For other versions of this document, see http://wikileaks.org/wiki/CRS-RL33235 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢ £ ¢ ¢ Prepared for Members and Committees of Congress ¢ ¢ The federal bank regulatory agencies--the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, and the Office of Thrift Supervision--have extensive authority to enforce various legal and regulatory standards with respect to the banking institutions that they supervise. Similarly, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has a wide range of tools to enforce the securities laws. This report provides a brief sketch of these authorities and identifies the organizational entities within each agency that Congress assigns enforcement responsibilities. It includes a table comparing the formal enforcement tools that the banking agencies may use with those of the SEC. This report will be updated as legislative activity warrants. ¢ Background ..................................................................................................................................... 1 An Overview of Banking and Securities Regulation....................................................................... 2 Banking ..................................................................................................................................... 2 Securities................................................................................................................................... 3 Major Enforcement-Related Statutes............................................................................................... 4 Banking ..................................................................................................................................... 4 Securities................................................................................................................................... 5 Organization of Enforcement Programs .......................................................................................... 6 Banking ..................................................................................................................................... 6 Securities................................................................................................................................... 7 Comparison of Enforcement and Compliance Tools....................................................................... 8 For Further Reading ...................................................................................................................... 10 Tables Author Contact Information ...........................................................................................................11 ¢ In the United States, following several decades of divergence, the businesses of commercial banking and securities activities have converged.1 Yet the regulatory framework for them, crafted largely in the 1930s, remains mainly under different statutory roofs.2 This report3 summarizes the enforcement and compliance programs of federal banking regulators and those of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). It begins by discussing the key objectives of banking and securities regulation, which shed light on why enforcement programs differ. There follow brief overviews of the statutory basis for enforcement, the major enforcement tools, and, finally, how regulators organize enforcement programs. This report focuses on the primary goals of bank and securities regulation respectively. Banks are to be run in a safe manner, seeking to avoid risk and thus losses. Their regulation is largely in the background, "opaque." Although banking operations are subject to penetrating examinations by federal regulators, agencies do not make most of the details public. The SEC, on the other hand, requires securities firms and securities issuers to disclose various details of their operations, including all material information that may generate losses as well as expected profits. In contrast to bank regulation, therefore, SEC regulation of securities businesses may be labeled "transparent," that is, although sources of volatility are acceptable in the industry, they must be adequately and accurately revealed or disclosed. In both sectors, other goals are promoted by industry standards or self-policing and by government regulation. Among these are the following: business continuity planning in case of natural and unnatural (terrorist) disasters that could weaken operations;4 preventing use of financial institutions as conduits for money laundering or terrorist financing;5 providing consumer protection against fraud and misconduct; safeguarding data security and the privacy of customer information; and supervising technological service providers. Banking and securities regulators and institutions have long cooperated, both nationally and internationally, informally and formally, and share cooperative arrangements of many kinds, often extending beyond U.S. borders.6 1 CRS Report RL30516, Mergers and Consolidation Between Banking and Financial Services Firms: Trends and Prospects, by Walter W. Eubanks. 2 CRS Report RL32672, Financial Institutions and Markets: Major Federal Statutes, by M. Maureen Murphy. 3 Sections of this report were written by William Jackson, formerly of the Government and Finance Division of CRS. 4 CRS Report RL31873, Homeland Security: Banking and Financial Infrastructure Continuity, by William Jackson. 5 CRS Report RL33020, Terrorist Financing: U.S. Agency Efforts and Inter-Agency Coordination, coordinated by Martin A. Weiss, especially section "Financial Regulators and Institutions." 6 Institute of International Bankers, "Global Survey 2005, Regulatory and Market Developments," at http://www.iib.org/GS2005.pdf. ¢ Banking is one of the most heavily regulated businesses in the United States.7 The reasons for this lie in the economics of banking. A typical bank balance sheet features long-term assets (loans and investments) and short-term liabilities (deposits). This means that banks face liquidity problems if depositors suddenly choose to withdraw their funds. Furthermore, a run on a single bank can become an industry-wide problem, if cautious depositors at otherwise healthy banks-- understanding that only some withdrawal claims can be satisfied--decide to get in line early. Banks are monitored closely through regulatory systems that require governmental chartering; periodic reporting on virtually every aspect of their business; systematic examination and supervision; independent auditing; and annual reports to shareholders, depositors and the public.8 Under the dual banking system, banks may be chartered by a state government or by the federal government. Although the chartering authority--state or federal--prescribes the requirements that a banking institution must meet with respect to the basic aspects of its business, an array of federal laws and regulations provide for close federal supervision of nearly all depository institutions in the United States. A major component of federal regulation of banking is the deposit insurance system. To discourage runs on banks and reduce the risk of contagion, Congress began federal deposit insurance during the Great Depression, following collapses of state-sponsored deposit guaranty schemes.9 Because under the deposit insurance program, the federal government assumes part of the financial risk of bank failure, federal law requires that banking regulators have access to confidential business data and gives them broad powers to assure that the managers of insured depository institutions operate them in a safe manner. Nearly every aspect of the operation and management of an insured institution is subject to close regulatory supervision. In an economic sense, bankers and regulators are business partners: a bank that becomes insolvent is not just a business failure; it also represents a failure of regulation. As vigilant as the regulators may be, bad business decisions are inevitable, as are downturns in the economy that may result in negative effects flowing from risks that are otherwise acceptable. In other words, depositories cannot completely avoid risks. With federal insurance of deposits, however, comes a safety net that lessens the impact of bank failure on depositors and, consequently, on the entire monetary economy. Congress divides federal regulatory authority over banking institutions among five regulators. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), besides administering the federally guaranteed insurance fund that covers any insured deposit losses, regulates state-chartered banks (and savings associations), except those belonging to the Federal Reserve System (FRS). The Board of Governors of the FRS (Fed) regulates such "member banks." The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) regulates federally-chartered "national banks." The Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS) regulates federally-chartered and state-chartered savings associations. 7 See Jonathan R. Macey and Geoffrey P. Miller, BANKING LAW AND REGULATION 73 (2d ed. 1997). 8 See Patricia A. McCoy, BANKING LAW MANUAL § 12.03 [Matthew Bender, 2d ed.]. 9 CRS Report RS20724, Federal Deposit and Share Insurance: Proposals for Change, by Walter W. Eubanks. ¢ Besides federal regulation, all state-chartered banking institutions are subject to state banking laws and to supervision by state supervisory agencies.10 Federal regulators also have authority to monitor safety and soundness in various related organizations, known as bank "affiliates," 11 which may be bank subsidiaries, bank service companies, or other entities related to the bank through corporate family structures known as "holding companies." Regulation of holding companies and their subsidiaries depends on what kind of firm is at their core. The Fed regulates bank-based holding companies; OTS regulates savings institution-based complexes; and the SEC, securities-based "investment bank holding companies."12 The federal securities laws require companies that sell securities to the public to register with the SEC. In contrast to bank regulation, however, the act of registration with the SEC does not mean that the government has deemed a corporation's securities to be a safe investment. Registration documents, known as "prospectuses," state in bold type at their beginning that these securities have not been approved or disapproved by the SEC, and any representation to the contrary is a criminal event. The prospectus for even a high-quality stock or bond issue sets forth a long list of risk factors, some of which are unlikely to occur, while others such as weather, labor cost, and raw material conditions are intuitively obvious. In fact, the standard prospectus for a high-yield (junk) bond offering usually includes statements to the effect that it is highly unlikely that the issuing corporation will be able to pay interest on the bonds, let alone repay the principal. Under federal securities law, such an offer is entirely legal if all material information is fully and accurately disclosed to the public. All parties concerned expect the value (price) of traded securities to fluctuate, unlike bank deposits of fixed value. In other words, there is no securities law term equivalent to safety and soundness, the central notion of banking regulation. No one sees failure of a publicly-traded corporation or the decline of its share price as a SEC failure if the firm has disclosed all material risks fully and accurately. The SEC seeks to protect investors from fraud, not risk. Banking regulation transfers the risk of bank failure, including any failure resulting from fraud, from the customer to the government. The SEC also regulates and requires registration of broker/dealers, investment advisers, mutual fund operators, and other members of the securities industry. Although the SEC exercises regulatory authority over the securities industry, its authority is somewhat limited. An illustrative comparison is between the capital requirements imposed upon banks and the SEC's net capital rule, which requires brokerage firms to maintain a minimum level of capital above mere solvency. Lawmakers intend bank capital requirements to permit institutions to weather unexpected losses or unfavorable market developments. The net capital rule, on the other hand, is a liquidation rule--it seeks to ensure that failing brokerages are shut down while they have money left to meet customer claims. Even in such cases, the brokerage industry's self-funded protection 10 Conference of State Bank Supervisors, "State Banking Department Links," at http://www.csbs.org/links/ state_links.asp. 11 CRS Report RS21680, Affiliates in Banking, Finance, and Commerce: Development and Regulatory Background, by William D. Jackson. 12 The most recent structural legislation governing financial holding companies is the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, 113 Stat. 1138, P.L. 106-102. ¢ arrangement--the Securities Investor Protection Corporation--may have to cover many account shortfalls.13 As in banking, state securities supervisors retain certain oversight power over securities businesses.14 Unlike the banking agencies, which supervise without intermediary organizations, the SEC has delegated significant authority to private-sector bodies. For corporation accounting, it has granted the Financial Accounting Standards Board and Public Company Accounting Oversight Board major decision-making capabilities. For securities firms, it has allowed many oversight responsibilities to be carried on by the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD), a "self regulatory organization" (SRO). The stock exchanges are also SROs and thus exercise certain regulatory authority over their membership and over the corporations whose shares they list. The SEC, however, may veto rulings of these nongovernmental bodies, may require them to modify their rules (or adopt new ones), and exercise further oversight over them. Although Congress has scattered provisions delegating various enforcement authorities to federal banking agencies under specified circumstances throughout U.S. laws, a full range of the civil enforcement powers of the federal banking agencies is set out in section eight of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act.15 Banking violations are also punishable under federal criminal laws, and banking regulators often refer suspected violations to the Department of Justice for possible prosecution. Many prosecutions involving banks or banking officials are based on charges under general criminal statutes, such as the federal laws against mail fraud, wire fraud, racketeering, false statements, and money laundering. In addition, many federal criminal laws apply more narrowly to banking. These include: 512 § .C.S.U 81 yrebirb knab 656 § .C.S.U 81 sdnuf knab fo tnemelzzebme ro tfeht 907 § .C.S.U 81 "ecnarusni tisoped laredef" sa hcus smret laredef fo esusim ro gnisitrevda eslaf 5001 § .C.S.U 81 srotaluger ot stnemetats eslaf ro seeyolpme knab yb seirtne eslaf 4101 § .C.S.U 81 noitacilppa tiderc ro naol a no stnemetats eslaf 9201 § .C.S.U 81 duarf ecived ssecca 4431 § .C.S.U 81 duarf knab 3112 § .C.S.U 81 .yrebbor knab Because both banking and securities companies operate as intermediaries in financial transactions, law requires them to make anti-money laundering and anti-terrorist financing procedures to monitor and report on certain types of currency and foreign transactions under various federal laws and under regulations issued by the Department of the Treasury's Financial 13 CRS Report RS21741, Securities Investor Protection Corporation, by Gary Shorter. 14 North American Securities Administrators Association, "About Nasaa," at http://www.nasaa.org/ About%5FNASAA/. 15 12 U.S.C. § 1818. ¢ Crimes Enforcement Network.16 They also must report suspicious transactions.17 Violation of these requirements is subject to potential criminal and civil penalties.18 In addition, Congress requires them to institute procedures to comply with the various economic sanction programs administered by Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) and subjects them to potential civil and criminal penalties for failure to comply with the requirements that include blocking assets of designated entities and persons and notifying OFAC of that.19 Of course, banks and banking officials may be prosecuted under criminal laws of general applicability, such as those covering bribery of public or foreign officials and tax fraud and evasion. The securities laws give the SEC a range of administrative sanctions that it can apply to violators. Like the banking regulators, the SEC cannot bring criminal charges itself but makes recommendations for prosecutions to the Justice Department. The principal securities statutes are four, as follows. The Securities Act of 1933,20 called a "truth-in-securities" law, requires that securities be registered with the SEC before a sponsor/issuer sells them to the public. Registration requires disclosure of detailed information about the issuing corporation's business, management, and financial condition. Failure to make complete and accurate disclosures creates liability for civil and criminal penalties. The Securities Exchange Act of 193421 created the SEC and gave it broad authority to adopt rules and regulations to maintain fair and orderly securities markets. This act requires ongoing disclosure and gives the SEC control over the form and content of corporate financial statements (quarterly and annual reports, etc.). The act also applies to exchanges where securities are bought and sold--stock, bond, and stock option markets must submit their rules for SEC approval. Brokers, the firms that employ them, and other industry professionals must register; revocation of registration may prevent them from working in the securities industry. The Exchange Act also governs communications between firms and their shareholders as well as certain merger transactions. The Investment Company Act22 provides for regulation of defined investment companies such as mutual funds. As securities, mutual funds must be registered before public sale, a process that requires public disclosures regarding the fund and its managers. The law also places certain limits on the type of investments that funds are permitted to make and on various other business practices. 16 31 C.F.R., Part 103. 17 31 C.F.R. § 103.19 (brokers and dealers); 31 C.F.R. § 103.18 (banks). 18 See, e.g., 31 U.S.C. §§ 5321, 5322. 19 See U.S. Department of the Treasury, Office of Foreign Assets Control, "Foreign Assets Control Program for the Financial Community," at http://www.treas.gov/offices/enforcement/ofac/regulations/t11facbk.pdf. 20 15 U.S.C. §§ 77a et seq. 21 15 U.S.C. §§ 78a et seq. 22 15 U.S.C. §§ 80a et seq. ¢ The Investment Advisers Act of 194023 applies to persons engaging in the business of advising others, either directly or through publications, as to the advisability of the purchase or sale of securities. Advisers whose assets under management exceed specified thresholds must register with the SEC. In 2004, the SEC required hedge funds to register as advisers.24 £ Congress has vested enforcement of federal banking laws generally in an institution's primary federal regulator. Each of the federal banking agencies issues regulations applicable to the entities under its authority. Typically, these are coordinated through the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council (FFIEC).25 It is an interagency body composed of the heads of the federal banking agencies, which is charged with making "uniform principles and standards and report forms for examination of financial institutions,"26 encouraging "application of uniform examination principles and standards by State and Federal supervisory agencies,"27 and reviewing all federal banking regulations at least once every 10 years "to identify outdated or otherwise unnecessary regulatory requirements."28 Federal banking regulators have both considerable enforcement options and wide discretion in choosing among them. Besides the formal enforcement tools specifically authorized by statute, each of the federal banking agencies employs informal methods of insuring that regulated institutions meet safety and soundness standards as well as regulatory and statutory standards. These range from moral suasion to written requirements that corrective action be taken. Much of the information upon which informal enforcement actions are based derives from periodic bank examinations. Each banking agency has its own examination force that detects violations during recurring safety and special-purpose examinations of bank books and operations. Upon completion of a bank examination, the regulator will present a Report of Examination to the institution's board of directors, which is to order remedial action or present information refuting the findings. Other forms of informal enforcement tools to correct perceived weaknesses in an institution include supervisory directives, board-of-director resolutions drafted by the regulator, and written instructions or agreements from the regulator.29 Institutions usually make correction and remediation voluntarily following the examination process and consider such self-correction a normal part of their business because of the multiplicity and complexity of banking laws and regulations. If this informal process of enforcement is unavailing, the banking agencies resort to the formal mechanisms available to them. They, thus, typically issue progressively stricter enforcement decrees against more serious weaknesses: memoranda of understanding, civil money penalties, cease-and-desist orders, and 23 15 U.S.C. §§ 80b et seq. 24 CRS Report 94-511, Hedge Funds: Should They Be Regulated?, by Mark Jickling. 25 U.S. Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council, "About the FFIEC," at http://www.ffiec.gov/about.htm. 26 12 U.S.C. § 3305. 27 12 U.S.C. § 3306. 28 12 U.S.C. § 3310. 29 See Patricia A. McCoy, BANKING LAW MANUAL § 13.02 (2d ed.). ¢ orders requiring the removal of officials. Should errant practices continue, an institution may be closed either by charter revocation or termination of its deposit insurance. Enforcement units within each agency are as follows. (1) OCC, the primary regulator of nationally chartered banks, which is organizationally placed within the U.S. Department of the Treasury, assigns bank supervision and enforcement operations to the Office of the Chief National Bank Examiner, within which there are "Large Bank Supervision" and "Mid-size/Community Bank Supervision" units and four district offices. (2) Fed, the primary regulator of state-chartered member banks and bank holding companies including financial holding companies, conducts supervisory and enforcement activities through its Division of Banking Supervision and Regulation and delegates to 12 regional Federal Reserve Banks certain supervisory and enforcement powers. (3) FDIC, the primary federal regulator of state-chartered banks not belonging to the Fed, allocates enforcement to its Division of Supervision and Consumer Protection, which has Risk Management, Policy and Examination Oversight, and Compliance and Consumer Protection units within eight regional offices. (4) OTS, the primary federal regulator of savings or thrift institutions, and their savings and loan holding companies, organizationally within the U.S. Department of the Treasury, allocates its supervisory and enforcement activity to its Office of Examinations, Supervision, and Consumer Protection, with certain line supervisory responsibilities delegated to four regional offices. (5) State-chartered banks are subject to regulation by state banking agencies. Each state has a banking agency and usually designates an administrative position, Chief Examiner, Deputy Commissioner, or Supervisory Examiner, to enforce banking laws applicable to state banks.30 They usually make examinations on alternating cycles under general cooperative agreements with federal banking agencies, often negotiating them through the FFIEC.31 Two units within the SEC have enforcement responsibilities: the Division of Enforcement and the Office of Compliance, Inspections, and Examinations. They may operate via 11 regional SEC offices. The Division of Enforcement conducts investigations into possible violations of federal securities laws and oversees civil suits and administrative proceedings.32 The division conducts two levels of investigations: · Informal investigations, which rely primarily on the voluntary cooperation of witnesses and/or the target of the investigation,33 and 30 12 U.S.C. § 484 prohibits states from examining national banks except for compliance with state laws on unclaimed property and escheat. 31 Under 12 U.S.C. § 1820(d)(6)(A)(iii), federal banking agencies are to coordinate examinations with state bank supervisors. 32 See http://www.sec.gov/divisions/enforce.shtml. ¢ · Formal investigations, in which it uses subpoenas to compel testimony or the production of documents. To obtain subpoena authority, the division submits a memorandum to the commissioners (via the General Counsel). The memorandum is a justification for the proposed investigation and the need for subpoenas. A majority of commissioners, or the single commissioner then serving as the duty officer, may then authorize a formal order authorizing administrative action or filing in federal court.34 Normally, the agency conducts investigations on a nonpublic basis; the SEC generally refuses to comment on whether an investigation is in progress. It announces enforcement actions to the public, but not all investigations result in enforcement actions. Before bringing an action, division staff may send out a "Wells Call," suggesting intent to bring an action, giving the target the opportunity to respond in writing before bringing formal charges.35 Disclosure requirements of the securities laws ensure that the recipient will likely have to publicize a Wells Call, since news that an action is forthcoming is normally considered material to investors. The Office of Compliance, Inspections, and Examinations (OCIE) is responsible for examinations and inspections of registered entities--broker-dealers, investment companies, investment advisers, transfer agents, clearing agencies, and self-regulatory organizations. This office conducts inspections to attempt to assure compliance with the securities laws, to detect violations, and to apprise the SEC of developments in the regulated community. When OCIE detects deficiencies, it issues a "deficiency letter" which identifies problems that should be corrected, and the office will monitor the situation until it believes that compliance has occurred. If the office believes that violations are too serious for its process of correction, it will refer the violations to the Division of Enforcement.36 As in banking, each state continues to have its own set of securities laws, called blue sky laws; state agencies are responsible for enforcing these laws. SROs also have enforcement roles. For example, the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD) oversees the registration of broker/dealers and their personnel and may bring a variety of sanctions against those who violate its rules and standards. The stock exchanges, as SROs, are required to conduct market surveillance and maintain and enforce rules to protect their public customers. SROs must submit proposed new rules to the SEC for approval.37 Beyond the informal enforcement methods mentioned above, banking regulators have a wide array of statutorily authorized formal enforcement tools that range from civil administrative fines and orders to civil suits for damages and referrals to the Department of Justice for criminal prosecution. Among the laws delegating civil enforcement authorities is Section 8 of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, which delegates to the federal banking regulators authority to issue cease (...continued) 33 A.A. Sommer, Jr. (ed.) 6 SECURITIES LAW TECHNIQUES § 87.03 (2005). 34 Id. at § 87.04. 35 Sommer, at § 88.10. 36 See http://www.sec.gov/about/offices/ocie.htm. 37 See, e.g., 15 U.S.C. § 78s. 2001, pp. 13-21. Financial Institution Regulators' Enforcement and Prompt Corrective Action Authorities," GAO-01-322R, Jan. 3, Chairman Baker of the Subcommittee on Capital Markets of the House Financial Services Committee. "Comparison of closely follows information found in a table compiled by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) letter to 43 The tabular description of the formal enforcement tools available to bank regulators in the first column of the table 42 See, e.g., 15 U.S.C. § 78u-3. 41 See, e.g., 15 U.S.C. § 78u-2. 40 See, e.g., 15 U.S.C. § 78u-1. See, e.g., 15 U.S.C. § 78u. 39 12 U.S.C. § 1818. 38 ;stnemeriuqer gnitroper noitcasnart fo noitaloiv eht otni nur evah slaudividni dna smrif ro ,redro noisnepsus ro lavomer ,redro D&C elgnis no desopmi senif ,sesac niatrec nI .stius yraropmet ,tnemeerga ro noitidnoc nettirw ,redro livic ni stiforp lagelli fo tnemegrogsid dna tnemecrofne lanif ,noitaluger ,wal fo noitaloiv seitlanep seitlanep yenom livic skees netfo CES ehT rof )1( :tsixe seitlanep yenom fo sreit eerhT yenom liviC .evres ot ssentifnu detartsnomed sah dna noitaloiv wal seitiruces a dettimmoc nosrep taht fi ynapmoc dedart .sgnideecorp lanimirc -ylcilbup a fo rotcerid ro reciffo na sa gnivres ni devlovni PAI na ot dna ,setutats gniknab cificeps morf nosrep a rab ot ytirohtua eht CES eht fo noitaloiv ni srotcerid dna sreciffo ot ylppa sevig tcA yelxO-senabraS eht fo 503 noitceS noitibihorp ro lavomer rof sdnuorg lanoitiddA .srotisoped ro noitutitsni na tcetorp ot yrassecen .yrtsudni seitiruces fi ro ;devlovni si ytilibapluc latnem ro ytsenohsid eht ni tnemyolpme morf noisnepsus ro srab erehw ro ,srucco ssol laicnanif elbaborp esopmi ot ro ,noitartsiger ekover ro dnepsus ro lautca erehw ,ytud yraicudif fo hcaerb ro ot sgnideecorp evitartsinimda etutitsni yam secitcarp dnuosnu ro efasnu ni segagne ;tnemeerga CES eht ,sresivda tnemtsevni dna ,srelaed nettirw ro ,redro D&C lanif ,noitaluger noitibihorp ,srekorb sa hcus( seititne deretsiger roF ,wal setaloiv ohw PAI yna tsniaga nekat eb yaM dna lavomeR .PAI ro IDI na fo seitivitca eht no snoitatimil ro ,snoitaloiv ro secitcarp morf gnitluser snoitidnoc tcerroc ot redro evitamriffa edulcni yam redro D&C .tnemeerga nettirw yna ro ,noitaluger ,elur ,wal .sdnuf nettog-lli egrogsid ot deredro yna fo noitaloiv )2( ro ,ecitcarp dnuosnu ro efasnu )D&C( eb yam tnednopseR .swal seitiruces laredef )1( rof )PAI( seitrap detailiffa-noitutitsni ro )IDI( redro tsised setaloiv ohw nosrep yna no desopmi eb yaM noitutitsni yrotisoped derusni no desopmi eb yaM dna esaeC CES srotalugeR knaB slooT CES eht dna srotalugeR knaB laredeF fo sloo tn T emecrofnE SEC is set out in the following table. 43 A brief sketch of the formal enforcement tools available to federal banking regulators and to the proceedings.42 the laws.41 The SEC may also, after notice and opportunity for hearing, begin cease-and-desist trading violations40 and to impose civil penalties in administrative proceedings for violations of practices that may constitute violations.39 It has the authority to impose civil penalties for insider in investigating possible violations of the securities laws and in obtaining injunctions against Likewise, the SEC has a wide range of enforcement tools. For example, it may use its discretion institution's insured status.38 and desist orders, prohibition and removal orders, civil money penalties, and orders canceling an ¢ http://www.sec.gov/about/whatwedo.shtml. Investors and Maintains Market Integrity." U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. "The Investor's Advocate: How the SEC Protects http://www.kc.frb.org/BS&S/publicat/PDF/RegsBook2000.pdf. Spong, Kenneth. Banking Regulation: Its Purposes, Implementation, and Effects. http://www.financialservicesfacts.org/financial/ Fact Book 2005. Insurance Information Institute and The Financial Services Roundtable. The Financial Services .SRC yb delipmoC :ecruoS .noitutitsni eht esolc dna rotavresnoc ro reviecer a tnioppa yam srotaluger ,yletamitlU .tnemeganam ecalper ro ,snoitarepo ssenisub ni segnahc tnacifingis eriuqer ,snoitcasnart ytirohtua .level deificeps eht woleb sllaf latipac niatrec tcirtser ,sknab rotinom ot spets noitadiuqil rieht fi snoitarepo esaec dna ,elur latipac evisurtni erom ylevissergorp ekat nac srotaluger dna noitca ten a htiw ylpmoc tsum srelaed/rekorb ,dezilatipacrednu yllacitirc ro ,dezilatipacrednu evitcerroc deretsigeR .ytirohtua elbarapmoc yltcerid oN yltnacifingis ,dezilatipacrednu semoceb knab a sA tpmorP .CIDF eht dna IDI eht neewteb tnemeerga nettirw ro ,.cte ,noitaluger ,wal elbacilppa yna fo seetsurt ro ,srotcerid ,IDI yb noitaloiv )3( ro ,snoitarepo eunitnoc ot snoitidnoc dnuosnu ro efasnu )2( ,seetsurt ro ,srotcerid sti ,IDI na yb secitcarp dnuosnu ro efasnu )1( ecnarusni .ytirohtua elbarapmoc on suht ,ecnarusni oN no desab ecnarusni tisoped etanimret yam CIDF fo noitanimreT .sredro noisnepsus dna noitibihorp ro/dna senif fo tnemyap eht evlovni yam dna ,sesac rojam ynam ni desu era stnemeerga tnesnoC .erutuf eht ni snoitaloiv timmoc ot ton seerga tub gniodgnorw ot timda ton seod noitagitsevni eht fo tegrat eht yberehw ,stnemeerga tnesnoc htiw ,truoc fo tuo delttes era sesac .seidemer evitartsinimda eusrup stnemeerga ynaM .snoitaloiv erutuf tibihorp ot snoitcnujni ,sesac fo ytirojam tsav eht ni tub ,snoitcnujni tnesnoc gnikees stius livic selif netfo CES ehT truoc kees ot ytirohtua evah srotaluger knaB dna snoitcnujnI .)3 reit( yad rep 000,000,1$ ot )1 reit( yad rep 000,5$ morf egnar seniF .niag yrainucep laitnatsbus ro ssol laitnatsbus gnisuac ylsselkcer ro ylgniwonk dna ytud yraicudif fo hcaerb ,ecitcarp dnuosnu ro efasnu ni gnigagne ,.cte ,wal fo noitaloiv gniwonk )3( ;rotaloiv eht ot niag yrainucep ni stluser ro ,ssol laminim a naht erom sesuac ,tcudnocsim fo nrettap a fo trap si taht ytud yraicudif fo hcaerb ro ,ecitcarp .srallod fo snoillim fo sderdnuh dnuosnu ro efasnu ,.cte ,wal fo noitaloiv )2( CES srotalugeR knaB slooT ¢ ¢ Mark Jickling M. Maureen Murphy Specialist in Financial Economics Legislative Attorney mjickling@crs.loc.gov, 7-7784 mmurphy@crs.loc.gov, 7-6971 Gary Shorter Michael V. Seitzinger Specialist in Financial Economics Legislative Attorney gshorter@crs.loc.gov, 7-7772 mseitzinger@crs.loc.gov, 7-7895 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ For other versions of this document, see http://wikileaks.org/wiki/CRS-RL33235