FINRA fines Citadel Securities for trading ahead of inactive OTC customer orders

Maria Nikolova

Citadel Securities agrees to pay $700,000 as a part of a settlement with FINRA.

Citadel Securities LLC has agreed to pay a fine of $700,000 as a part of a settlement with the United States Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA).

The alleged violations concern FINRA Rule 5320 (Prohibition Against Trading Ahead of Customer Orders) and FINRA Rule 6460 (Display of Customer Limit Orders). These rules are designed to, among other things, protect customer orders, promote market transparency, and increase quote competition.

In November 2011, Citadel Securities established an Over-the-Counter equity trading desk that received orders from the firm’s broker-dealer clients on behalf of their customers. Citadel Securities sought to program the OTC Desk trading systems to comply with the Trading Ahead and Limit Order Display Rules by providing customer orders automated order protection, quote display, and execution.

However, from September 2012 through mid-September 2014, Citadel Securities employed pre-trade controls, settings and processes that removed hundreds of thousands of OTC customer orders from that logic. While those controls, settings and processes had multiple purposes, they shared a principal purpose of directing mostly larger OTC customer orders for manual review and/or handling. Impacted orders were rendered inactive until the completion of a manual trader review.

While OTC customer orders were inactive, Citadel Securities, in many instances, as part of its market making activities, traded for its own account on the same side of the market at prices that would have satisfied the orders, without immediately thereafter executing them up to the size and at the same or better price as it traded for its own account.

To assess the potential trading ahead impact, FINRA reviewed Citadel Securities’ handling of OTC customer orders in an inactive state awaiting manual trader review during the sample month of February 2014. Based on this review, in 559 instances, Citadel Securities traded ahead of 415 inactive OTC customer orders.

By virtue of the foregoing, Citadel Securities violated FINRA Rules 5320(a) and 2010.

Furthermore, Citadel Securities failed to establish a supervisory system, including written supervisory procedures (WSPs), reasonably designed to achieve compliance with Trading Ahead and Limit Order Display Rules for OTC customer orders. Among other things, Citadel Securities did not establish WSPs requiring supervisory reviews of OTC customer orders for compliance with FINRA Rules 5320 and 6460, nor did the Firm establish any supervisory reports or other tools to allow supervisors to monitor whether OTC customer orders were handled in compliance with those rules, until October 2014 and June 2015, respectively. Furthermore, the reports the Firm implemented with respect to the display of OTC customer limit orders in June 2015 were not reasonably designed to achieve compliance with FINRA Rule 6460.

By virtue of this conduct, Citadel Securities violated NASD Rule 3010(a) and (b) (for conduct before December 1, 2014); FINRA Rule 3110(a) and (b) (for conduct on and after December 1, 2014); FINRA Rule 5320(a) and (b); FINRA Rule 6460; and FINRA Rule 2010.2

On top of the fine, the firm agrees to a censure. Citadel Securities will also provide restitution to each corresponding firm client for the customer orders that it executed at prices worse than it traded for its own account as a result of the FINRA Rule 5320(a) violations.

Read this next

Fintech

Sumsub adopts Europe’s new KYC standards for crypto

“Businesses are facing a rising regulatory tide where properly preparing for compliance is crucial. There is now a simple choice, whether to implement solutions that can deliver this, or instead risk significant financial and reputational damages.”

Chainwire

Bybit Web3 Launches Industry’s First Bitcoin Layer 2 Airdrop Campaign, Paving the Way for a New Bitcoin Era

Bybit, one of the world’s top three crypto exchanges by volume, is excited to announce that Bybit Web3 is launching the industry’s first Bitcoin Layer 2 Airdrop campaign through its Airdrop Arcade.

Retail FX

Vantage observes results of US$100,000 donation to UNHCR

Vantage’s US$100,000 donation has helped approximately 788 refugees, internally displaced persons (IDPs), and returnees in 2023 alone.

Executive Moves

Tradition hires Michel Everaert to integrate data science and AI

“I am excited about the potential this offers, and look forward to building relationships and working with teams across the global business.”

Retail FX

IBKR extends US Treasury bond trading to 22 hours per day

US Treasury bonds are highly sought after by investors seeking stability and security in their portfolios as these instruments are often considered one of the safest investment options. 

Market News

Navigating Yen Depreciation and Euro Resilience in Global Markets

Amidst the persistent depreciation of the Japanese yen against the US dollar, pressure mounts on Japanese policymakers to translate their verbal assurances into tangible actions.

Digital Assets

El Salvador refutes rumors of Bitcoin wallet hack

Chivo Wallet, El Salvador’s official cryptocurrency wallet, has dismissed reports of a hack involving its software source code and the data of over 5 million users associated with its KYC (Know Your Customer) procedures.

blockdag

Best Crypto to Buy: BlockDAG Presale Hits $20.1M Following Moon-Shot Keynote Teaser as Dogecoin & Shiba Inu Prices Plummet

This landmark achievement sets it apart in the cryptocurrency landscape, where traditional favorites like Dogecoin and Shiba Inu are witnessing a price decline.

Digital Assets

MetaMask developer sues SEC over regulatory overreach

Ethereum ecosystem developer Consensys Software has filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), challenging the agency’s regulatory actions concerning Ethereum and its related services.

<