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BofA’s Huge Fine Renews Push for More Info on Where Orders Go

BofA’s Huge Fine Renews Push for More Info on Where Orders Go

By Annie Massa With assistance by Erik Larson Source: Bloomberg.com Bank of America Corp.’s $42 million fine for misleading clients prompted

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By Annie Massa

With assistance by Erik Larson

Source: Bloomberg.com

Bank of America Corp.’s $42 million fine for misleading clients prompted fresh calls Friday for better insight into where investor orders go in the U.S. stock market.

It settled with New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman over accusations of bad behavior from 2008 through 2013, including secretly sending customers’ trades to firms like Citadel Securities, Knight Capital and Two Sigma Securities.

The infractions point back to a question that can addle investors: Do they really know what their brokers are doing? This settlement is glaring proof that the Securities and Exchange Commission needs to advance its nearly two-year-old proposal to tighten disclosures on broker order routing, said Tyler Gellasch, executive director of Healthy Markets Association, an investor advocacy group.

“When you’re not able to verify, unfortunately your trust can be abused,” Gellasch said.

Bank of America lied outright to clients, according to a statement from Schneiderman’s office. In 2010, in response to an institutional client asking if the bank routed orders to electronic traders on the way to other venues, BofA falsely denied that it did.

In another exchange in 2013, an institutional client asked for the names of all the other venues where the bank sent orders. A Bank of America salesperson drafted a response that identified the outside traders, but after some internal debate, including a managing director asking “is there anything you want to streamline or eliminate (i.e., the HFT stuff at the end of to whom do we route)?” the trading firms were deleted.

The bank also swapped in its own trading identification code in reports to customers, removing the codes of the outside firms, according to the New York attorney general. Other infractions include false claims about the how its dark pool “Instinct X” operated.

A spokesman for Bank of America said earlier Friday that “the settlement primarily relates to conduct that occurred as long as 10 years ago” and “at all times we met our obligation to deliver the best prices to clients.”

 

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