Tackling the 2023 SEC Cybersecurity Rules
by John deCraen, Christopher White
Wed, Oct 25, 2023
The Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) Division of Examinations (Division) released its examination priorities, highlighting a variety of recurring and new risk areas. In addition to the stated priorities, registrants should stay apprised of developments in the SEC’s active rule-making agenda and analyze all risk alerts issued by the Division as they provide valuable insight into risk areas of potential concern. The Division is guided by its “four pillars” mission—to promote compliance, prevent fraud, monitor risk and inform policy—and the 2024 priorities reflect the Division’s focus on risks as a result of the continued evolution of capital markets, complex financial products offered to investors and the impact of technology.
Firms that embrace a proactive approach enhancing their compliance programs on an ongoing basis are best prepared to navigate regulatory examinations in 2024. Kroll, with its wealth of industry insights and decades of combined compliance experience, will assist investment advisers and broker dealers with the identification and mitigation of business risks arising from compliance failures. Through services such as an initial gap analysis, ongoing engagements, SEC mock examinations, regulatory ruling readiness GAP assessments and various compliance tools, our seasoned team can remedy identified areas of weakness and strengthen your overall compliance program.
The following are highlights of the 2024 examination priorities that underscore an investment adviser’s primary responsibility: fiduciary duty. The Division will expect investment advisers to maintain reasonably designed risk-based policies and procedures tailored to address compliance, including, but not limited to:
Investment advisers to private funds must also prioritize the review of the following areas:
For registered investment companies, the Division is focused on the protection of retail investors and retirees. Therefore, in addition to certain risk areas highlighted for investment advisers above, the Division will also focus on:
For broker-dealers, the Division will continue to focus its examinations on the following areas:
Although the announced priorities provide a roadmap into the national examination agenda, they are only one data point. Registrants are encouraged to confer with their experts to be informed about local-area priorities, emerging risks, enforcement activity and agency risk alerts and take any necessary steps to adjust their risk identification and compliance mitigation strategies.
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by John deCraen, Christopher White