BrokerDealer Community Faces New Audit Standards By Public Company Oversight Board

PCAOB Issues Guidance for Broker-Dealer Auditors

BrokerDealer.com/blog update courtesy of extracts from accountingtoday’s news article

accounting todayThe Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB) has released staff guidance to help auditors of brokers and dealers registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission to plan and perform audits in accordance with PCAOB standards as mandated by the Dodd-Frank Act and SEC rules.

T he Dodd-Frank Act amended the Sarbanes-Oxley Act to, among other things, give the PCAOB oversight authority for the audits of broker-dealers registered with the SEC.

“To enhance investor protection, broker-dealer auditors must now meet PCAOB requirements,” said PCAOB chairman James R. Doty in a statement. “This guidance is tailored to help auditors of smaller broker-dealers develop a cost-effective, scaled approach to their audits.”

Last year, the SEC revised Exchange Act Rule 17a-5 to entail, among other things, audits of broker-dealers was conducted in accordance with PCAOB standards. In October, the PCAOB implemented an auditing standard along with two attestation benchmarks that apply to broker-dealer audits. Then in February, the SEC issued an order to take approval from the PCAOB’s new auditing and attestation standards for the audits of brokers and dealers.

The amendments of SEC and standards of PCAOB are effective for fiscal years ending on or after June 1, 2014. Former to the effective date, those broker-dealer audits were taken under general auditing standards.

In order to help auditors with the transition, the staff guidance helps to find relevant requirements for SEC-registered brokers and dealers audits, attestation processes, and provides helpful insights on the application of PCAOB standards to these processes. Furthermore, the publication shows up major prerequisites of SEC Rule 17a-5 and PCAOB standards.

“Auditors of broker-dealers are now subject to new requirements, including the requirement to apply PCAOB standards,” said PCAOB chief auditor Martin F. Baumann. This publication discusses how audits can be scaled, based on the size and complexity of the broker-dealer, to apply PCAOB standards and fulfill their important role of helping to protect customers of broker-dealers.”

Publication is available at PCAOB’s official website

Xinhua Unit Is On Track for IPO; China News Agency Goes Public

BrokerDealer.com blog extends thanks to the Wall Street Journal’s Shen Hong for providing coverage regarding the Xinhua News Agency initial public offering. See below link for full story. in Wall Street Journal today’s article.

SHANGHAI—China’s official news service is on track for an initial public offering of its digital arm, as Beijing seeks to transform its staid propaganda organs into modernized entities.

If the plan proceeds, China’s state-run Xinhua News Agency would become the second of the Communist Party’s state-run media outlets to sell stock to the public, following the IPO two years ago of People.cn Co. 603000.SH -3.31%, the website of the authorities’ flagship newspaper, the People’s Daily.

In recent years, Beijing has encouraged its state-run media to tap the capital markets for funds and to use modern tools to boost the influence of the propaganda machines that it has used for decades to deliver its message to the Chinese people. Analysts say the government also hopes its propaganda arms can help it to promote “soft power”—cultural heft around the world through media such as movies and television shows—as well as to develop a thriving domestic media industry.

Xinhuanet Co., which operates the 83-year-old news agency’s main website Xinhuanet.com, released the preliminary IPO prospectus for a listing on the Shanghai Stock Exchange on the Chinese securities regulator’s website late Friday. Continue reading

Financial Advisors and Investors: Cannabis Due Diligence

Brokerdealer.com blog update courtesy of extract from FA Magazine

fa magazineLooking for a fun way to do due diligence on a hot new investment? Financial advisors, and their clients, might want to try a luxury tour of Colorado’s fledgling cannabis industry, including head shops, dispensaries and growing facilities.

That’s just what a group of over 200 high-net-worth investors from around the country—as well as a media corps that included a documentary film crew from Rai, Italy’s national public broadcasting company—did on Sunday, boarding seven luxury buses in Denver and embarking on a tour of local “canna-businesses.”

The trip was part of a two-day gathering of members of San Francisco-based ArcView Group, which runs an angel network for cannabis investors. It was timed to precede the National Cannabis Industry Association’s business summit, which was held Tuesday and Wednesday.

ArcView members have invested over $10 million in 14 private cannabis-related companies. A report by the network in 2013 estimated that the legal U.S. cannabis market was $1.5 billion in 2013 and projected it would grow more than 68 percent to $2.6 billion this year.

Investors may ultimately find that direct investments in businesses that handle the plant itself are not necessarily the best bets when it comes to making money in this industry. ArcView member Patrick Rea, founder and fund manager of Boulder-based MISO Capital, which invests in ancillary legal marijuana businesses, says the plant itself is not where investors should put their money. Sudden increases in supply have been known to dramatically drive down prices.

“There’s more supply coming online. Investors need to invest in companies with intellectual property that’s defensible and sustainable, not in crops,” says Rea. Of the ancillary businesses, he says, “There’s so much more opportunity.”

Video Camera Maker GoPro Shares #GPRO Surge As Company Raises $450 Million in Deal Led By Top BrokerDealers

A BrokerDealer.com blog special report:

Photo Courtesy of US News

GoPro Founders Cheer IPO. Photo Courtesy of US News

IPO market investors who were able to secure shares from their brokerdealers that were floated today on the NASDAQ Stock Market by video camera maker GoPro were rewarded as the company’s stock surged more than 30% in the company’s first day of trading on the public stock markets.

Investment Bankers J.P.Morgan, Citigroup and UK’s Barclays were the lead underwriters. Selling group members included the broker dealer industry’s Mischler Financial Group, the securities industry’s oldest and largest firm owned and operated by service-disabled veterans.

GoPro is the largest consumer-electronics IPO since battery company Duracell International Inc.’s 1991 debut raised $433 million, according to data provider Dealogic. Gillette Co., now a unit of Procter & GambleCo., bought Duracell in 1997.

GoPro is the latest consumer business to cash in on investor demand for U.S. stocks, which has given the likes of microblogging service Twitter Inc., perfume maker Coty Inc. and theme-park operator SeaWorld Entertainment Inc. a window to float shares in the past year and a half.

At the offering price, GoPro’s selling shareholders will generate proceeds of $427.2 million, based on the 17.8 million shares being sold. The company will command a market value of nearly $3 billion based on the 123.1 million shares that will be outstanding after the deal.  Trading on the NASDAQ Stock Market under ticker symbol “GPRO”, the shares soared GoPro shares rose $7.73, or 32 percent, to $31.73 in afternoon trading Thursday after rising as high as $33 earlier.

 

Barclays Bank Common Shares Walk Back 6% After Fraud Charges Filed By NY Attorney General

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Image Courtesy of BBC News

Shares in  UK’s Barclays Bank fell as much as 10% and closed 6% lower today on the London Stock Exchange, after New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman filed criminal charges against the bank in connection with the brokerdealer’s “dark trading pool, ” one of the financial market’s largest electronic trading platforms whose business model is to provide black box order matching for large block trades. New York’s top cop has accused Barclays of fraud, including allegations of misrepresentations made to clients of the bank, including the world’s largest investment managers.

In addition to heavy selling in the company’s shares, Barclays was forced to postpone the floating of a $1billion debt issue, whose proceeds were intended to retire outstanding debt issued at higher interest rates, and other purposes that include conforming to new capital rules imposed on investment bank/brokerdealers throughout the global financial markets

Per reporting from the BBC:

Prosecutors said Barclays misrepresented the kinds of investors that were using the dark pool. They said the bank claimed the pool was closed to aggressive traders, but in reality it was not.

They also said the bank had misled ordinary investors by claiming it would use a stock exchange or dark pool that “would best execute their trades” at any given time, but in fact the trades were “nearly always” routed to Barclays’ own dark pool so the bank could make more money.

The world’s major stock markets, such as the London and New York Stock Exchanges, are known as light markets, as they are highly transparent and regulated.

Dark pools are private markets set up by banks that are less transparent and so are not open to the same levels of scrutiny.

New York attorney general Eric Schneiderman said: “The facts alleged in our complaint show that Barclays demonstrated a disturbing disregard for its investors in a systematic pattern of fraud and deceit.”

“Barclays grew its dark pool by telling investors they were diving into safe waters. According to the lawsuit, Barclays’ dark pool was full of predators – there at Barclays’ invitation,” he said.

The complaint details “a flagrant pattern of fraud, deception and dishonesty with Barclays clients and the investing public,” he added.

Mr Schneiderman said presentations made by Barclays were “demonstrably false”. He read out some of the emails cited in the complaint. One, from a vice-president of sales, said: “I always like the idea we are being transparent, but happy to take liberties if we can all agree.”

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