Published on Feb 3rd, 2026 |

FINRA Fines BD $750k (Recordkeeping & Supervisory Failures)

FINRA

Introduction

On January 30th, 2026, FINRA fined and censured a Broker Dealer for $750,000 for failing to properly supervise and retain business-related text messages sent by Registered Representatives.

According to FINRA’s Acceptance, Waiver and Consent (AWC), the Firm did not reasonably enforce its own policies restricting business communications to approved, record-retained systems, resulting in widespread recordkeeping and supervisory failures over several years.

Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • What Went Wrong:
    • From 2019 through 2023, Registered Representatives used personal text messaging for Firm business, even though the Firm’s policies prohibited it.
    • The Firm failed to effectively monitor, prevent, or capture those communications.
  • Missing Records:
    • FINRA identified at least 3,560 business-related text messages that were not retained. The true number may be higher because many messages could not be recovered.
  • Rules Violated:
    • FINRA Rule 3110 (Supervision)
    • FINRA Rule 4511 and SEC Exchange Act Rule 17a-4 (Books and Records)
    • FINRA Rule 2010 (Standards of Commercial Honor)
  • Ignored Warning Signs:
    • FINRA noted the Firm had prior notice of potential electronic communications issues from earlier arbitration matters but did not take adequate corrective action.
  • Outcome:
    • The Firm agreed to a censure and $750,000 fine without admitting or denying the findings.
    • In 2023, it engaged a consultant, updated policies, enhanced supervision, and expanded training related to text messaging compliance.

Vigilant's Conclusion

Vigilant’s Conclusion

This Enforcement Action reinforces a clear regulatory message: policies alone are not enough.

Broker Dealers must actively ensure that all business-related electronic communications (especially text messages) are captured, retained, and supervised in accordance with FINRA and SEC requirements.

Firms should treat off-channel communications as a high-risk compliance area, regularly test controls, respond promptly to red flags, and adapt supervision as communication practices evolve.

Proactive oversight and on-going monitoring remain essential to meeting regulatory expectations and avoiding costly enforcement actions.

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