FINRA Pauses Broker Expulsions for SEC's Thorough Review Process
Published Date: 6/17/2025
Notice
Summary
FINRA is hitting the pause button on kicking out certain member firms and denying their membership while the SEC takes a closer look. This means some firms won’t lose their status right away, giving everyone more time to sort things out. The change kicks in immediately and could affect firms facing fines or membership issues, but no new costs are expected.
Analyzed Economic Effects
4 provisions identified: 3 benefits, 1 costs, 0 mixed.
FINRA stays expulsions pending SEC review
If you are a FINRA member firm (including funding portals and firms treated as capital acquisition brokers), expulsions, cancellations of membership, and denials of continued membership will not become effective until the 30-day period to apply for SEC review has passed and no application is filed, or, if an application is timely filed, until the SEC completes its Section 19 review. This rule change applies to decisions in expedited proceedings (FINRA Rule 9550 Series), disciplinary proceedings (FINRA Rule 9200/9300 Series), eligibility proceedings (FINRA Rule 9520 Series), and became operative on June 2, 2025.
Summary expulsions for unpaid fines also paused
An expulsion under FINRA Rule 8320 (summary suspension/expulsion after seven days' written notice for failure to pay fines, monetary sanctions, or costs) will not become effective until the 30-day period to apply for SEC review has passed and no application is filed, or, if timely filed, until the SEC completes its review. This amendment to Rule 8320 became operative on June 2, 2025.
No stay for defaults or failure to exhaust appeals
The rule change does not operate as a stay where a member firm has defaulted (for example, not sought a hearing) or has failed to exhaust its administrative remedies through FINRA's appellate process; expulsions imposed under FINRA Rule 9268 or 9269 remain effective unless appealed to or called for review by the NAC. This limitation is part of the June 2, 2025 amendments.
Interim customer protections and public notice
During the pendency of appeals, FINRA may impose conditions or restrictions on a respondent firm under FINRA Rule 9285 to prevent customer harm, and FINRA will provide public notice (including via BrokerCheck) if a disciplinary decision is appealed to the SEC and whether the effectiveness of the decision has been stayed.
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