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JPMorgan to Pay $135 Million for Improper Handling of ADRs

The SEC said the transactions inflated the amount of securities tied to foreign companies that were available in the market.

JPMorgan to Pay $135 Million for Improper Handling of ADRs
Signage stands outside JP Morgan Chase & Co. headquarters in New York, U.S. (Photographer: Peter Foley/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- JPMorgan Chase & Co. will pay $135 million to settle Securities and Exchange Commission allegations that it mishandled U.S. securities that represent shares of foreign companies, the latest bank fined in an industry crackdown on the practice.

The bank improperly provided what’s known as American depository receipts to brokers when neither the brokers nor their clients held shares in foreign companies that were required to support such transactions, the SEC said in a Wednesday statement.

Without admitting or denying the claims, JPMorgan agreed to pay a $49.7 million fine and $85.4 million in disgorgement and interest.

Wall Street’s main regulator has made ADR sales a focus of its enforcement efforts. Last month, Citigroup Inc. agreed to pay $38.7 million to settle similar SEC charges and Deutsche Bank AG agreed to pay about $75 million in July.

Abusive Practices

The SEC said on Wednesday that the JPMorgan settlement was the eighth enforcement action against a firm that stemmed from the regulator’s ongoing probe into "abusive ADR pre-release practices."

“With these charges against JPMorgan, the SEC has now held all four depositary banks accountable for their fraudulent issuances of ADRs into an unsuspecting market,” said Sanjay Wadhwa, senior associate director of the SEC’s New York regional office. “Our investigation continues into brokerage firms that profited by making use of these improperly issued ADRs.”

The SEC said the transactions inflated the amount of securities tied to foreign companies that were available in the market, potentially enabling inappropriate short selling and other abusive practices.

“We’re pleased to have resolved this matter, which is related to an industry practice we voluntarily ended a few years ago,” said Andrew Gray, a JPMorgan spokesman.

--With assistance from Jenny Surane.

To contact the reporter on this story: Ben Bain in Washington at bbain2@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Jesse Westbrook at jwestbrook1@bloomberg.net, Michael J. Moore

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