Share
Email This Page
add comment
Print

Wyatt reports: "Even as the Securities and Exchange Commission has stepped up its investigations of Wall Street in the last decade, the agency has repeatedly allowed the biggest firms to avoid punishments specifically meant to apply to fraud cases."

JPMorgan Chase bank building in Lower Manhattan. (photo: AP)
JPMorgan Chase bank building in Lower Manhattan. (photo: AP)



The SEC Is Letting Large Banks Off

By Edward Wyatt, The New York Times

03 February 12

 

ven as the Securities and Exchange Commission has stepped up its investigations of Wall Street in the last decade, the agency has repeatedly allowed the biggest firms to avoid punishments specifically meant to apply to fraud cases.

By granting exemptions to laws and regulations that act as a deterrent to securities fraud, the S.E.C. has let financial giants like JPMorganChase, Goldman Sachs and Bank of America continue to have advantages reserved for the most dependable companies, making it easier for them to raise money from investors, for example, and to avoid liability from lawsuits if their financial forecasts turn out to be wrong.

An analysis by The New York Times of S.E.C. investigations over the last decade found nearly 350 instances where the agency has given big Wall Street institutions and other financial companies a pass on those or other sanctions. Those instances also include waivers permitting firms to underwrite certain stock and bond sales and manage mutual fund portfolios.

JPMorganChase, for example, has settled six fraud cases in the last 13 years, including one with a $228 million settlement last summer, but it has obtained at least 22 waivers, in part by arguing that it has "a strong record of compliance with securities laws." Bank of America and Merrill Lynch, which merged in 2009, have settled 15 fraud cases and received at least 39 waivers.

Only about a dozen companies - Dell, General Electric and United Rentals among them - have felt the full force of the law after issuing misleading information about their businesses. Citigroup was the only major Wall Street bank among them. In 11 years, it settled six fraud cases and received 25 waivers before it lost most of its privileges in 2010.

By granting those waivers, the S.E.C. allowed Wall Street firms to have powerful advantages, securities experts and former regulators say. The institutions remained protected under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, which makes it easier to avoid class-action shareholder lawsuits.

And the companies continue to use rules that let them instantly raise money publicly, without waiting weeks for government approvals. Without the waivers, the companies could not move as quickly as rivals that had not settled fraud charges to sell stocks or bonds when market conditions were most favorable.

Other waivers allowed Wall Street firms that had settled fraud or lesser charges to continue managing mutual funds and to help small, private companies raise money from investors - two types of business from which they otherwise would be excluded.

"The ramifications of losing those exemptions are enormous to these firms," David S. Ruder, a former S.E.C. chairman, said in an interview. Without the waivers, agreeing to settle charges of securities fraud "might have vast repercussions affecting the ability of a firm to continue to stay in business," he said.

S.E.C. officials say that they grant the waivers to keep stock and bond markets open to companies with legitimate capital-raising needs. Ensuring such access is as important to its mission as protecting investors, regulators said.

The agency usually revokes the privileges when a case involves false or misleading statements about a company's own business. It does not do so when the commission has charged a Wall Street firm with lying about, say, a specific mortgage security that it created and is selling to investors, a charge Goldman Sachs settled in 2010. Different parts of the company - corporate officers versus a sales force, for example - are responsible for different types of statements, officials say.

"The purpose of taking away this simplified path to capital is to protect investors, not to punish a company," said Meredith B. Cross, the S.E.C.'s corporation finance director, referring to the fast-track offering privilege. "You're not seeing the times that waivers aren't being granted, because the companies don't ask when they know the answer will be no."

Others, however, argue that the pattern is another example of the government being too soft on Wall Street as it has become a much larger part of the economy in recent decades.

President Obama, in his State of the Union address, asked Congress last week for tougher laws that make "the penalties for fraud count." Federal judges in New York and Wisconsin recently criticized the S.E.C. for its habit of settling cases by allowing companies to promise not to violate the law in the future.

The commission has frequently turned the other cheek when the companies again settle similar fraud cases. S.E.C. officials have defended that practice by saying they do not have the resources to take cases to court rather than settle. They recently asked Congress to toughen laws and to raise financial penalties for fraud violations.

But the repeated granting of waivers suggests that the agency does in fact have tools it often does not use, critics say. Close to half of the waivers went to repeat offenders - Wall Street firms that had settled previous fraud charges by agreeing never again to violate the very laws that the S.E.C. was now saying that they had broken.

Senator Charles E. Grassley, an Iowa Republican who serves on committees that oversee the S.E.C., said he was baffled that the agency had recently asked Congress for more enforcement powers when it had ceded much of the power it already had.

"It's really hard to see why the S.E.C. isn't using all of its weapons to deter fraud," he said. "It makes already weak punishment even weaker by waiving the regulations that impose significant consequences on the companies that settle fraud charges. No wonder recidivism is such a problem."

The Times analysis found 11 instances where companies that had settled fraud cases had actually lost the special privilege for fast-track stock or bond offerings, versus 49 times that the S.E.C. granted waivers from the punishment to Wall Street firms since 2005. The analysis counted 91 waivers since 2000 granting immunity from lawsuits, and 204 waivers related to raising money for small companies and managing mutual funds.

The S.E.C. does not maintain a central database of how many companies lose special status or are denied waivers. Its records of granted waivers are scattered across several databases on its Web site.

JPMorganChase is among the big Wall Street firms that have been granted multiple waivers with nearly every settlement of S.E.C. fraud charges. Last July, it agreed to pay $228 million to settle civil and criminal charges that it cheated cities and towns by rigging bids with other Wall Street firms to invest the money raised by several municipalities for capital projects.

JPMorgan received three waivers related to that case for privileges that it otherwise would have lost. But the S.E.C. said the company's fraudulent actions didn't involve misleading investors about JPMorgan's business.

"That distinction doesn't do it for me," said Richard W. Painter, a corporate law professor at the University of Minnesota and the co-author of a casebook on securities litigation and enforcement. "If a company has trouble telling the truth to investors in one batch of securities it is underwriting, I would not have confidence that it would tell the truth to investors about its own securities."

Despite six securities fraud settlements in 13 years, JPMorgan rarely if ever lost any special privileges. It has been awarded at least 22 waivers since 2003, with most of its S.E.C. settlements generating two or more. In seeking the reprieves, lawyers for JPMorgan stated in letters to the S.E.C. that it should grant a waiver because the company has "a strong record of compliance with the securities laws." The company declined to comment for this article.

Citigroup is one of the rare Wall Street giants that has lost significant privileges recently. In October 2010, the bank paid $75 million to settle charges that it misled investors in 2007 about the size of its holdings of assets backed by subprime mortgages. The company told investors that it had about $13 billion of those risky investments on its balance sheet, when it really had more than $50 billion, according to the S.E.C.

Because those accusations involved Citigroup's statements about its own financial well-being, the company lost for three years the ability to insulate itself from lawsuits over mistaken predictions about its business. It also lost, for the same three years, the exemption for "well-known seasoned issuers," which allowed it to quickly raise capital in the securities markets. As a result, Citigroup has had to file thousands of pages of new documents with the S.E.C. and wait weeks for the agency's approvals to make itself eligible to sell stocks, bonds and other securities to the public.

Citigroup declined to comment on whether the sanctions have had any effect on its business.

Wrangling over waivers is an important part of the negotiations when companies accused of fraud discuss a settlement with the S.E.C., and sometimes it can involve a form of corporate plea bargaining to a lesser charge.

In 2009, the S.E.C. was negotiating with Bank of America over charges that it had failed to disclose to shareholders that billions of dollars in bonuses were being paid to Merrill Lynch executives just as Bank of America was bailing out the firm.

Because the S.E.C. charges involved fraudulent statements by both Bank of America and Merrill Lynch about their financial status, the merged company was in danger of losing its special privileges for both offerings and forecasts. According to a report by the then-S.E.C. inspector general, H. David Kotz, the waiver issue "was of such importance to B. of A. that the settlement became contingent on B. of A.'s receipt of the waiver."

Bank of America apparently won the argument but would not comment on it. It settled the case by agreeing to a $150 million payment. The S.E.C., however, decided not to charge the bank with fraud, which could have endangered the bank's special status. Instead, the S.E.C. charged Bank of America with violating disclosure rules for shareholder materials and proxies, and Bank of America kept its privileges.

S.E.C. officials said they would not discuss how they arrived at specific settlements and declined to comment on the Citigroup, JP Morgan or Bank of America settlements.

Thomas Lee Hazen, a securities law professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said that it is understandable that the S.E.C. might relax some potential sanctions on Wall Street firms - where it appears that lessons have been learned, or when a fine is thought to be sufficient punishment.

"The ripple effect of having a sanction that could shut them down or could seriously impede a company's operations would seriously affect a lot of innocent customers," he said. "It's a very fine balance. That's not to say that the S.E.C. is striking the balance properly. That is in the eye of the beholder."

 

Comments  

We are concerned about a recent drift towards vitriol in the RSN Reader comments section. There is a fine line between moderation and censorship. No one likes a harsh or confrontational forum atmosphere. At the same time everyone wants to be able to express themselves freely. We'll start by encouraging good judgment. If that doesn't work we'll have to ramp up the moderation.

General guidelines: Avoid personal attacks on other forum members; Avoid remarks that are ethnically derogatory; Do not advocate violence, or any illegal activity.

Remember that making the world better begins with responsible action.

- The RSN Team

 
+11 # Tippitc 2012-02-03 13:48
The government investigating the crooks on Wall Street is redundant - Wall Street is the government!! They might go to bed one night without their supper and then it is business as usual. This means the American people get screwed AGAIN and they hope we won't notice!!
 
 
+6 # alifestudent 2012-02-03 13:53
Who knew this could happen ???
The Corporate Criminal Class has awakened us.It is time to take action..... Sign the petition driving up the counter, and hold the candidates feet to the fire.
sign the petition at www.movetoamend.org
 
 
+6 # BenECoyote 2012-02-03 15:28
This is ridiculous: the SEC saying that allowing wall street to commit fraud in order to make money is as important as protecting investors from fraud, is sort of like a cop who lets a grifter run a 3 card monty racket on his beat because helping grifters make money is as important as protecting folks from being cheated by grifters.
After all the Bush and Obama bailouts of corporate America, and all the millions and millions of bonuses those bailouts paid for, and all the bailout money that has been funneled back into Democratic and Republican campaign coffers, is it any wonder there is still fraud in Wall street. Congress giving us new laws won't help if the president isn't having his folks enforce the ones that are already in place. It is time for Americans to stand up and say enough is enough. We need to end the corporate buy out of our government, and Rocky Anderson will do that. http://www.voterocky.org/?recruiter_id=57374
 
 
+7 # CandH 2012-02-03 16:48
AND:

"Imagine a world in which a man who is repeatedly investigated for a string of serious crimes, but never prosecuted, has his slate wiped clean every time the cops fail to make a case. [...]

That, it now appears, is exactly how the SEC has been treating the WS criminals who cratered the global economy a few years back. For the past two decades, according to a whistle-blower at the SEC who recently came forward to Congress, the agency has been systematically destroying records of its preliminary investigations once they are closed. By whitewashing the files of some of the nation's worst financial criminals, the SEC has kept an entire generation of federal investigators in the dark about past inquiries into insider trading, fraud and market manipulation against companies like Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank and AIG. With a few strokes of the keyboard, the evidence gathered during thousands of investigations – "18,000 ... including Madoff," as one high-ranking SEC official put it during a panicked meeting about the destruction – has apparently disappeared forever into the wormhole of history." http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/is-the-sec-covering-up-wall-street-crimes-20110817#ixzz1lMyBBuER

Damn, I miss the old Taibbi...
 
 
+10 # Rick Levy 2012-02-03 17:48
It boggles the mind to see on TV the obviously non-affluent crowds who are one paycheck away from the street themselves cheering the likes of Romney.
 
 
+2 # grouchy 2012-02-03 22:32
Case after case after case here just illustrate how wall street actually owns us--or do explain it some other way.
 
 
+1 # KittatinyHawk 2012-02-04 14:38
It boggles me that none of you here has ever written to an agency and gotten the form letter of how sorry they are to inform you but although you have a valid problem, it is not in their jurisdiction to do anything...hands tied, blah blah
Agencies should be reviewed, dismantled. We keep making more Committee, more Agencies so someone else can get paid off, their family gets job, their friends get job. in meantime, Agency usually does nothing, most do not even know Laws they are supposed to upkeep. Agencies like Wildlife, Environmental are as good as their Leadership.
Out West the Wildlife, are allowing Buffalo, Wolves,Horses, too many to mention here, to be killed daily for Cattle. Diseased ridden MacDonalds, Burger King, Supermarkets beef. You are eating GMO garbage food. Even Cows in Amish Pa were eating animal guts, dead animals. Cows have no stomach to digest this but that is what these farmer feed them, pesticide ridden food, GMO agent orange food and land is allowed to be Sewaged. Some cases the Sewage was not treated.
So Boggle away, I cannot even begin to blame Sheeple for doing this, you all do. Right now your animals are eating food high in content of ecoli, salmonella which you, your family are exposed to. FDA does not make companies clean out VATS after finding problems.
Your OJ has just bee diagnosed with Pesticides the USA Bans...FDA says no problem, it will run thru. Again no clean up. Bon apetit, thank Agency
 

THE NEW STREAMLINED RSN LOGIN PROCESS: Register once, then login and you are ready to comment. All you need is a Username and a Password of your choosing and you are free to comment whenever you like! Welcome to the Reader Supported News community.