The National - News

DFSA issues RJO Mena with $1.37m fine for lack of compliance

- AARTI NAGRAJ

The Dubai Financial Services Authority has imposed a fine of more than Dh5 million ($1.37 million) on financial broker RJ O’Brien Mena Capital for failing to comply with regulatory requiremen­ts.

The fine was reduced from the original Dh10.25 million since the firm offered the authority an enforceabl­e undertakin­g to remediate the failings and agreed to settle the matter, the regulator of the Dubai Internatio­nal Financial Centre said.

The firm also engaged an external compliance expert to assist and to verify that the necessary remediatio­n has been completed.

“Authorised firms must ensure that they have adequate compliance and other resources to be able to comply with their legal and regulatory obligation­s,” said Patrick Meaney, head of enforcemen­t at the authority.

“Compliance is not an incidental cost of doing business, it is a critical function that must be adequately resourced in terms of both number and quality of staff.”

RJO Mena is a fully owned subsidiary of JVMC Holding, a group holding company that operates in the US, UK, EU, Middle East and Asia.

The group has a futures brokerage and clearing firm, including a full clearing member of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and all its markets, as well as the markets operated by the Interconti­nental Exchange Group in the EU and the US.

The matter pertains to RJO Mena’s acquisitio­n of LFS, another DFSA authorised firm, which was initiated in 2020. The authority said it found the firm “did not undertake sufficient planning and analysis to ensure it could comply with its ongoing regulatory obligation­s after acquiring an additional brokerage”.

“The firm’s senior management were aware of the lack of compliance resources and failed to adequately address it to ensure that the compliance function was able to fulfil its regulatory obligation­s,” it said.

But the authority said it “did not find any evidence that the firm acted deliberate­ly to contravene DFSA-administer­ed laws and rules”.

It also said the contravent­ions occurred during the Covid-19 pandemic, which made planning and supervisio­n of the LFS integratio­n “more challengin­g due to travel restrictio­ns preventing travel by group employees to Dubai”.

The authority has been cracking down on regulatory non-compliance as part of efforts to maintain confidence and stability in the financial services industry in the DIFC. It aims to reduce systemic risk in the sector and prevent, detect and restrain conduct that causes or may cause damage to the reputation of the financial centre.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates