JPMorgan fined $200 million after staff used personal chats for company business

JPMorgan Chase was fined $200 million by regulators Friday for failing to track work-related communication on employees’ personal cellphones and email.

>>Lananh Nguyen and Matthew GoldsteinThe New York Times
Published : 18 Dec 2021, 07:06 AM
Updated : 18 Dec 2021, 07:06 AM

Staff members in the bank’s securities division avoided oversight by discussing company business on their personal devices via text messages, the messaging service WhatsApp and personal email accounts, according to the Securities and Exchange Commission, which fined the bank $125 million. The bank’s “widespread and long-standing failures” spanned from January 2018 to November 2020, the SEC said.

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission also fined the bank $75 million in a separate enforcement order for similar misconduct dating to 2015.

JPMorgan admitted that its conduct violated federal securities and commodity-trading laws, which are aimed at protecting investors and maintaining fair markets. It also agreed to hire a compliance consultant to review its policies and procedures for retaining electronic communications.

Record-keeping is “an essential part of market integrity and a foundational component of the SEC’s ability to be an effective cop on the beat,” Gary Gensler, the SEC chairman, said in the statement. “As technology changes, it’s even more important that registrants ensure that their communications are appropriately recorded and are not conducted outside of official channels.”

A spokesman for the bank declined to comment.

The magnitude of the fines could serve as a warning to Wall Street, where bankers have increasingly relied on text messages and chats, preferring them to company email.

Serious penalties for failing to maintain proper records have generally been rare: The last major SEC fine for such conduct was $15 million against Morgan Stanley in 2006, for failing to produce emails during investigations on initial public offerings and research produced by analysts.

The SEC has not yet closed its investigation into JPMorgan, which found that more than 100 people, including senior managers, used personal communications to send tens of thousands of messages that were not properly retained in the bank’s systems, according to an SEC official briefed on the matter who declined to be identified discussing a still-open inquiry. The messages covered a wide range of topics, from investment strategy to client meetings, and involved various teams, including parts of the investment bank, the person said.

The regulator only learned about the unapproved communications through third parties, including in one instance in which it was investigating JPMorgan’s role as an underwriter, the SEC said in enforcement order. Employees including desk heads, managing directors and other senior executives sent more than 21,000 texts and emails relating to work for an investment-banking client from January 2018 to November 2019. The bank did not keep records of those communications, according to the order.

The JPMorgan inquiry has also prompted investigations into other financial firms’ records, the regulator said Friday. It encouraged companies to come forward to report any similar issues. That is because firms that voluntarily report lapses in compliance with the authorities typically receive less severe punishments.

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