FINRA Fines Pictet Overseas and Blue Ocean ATS for AML and Supervisory Violations Involving Low-Priced Securities | FINRA.org

https://www.finra.org/media-center/newsreleases/2026/finra-fines-pictet-overseas-and-blue-ocean-ats-aml-and-supervisory
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2026-05-22 05:04:15 · ggallwey@vixio.com
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WASHINGTON, D.C.—FINRA has fined two member firms a total of more than $1.1 million for anti-money laundering (AML) and supervisory violations related to low-priced securities transactions.

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TITLE: Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Fines Pictet Overseas and Blue Ocean ATS for Anti-Money Laundering Violations BODY: On May 20, 2026, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) announced enforcement actions against two member firms for anti-money laundering (AML) and supervisory violations involving low-priced securities transactions. FINRA fined Pictet Overseas Inc. $610,000 and Blue Ocean ATS $550,000, totalling more than $1.1 million in combined penalties. Pictet Overseas executed approximately $300 million of low-priced securities transactions involving more than 150 million shares between February 2022 and March 2023, with more than 70 percent occurring through an omnibus account held by its foreign financial institution (FFI) affiliate. FINRA found that despite receiving an alert from another regulator in June 2021 regarding AML program deficiencies, Pictet failed to implement a reasonably designed AML compliance program to detect and report suspicious transactions in low-priced securities from September 2021 to February 2025. The firm relied on manually compiled daily reports that could not effectively identify suspicious activity patterns and did not detect instances where customer trading represented more than 20 percent of individual daily market volumes. Pictet also failed to implement adequate due diligence procedures for FFI correspondent accounts and did not reasonably supervise compliance with Section 5 of the Securities Act of 1933. Blue Ocean ATS handled 95 percent of all overnight trading volume since its inception, including substantial low-priced securities volumes. FINRA determined that Blue Ocean's AML monitoring consisted primarily of manual reviews by a single employee and conducted no surveillance for spoofing, layering, or other manipulative order entry patterns. Both firms consented to FINRA's findings without admitting or denying charges. FINRA ordered Blue Ocean to certify remediation of its AML compliance program deficiencies. The enforcement actions reflect FINRA's focus on AML compliance obligations outlined in FINRA Rule 3310 and the 2026 FINRA Annual Regulatory Oversight Report.
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  • Created:2026-05-22 05:04:15
  • By:ggallwey@vixio.com (58)