The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) issued a $250,000 fine to Vision Financial Markets LLC for miscalculating required customer and proprietary account reserves between April 2020 and November 2022. FX News Group
This regulatory action signifies increased scrutiny of the back-office structure and compliance of broker-dealers in the retail forex/clearing space.
The details:
• Vision is a US broker-dealer/clearing firm and agreed to settle the findings with FINRA, which include violations of Exchange Act rules 15(c)(3) and 17(a) and the associated Rules of 15c3-3, 17a-3, 17a-4, 17a-5, and FINRA's rules of 4511 and 2010. FX News Group
• During the review period from April 2020 to November 2022, "there was a failure to properly calculate its required customer reserve and its required reserve for proprietary accounts of broker-dealers (PABs)." FX News Group
• In addition to the violations above, there were failures to establish appropriate supervisory systems, including, but not limited to, Written Supervisory Procedures (WSPs) under rules 3110 and 2010. FX News Group
• Result of the violations: a $250k fine plus a formal censure from FINRA. FX News Group
Why is this important:
• With respect to Vision, it is currently not a retail-FX broker. Still, the reserve rule violations illustrate operational and compliance risks that directly affect forex brokers' management of client funds, leverage, and cross-border exposures.
• For traders and counterparties: The case illustrates the necessity to confirm if a broker or clearing firm is meeting its regulatory obligations relating to the segregation of customer funds, reserve fund disclosures, and risk controls.
• For the sector: Conclusively, it clearly suggests that regulators are still being vigilant towards larger broker-dealer/clearing firm operations, and are likely to involve retail FX firms that do not maintain similar standards of internal controls going forward.
• Reputation: Even nominal fines can raise flags for clients when a broker is cited for deficiencies in reserve fund compliance or supervisory compliance. This can damage the broker's reputation and lead to fund withdrawals and account closures.
WikiLix Insight:
• Bottom line for FX brokers: If the broker holds client funds (especially leveraged accounts) or is affiliated with a clearing firm, WSP, and reserve account compliance is not optional.
• The trends to observe:
o If retail FX brokers in the US or other countries face similar regulatory enforcement procedures (the extent of this is yet to be determined)
o If the standards for supervisory procedures (WSPs) extend more broadly to include FX brokers globally, as opposed to just classic broker-dealer.
o If oversight on matters of capital allocation involves global regulators (European/Australian), even though it is a US case.
• Advice for clients/traders: When deciding to use a broker, examine not just licensing but also the level of back-office compliance (e.g., audited financials, segregation of funds, reserve account disclosures, transparency) - as demonstrated, even licensed firms can overlook these areas.



