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Nomura CEO Pay Cut Over Information Leak

CEO Koji Nagai will forgo 30% of his salary for three months, the firm said.

Nomura CEO Pay Cut Over Information Leak
Koji Nagai, chief executive officer of Nomura Holdings Inc. (Photographer: Toru Hanai/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Nomura Holdings Inc.’s chief executive officer will take a pay cut to assume responsibility for improper handling of stock market information by employees, the latest setback for the struggling Japanese securities firm.

CEO Koji Nagai will forgo 30% of his salary for three months, the firm said after finding that a researcher at an affiliate shared information on potential changes to the Tokyo Stock Exchange sections inappropriately. Japan’s financial regulator plans to order the brokerage to improve internal controls, a person with knowledge of the matter said earlier, in what will be the first such action against Nomura since 2012.

Nomura CEO Pay Cut Over Information Leak

The incident could hinder Nagai’s plan to turn around Japan’s biggest brokerage after posting the first annual loss in a decade. One corporate client has already said it will drop Nomura as underwriter of a planned bond sale.

A Nomura Research Institute analyst, who was on a Tokyo Stock Exchange panel considering an overhaul of market segments, leaked information on the threshold for the changes, Nomura said in a statement. He wrote an email to a strategist at the brokerage in March saying that he felt the cut-off point for companies to remain on the exchange’s first section would probably be 25 billion yen ($228 million), lower than previously anticipated.

Supervision Lacking

Nomura Securities employees then shared the information with clients, with one salesperson sending an email saying “if the stocks were already sold on the assumption that 50 billion yen would be the threshold, there may be a chance that they will be repurchased.”

Although the incident didn’t violate laws, according to the bank, it found that the strategist and salespeople interpreted compliance too narrowly and supervision was lacking. In an internal survey, some employees answered to say there were no problems with the incident.

“I was very surprised when I learned about this,” Nagai said at a news briefing on Friday. “It’s shocking that there are employees, even if it’s just a few, who think it’s OK because it’s not corporate confidential information.”

To prevent a recurrence, Nomura outlined measures to raise compliance awareness and oversight. It will also close its GM Sales Department II in July after an employee there sought to create a custom stock index based on the information. As well as Nagai, other top executives will have their pay cut temporarily. Staff involved in the leaks and their supervisors have faced “strict disciplinary actions,” the firm said.

A business improvement order generally requires the recipient to fix internal controls rather than pay fines. In 2012, the FSA issued the penalty against Nomura after finding that employees leaked information on equity offerings that was subsequently used for insider trading. Nagai’s predecessor resigned in the wake of the scandal.

While the FSA doesn’t see the latest incident as amounting to insider trading, it determined that it undermined trust in the market, the Nikkei reported.

Osaka Gas

Osaka Gas Co. plans to drop Nomura as an underwriter for a bond sale due to the report on the FSA’s move, a spokeswoman said. The utility is planning sales of long-term bonds later this month, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Nagai’s pay cut comes just a month after he and other executives had their bonuses scrapped following the company’s 100.4 billion yen loss in the fiscal year ended March. The CEO has embarked on a $1 billion cost-reduction program centering on revamping its global markets and investment banking operations. He is also reducing retail branches at home.

Investors have so far shrugged off the news of impending regulatory action. Shares of Nomura closed 2% higher in Tokyo before the company issued its report. Nomura Research Institute gained 1.1%. Nomura owns about 39% of NRI, according to the research institute.

The Nikkei identified Sadakazu Osaki as the NRI researcher who leaked the information. NRI spokesman Yasuhiro Komatsu said the company hasn’t allowed Osaki to speak publicly since the incident. While the information he provided to Nomura Securities was all publicly available, his act was inappropriate, Komatsu said.

Japan Exchange Group Inc. is considering changes that involve cutting the number of stock sections to three from four, amid criticism that there are too many. The bourse operator released a report in March that detailed feedback from investors, companies and brokerages on ways to revamp the sections.

To contact the reporters on this story: Takashi Nakamichi in Tokyo at tnakamichi1@bloomberg.net;Takako Taniguchi in Tokyo at ttaniguchi4@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Marcus Wright at mwright115@bloomberg.net, Russell Ward

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