September 03, 2013
from
SEC Website
SEC Enforcement Actions
Addressing Misconduct That Led to or Arose From the
Financial Crisis
Key Statistics (through September 1,
2013)
Concealed from investors
risks, terms, and improper pricing
...in CDOs
and other complex structured products
-
Citigroup - SEC charged
Citigroup's principal U.S. broker-dealer subsidiary with misleading
investors about a $1 billion CDO tied to the housing market in which
Citigroup bet against investors as the housing market showed signs
of distress. The proposed settlement would require a payment of $285
million by Citigroup that would be returned to harmed investors.
(10/19/11)
-
Commonwealth Advisors - SEC
charged Walter A. Morales and his Baton Rouge-based firm with
defrauding investors by hiding millions of dollars in losses
suffered during the financial crisis from investments tied to
residential mortgage-backed securities. (11/9/12)
-
Goldman Sachs - SEC charged
the firm with defrauding investors by misstating and omitting key
facts about a financial product tied to subprime mortgages as the
U.S. housing market was beginning to falter. (4/16/10)
-
Goldman Settled Charges
- Firm agreed to pay record penalty in $550 million settlement
and reform its business practices. (7/15/10)
-
Fabrice Tourre Found
Liable - A jury found former Goldman
Sachs Vice President Fabrice Tourre liable for fraud relating to
his role in a synthetic collateralized debt obligation tied to
subprime residential mortgages. (8/1/13)
-
ICP Asset Management - SEC
charged ICP and its president with fraudulently managing investment
products tied to the mortgage markets as they came under pressure.
(6/21/10)
-
J.P. Morgan Securities -
SEC charged the firm with misleading investors in a complex mortgage
securities transaction just as the housing market was starting to
plummet. J.P. Morgan agreed to pay $153.6 million in a settlement
that enables harmed investors to receive all of their money back.
(6/21/11)
-
Mizuho Securities USA - SEC
charged the U.S. subsidiary of Japan-based Mizuho Financial Group
and three former employees with misleading investors in a CDO by
using “dummy assets” to inflate the deal’s credit ratings while the
housing market was showing signs of severe stress. The SEC also
charged the deal’s collateral manager and portfolio manager. Mizuho
agreed to pay $127.5 million to settle the charges, and the others
also agreed to settlements. (7/18/12)
-
Stifel, Nicolaus & Co. -
SEC charged the St. Louis-based brokerage firm and a former senior
executive with defrauding five Wisconsin school districts by selling
them unsuitably risky and complex investments. (8/10/11)
-
Wachovia Capital Markets -
SEC charged the firm with misconduct in the sale of two CDOs tied to
the performance of residential mortgage-backed securities as the
housing market was beginning to show signs of distress. Firm settled
charges by paying more than $11 million, much of which will be
returned to harmed investors. (4/5/11)
-
Wells Fargo - SEC charged
Wells Fargo's brokerage firm and a former vice president for selling
investments tied to mortgage-backed securities without fully
understanding their complexity or disclosing the risks to investors.
Wells Fargo agreed to pay more than $6.5 million to settle the
charges. (8/14/12)
-
UBS Securities - SEC
charged UBS Securities with violating securities laws while
structuring and marketing a CDO by failing to disclose that it
retained millions of dollars in upfront cash that should have gone
to the CDO for the benefit of its investors. UBS agreed to pay
nearly $50 million to settle the SEC's charges. (8/6/13)
Made misleading disclosures
to investors
...about mortgage-related risks and exposure
-
American Home Mortgage -
SEC charged executives with accounting fraud and misleading
investors about the company's deteriorating financial condition as
the subprime crisis emerged. Former CEO settled charges by paying
$2.45 million and agreeing to five-year officer and director bar.
(4/28/09)
-
BankAtlantic - SEC charged
the holding company for one of Florida's largest banks and CEO Alan
Levan with misleading investors about growing problems in one of its
significant loan portfolios early in the financial crisis. (1/18/12)
-
Bank of America - SEC
charged Bank of America and two subsidiaries with defrauding
investors in an offering of residential mortgage-backed securities
by failing to disclose key risks and misrepresenting facts about the
underlying mortgages. (8/6/13)
-
Citigroup - SEC charged the
company and two executives with misleading investors about exposure
to subprime mortgage assets. Citigroup paid $75 million penalty to
settle charges, and the executives also paid penalties. (7/29/10)
-
Commonwealth Bankshares -
SEC charged three former bank executives in Virginia for
understating millions of dollars in losses and masking the true
health of the bank's loan portfolio at the height of the financial
crisis. (1/9/13)
-
Countrywide - SEC charged
CEO Angelo Mozilo and two other executives with deliberately
misleading investors about significant credit risks taken in efforts
to build and maintain the company's market share. Mozilo also
charged with insider trading. (6/4/09)
-
Credit Suisse Securities (USA)
SEC charged the firm with misleading investors in
offering of residential mortgage-backed securities. Credit Suisse
agreed to pay $120 million to settle the SEC's charges. (11/16/12)
-
Franklin Bank - SEC charged
two top executives with securities fraud for misleading investors
about increasing delinquencies in its single-family mortgage and
residential construction loan portfolios at the height of the
financial crisis. (4/5/12)
-
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
- SEC charged six former top executives of Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac with securities fraud for misleading investors about the extent
of each company's holdings of higher-risk mortgage loans, including
subprime loans. (12/16/11)
-
IndyMac Bancorp - SEC
charged three executives with misleading investors about the
mortgage lender's deteriorating financial condition. (2/11/11)
-
J.P. Morgan Securities -
SEC charged the firm with misleading investors in offerings of
residential mortgage-backed securities. J.P. Morgan Securities
agreed to pay $296.9 million to settle the SEC's charges. (11/16/12)
-
New Century - SEC charged
three executives with misleading investors as the lender's subprime
mortgage business was collapsing. (12/7/09)
-
Option One Mortgage Corp. -
SEC charged the H&R Block subsidiary with misleading investors in
several offerings of subprime residential mortgage-backed securities
by failing to disclose that its financial condition was
significantly deteriorating. The firm agreed to pay $28.2 million to
settle the charges. (4/24/12)
-
Thornburg executives - SEC
charged three executives at formerly one of the nation's largest
mortgage companies with hiding the company's deteriorating financial
condition at the onset of the financial crisis. (3/13/12)
-
TierOne Bank executives -
SEC charged three former bank executives in Nebraska for
participating in a scheme to understate millions of dollars in
losses and mislead investors and federal regulators at the height of
the financial crisis. Two executives settled the charges by paying
penalties and agreeing to officer-and-director bars. (9/25/12)
Concealed the extent of
risky mortgage-related
...and other
investments in mutual funds and other financial products
-
Bear Stearns - SEC charged
two former Bear Stearns Asset Management portfolio managers for
fraudulently misleading investors about the financial state of the
firm's two largest hedge funds and their exposure to subprime
mortgage-backed securities before the collapse of the funds in June
2007. (6/19/08)
-
Charles Schwab - SEC
charged entities and executives with making misleading statements to
investors in marketing a mutual fund heavily invested in
mortgage-backed and other risky securities. The Schwab entities paid
more than $118 million to settle charges. (1/11/11)
-
Evergreen - SEC charged the
firm with overstating the value of a mutual fund invested primarily
in mortgage-backed securities and only selectively telling
shareholders about the fund's valuation problems. Evergreen settled
the charges by paying more than $40 million, most of which was
returned to harmed investors. (6/8/09)
-
Morgan Keegan - SEC charged
the firm and two employees with fraudulently overstating the value
of securities backed by subprime mortgages (4/7/10)
-
OppenheimerFunds - SEC
charged the investment management company and its sales distribution
arm for misleading statements about two of its mutual funds that had
substantial exposure to commercial mortgage-backed securities during
the midst of the credit crisis in late 2008. (6/6/12)
-
Reserve Fund - SEC charged
several entities and individuals who operated the Reserve Primary
Fund for failing to provide key material facts to investors and
trustees about the fund's vulnerability as Lehman Brothers sought
bankruptcy protection. (5/5/09)
-
State Street - SEC charged
the firm with misleading investors about exposure to subprime
investments while selectively disclosing more complete information
to specific investors. State Street agreed to repay investors more
than $300 million to settle the charges. (2/4/10)
-
TD Ameritrade - SEC charged the firm with failing to supervise
representatives who mischaracterized the Reserve Fund as safe as
cash and failed to disclose risks when offering the investment to
customers. Firm settled charges by agreeing to repay $10 million to
certain fund investors. (2/3/11)
Others
-
Aladdin Capital Management
- SEC charged the Connecticut-based investment adviser, its
affiliated broker-dealer, and a former executive with falsely
stating to clients that it had "skin in the game" for two CDOs.
Aladdin and its broker-dealer agreed to pay more than $1.6 million
combined, and the former executive agreed to pay a $50,000 penalty.
(12/17/2012)
-
Bank of America - SEC
charged the company with misleading investors about billions of
dollars in bonuses being paid to Merrill Lynch executives at the
time of its acquisition of the firm, and failing to disclose
extraordinary losses that Merrill sustained. Bank of America paid
$150 million to settle charges. (2/4/10)
-
Brooke Corporation - SEC
charged six executives for misleading investors about the firm's
deteriorating financial condition and for engaging in various
fraudulent schemes designed to conceal the firm's rapidly
deteriorating loan portfolio. Five executives agreed to settlements
including financial penalties and officer and director bars.
(5/4/11)
-
Brookstreet - SEC charged
the firm and its CEO with defrauding customers in its sales of risky
mortgage-backed securities. (12/8/09)
-
Capital One - SEC charged
Capital One Financial Corporation and two senior executives for
understating millions of dollars in auto loan losses incurred during
the months leading into the financial crisis. Capital One agreed to
pay $3.5 million to settle the SEC's charges. The two senior
executives also agreed to pay penalties to settle the claims against
them. (April 24, 2013)
-
Claymore Advisors/Fiduciary Asset Management
- SEC charged two investment advisory firms and two portfolio
managers for failing to adequately inform investors about a
closed-end fund's risky derivative strategies that contributed to
its collapse during the financial crisis. Claymore agreed to
distribute $45 million to fully compensate investors for losses
related to the problematic trading, and Fiduciary Asset Management
agreed to pay more than $2 million. (12/19/2012)
-
Colonial Bank and Taylor, Bean
& Whitaker (TBW) - SEC charged executives
at the bank and the major mortgage lender for orchestrating $1.5
billion scheme with fabricated or impaired mortgage loans and
securities, and attempting to scam the TARP program.
-
Credit Suisse bankers - SEC
charged four former veteran investment bankers and traders for their
roles in fraudulently overstating subprime bond prices in a complex
scheme driven in part by their desire for lavish year-end bonuses.
(2/1/12)
-
Jefferies & Co. executive -
SEC charged a former executive at a New York-based broker-dealer
with defrauding investors while selling mortgage-backed securities
in the wake of the financial crisis so he could generate additional
revenue for his firm. (1/28/13)
-
KCAP Financial - SEC
charged three top executives at a New York-based publicly traded
fund being regulated as a business development company with
overstating the fund's assets during the financial crisis. The
executives agreed to pay financial penalties to settle the SEC's
charges. (11/28/12)
-
UCBH Holdings Inc. - SEC
charged former bank executives with misleading investors about
mounting loan losses at San Francisco-based United Commercial Bank
and its public holding company during the height of the financial
crisis. (10/11/11)
Revised Stats
...as of
September 1, 2013
Number of Entities and Individuals
Charged |
161 |
Number of CEOs, CFOs, and Other Senior
Corporate Officers Charged |
66 |
Number of Individuals Who Have Received
Officer and Director Bars, Industry Bars, or Commission Suspensions
|
37 |
Penalties Ordered or Agreed To
|
> $1.53 billion |
Disgorgement and Prejudgment Interest
Ordered or Agreed To |
> $800 million |
Additional Monetary Relief Obtained for
Harmed Investors |
$400 million*
|
Total Penalties, Disgorgement, and Other
Monetary Relief |
$2.73 billion |
*
In settlements with,
-
Evergreen
-
J.P. Morgan
-
State Street
-
TD Ameritrade
-
Claymore Advisors
|