J.P. Morgan Securities, a division of JPMorgan Chase, has consented to a settlement of $18 million to address claims that it hindered retail clients in its advisory and brokerage services from reaching out to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) regarding possible securities law breaches.
The SEC's allegations span from March 2020 to July 2023, during which J.P. Morgan Securities purportedly made it a common practice to request clients, who were recipients of credits or settlement amounts exceeding $1,000 from the firm, to enter into confidentiality agreements.
These agreements explicitly barred the clients from initiating contact with the SEC, effectively limiting their ability to report any suspected violations of securities regulations.
This action by J.P. Morgan Securities has raised significant concerns about the transparency and ethical practices within the financial advisory and brokerage sectors, particularly in the context of client rights and the enforcement of securities laws.
January 16, 2024
More Articles
What Bubble? Asset Managers in Risk-On Mode Stick With Stocks
There’s a time when investments run their course and the prudent move is to cash out. For global asset managers that time is not now.
Alpha Vee Solutions’ Dynamic Risk Management: Keeping Clients Invested Through Volatility
Leigh Eichel, Co-Founder and CEO of Alpha Vee Solutions, has spent 15 years building strategies around one premise: buy-and-hold has become “buy and hope.” His firm’s approach combines fundamental research with quarterly risk overlays across market conditions, inflation, sector rotation, and stock selection—seeking to keep clients invested through volatility while managing downside exposure. The framework aims to respond systematically to changing markets rather than attempting to predict them.