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18 December 2018
Washington DC
Reporter Jenna Lomax

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BNY Mellon to pay $54 million to settle charges for ADRs

BNY Mellon is set to pay more than $54 million to settle charges of improper handling of “pre-released” American depositary receipts (ADRs), the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has revealed.

ADRs are US securities that represent foreign shares of a foreign company, require a corresponding number of foreign shares to be held in custody at a depositary bank.

The practice of ‘pre-release’ allows ADRs to be issued without the deposit of foreign shares provided brokers receiving them have an agreement with a depositary bank and the broker or its customer owns the number of foreign shares that corresponds to the number of shares the ADR represents.

The SEC’s order found that BNY Mellon improperly provided ADRs to brokers in thousands of pre-release transactions when neither the broker nor its customers had the foreign shares needed to support those new ADRs.

SEC said: “Such practices resulted in inflating the total number of a foreign issuer’s tradeable securities, which resulted in abusive practices like inappropriate short selling and dividend arbitrage that should not have been occurring.”

This is the seventh action against a bank or broker and third action against a depositary bank resulting from the SEC’s ongoing investigation into abusive ADR pre-release practices.

Without admitting or denying the SEC’s findings, BNY Mellon agreed to disgorge more than $29.3 million in allegedly ill-gotten gains, plus pay $4.2 million in prejudgment interest and a $20.5 million penalty for total monetary relief of more than $54 million.

The SEC’s order acknowledges BNY Mellon’s cooperation in the investigation and remedial acts.

Sanjay Wadhwa, senior associate director of the SEC’s New York regional office, said: “Our ongoing industry-wide investigation into Wall Street misconduct marches on.”

He added: “BNY Mellon is the seventh bank or broker being held accountable for improper practices that allowed banks and brokerage firms to profit handsomely while market participants were unaware of how the market was being abused.”

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