Robinhood To Pay $29.75M to Settle FINRA Probe Over Compliance Issues

Share This Post

robinhood

The post Robinhood To Pay $29.75M to Settle FINRA Probe Over Compliance Issues appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News

Robinhood has agreed to pay $29.75 million to settle investigations by FINRA regarding its supervision and compliance practices. The settlement includes a $26 million fine and $3.75 million in restitution to customers. 

Robinhood Failed to Manage Trading System During Activity Surge

FINRA found that Robinhood didn’t properly manage or oversee its system for processing trades, even though there were clear signs of delays in processing due to a huge increase in trading activity. 

This happened between March 2020 and January 2021, which was the same time Robinhood restricted trading in popular meme stocks like GameStop and AMC Entertainment Holdings. In other words, Robinhood didn’t do enough to address the issues that were causing delays in its system, even though they could have seen it coming.

Robinhood failed to “respond to red flags of potential misconduct,” FINRA noted, leading to Anti-Money Laundering and supervisory and disclosure violations.

Robinhood Missed Suspicious Activities and Failed to Verify Accounts

FINRA found that Robinhood failed to detect, investigate suspicious activities, like manipulative trades, unusual money transfers, or cases where hackers took over customer accounts. Besides, Robinhood also opened thousands of accounts without properly checking customers’ identities. Because of these issues, Robinhood failed to set up strong Anti-Money Laundering programs, according to FINRA.

Robinhood also failed to properly monitor and keep records of social media posts, including those from paid influencers. Some of these posts were misleading or made unfair promises to investors.

The $3.75 million in restitution was because Robinhood gave customers incorrect or incomplete information when it changed market orders to limit orders, which impacted their trades.

Robinhood Agrees To FINRA’s Findings

Robinhood Financial and Robinhood Securities agreed to FINRA’s findings without admitting or denying the charges. This comes two months after the company settled for $45 million with the US securities regulator in January, following an investigation into violations of over 10 securities laws. Robinhood Financial and Robinhood Securities admitted to failing to maintain and preserve customer communications from 2020 to 2021.

Recently, in Q4 2024, Robinhood hit a record $916 million in net income and over $1 billion in revenue. Crypto revenue reached $358 million, a 200% increase, while crypto trading volumes jumped 450% to $71 billion.

Read Entire Article
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Related Posts

Bitcoin wallets interacting with this specific protocol are now flagged for “high-risk” seizures by compliance algorithms

When European police staged another coordinated sweep against crypto mixers this autumn, most people saw a familiar headline and scrolled on But every seizure, every frozen server rack, every

Первое видео Марио Мосбека на YouTube стало событием для любителей покера

Покерный мир отметил новое яркое событие: 5 декабря состоялась премьера первого видео на официальном

Big Buyers Storm In as Bitcoin’s Rebound to $91K Triggers Massive Liquidation Wave

After spending the morning flirting with the dungeon below $88,000, BTC clawed its way upward and blasted to an intraday high of $91,767 Bitcoin’s latest rebound didn’t just flip the script on

The AI Crypto Boom Hits a Wall as Tokens Deliver Tough Monthly Stats

AI coins have been dealing with a brutal stretch, with performance charts dripping red across several timeframes Even sector leaders were not spared, and traders looking for green candles instead got

Ethereum Torches $18B in Value and Clears 6M ETH Burned, Yet the Supply Keeps Expanding

According to metrics, the tally of ETH burned from fees has sailed past the 6 million mark, meaning that as of Dec 7’s exchange rates, more than $18 billion in value has effectively gone up in

A sudden $13.5 billion Fed liquidity injection exposes a crack in the dollar that Bitcoin was built for

The number didn’t look dramatic at first glance ($135 billion in overnight repos on Dec 1), but for anyone who watches the Federal Reserve’s plumbing, it was a noticeable spike These operations