus, some financial consulting corporations are telling their employees to work from home. Market unpredictability, working remotely -- and the greater cybersecurity openness introduced by doing so -- together take firms into a very high zone of vulnerability.
Market Volatility Will Expose Broker Misconduct
Banned Broker Questions Right to Bar Him
Non-Traditional ETFs Can Still Wreak Havoc in Investment Accounts
Phony Certificate of Deposit Scam Costs Investors More Than $25 Million
Banned Brokers Still Sell Insurance
Investors Lose Money in Non-Traditional ETFs
Financial oversight experts are scrutinizing non-traditional Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) in the midst of an outcry from investors who have lost millions of dollars in the alternative investments. Moreover, investment fraud lawyers have launched litigation on behalf of investors who may have lost cash due to brokers recommending the risky ETFs.
Massive Fraud Rocks Pennsylvania Mennonite Community
On Friday, Federal prosecutors announced that a Berks County accountant has been charged with one of the greatest Ponzi schemes in the history of the Pennsylvania.
U.S. Attorney William McSwain disclosed that Philip Elvin Riehl, 68, of Bethel Township, Berks County, PA was charged with conspiracy to convey securities fraud, wire fraud and similar offences. Investigators assert Riehl's scheme targeted hundreds of Mennonite and Amish religious people in and outside Pennsylvania over 10 years and profited $60 million.