Boston Herald

MassMutual fined for failing to monitor GME saga’s ‘Roaring Kitty’

Regulators say Gill was posting more than 250 hours of videos on YouTube and sending at least 590 Tweets about investing and GameStop through accounts unaffiliat­ed with the company.

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State regulators are fining MassMutual $4 million and ordering it to overhaul its social media policies after accusing the company of failing to supervise an employee whose online cheerleadi­ng of GameStop’s stock helped launch the frenzy that shook Wall Street earlier this year.

The settlement announced Thursday by Secretary of the State William Galvin centers on the actions of Keith Gill, who was an employee at a MassMutual subsidiary from April 2019 until January 2021.

His tenure ended as GameStop’s stock price suddenly soared nearly 800% in a week, with hordes of smaller-pocketed and novice investors piled in, to the shock and awe of profession­als.

Gill’s job at MassMutual was to create educationa­l materials for current and potential customers, but regulators say he was also posting more than 250 hours of videos on YouTube and sending at least 590 Tweets about investing and GameStop through accounts unaffiliat­ed with the company.

Regulators cited those messages, alleging MassMutual failed to monitor the social media accounts of Gill and other employees who were registered as brokerdeal­er agents in the state, and therefore subject to certain supervisio­n requiremen­ts.

The MassMutual unit where Gill worked prohibits broker-dealer agents from discussing generic securities on social media.

In his online messages, Gill would often talk about why he owned and was optimistic about GameStop’s stock, even though it had been struggling for years. He used the nicknames “Roaring Kitty” and “DeepValue,” with an expletive in the middle of the latter one, and he amassed tens of thousands of followers.

Gill, and the red headband he wore in many of his videos, became such central characters in the GameStop phenomenon that he testified in a Congressio­nal hearing about it. There he professed once again, “I like the stock,” a statement that became a rallying cry for GameStop investors in forums across the internet.

Regulators also said MassMutual failed to have reasonable policies and procedures to monitor the personal trading of its registered agents, among other things. To watch for excessive trading, for example, the MassMutual unit where Gill worked had a rule to flag transactio­ns of $250,000 or more in a single security made across all the accounts by registered representa­tives.

Regulators say Gill sold $750,000 worth of GameStop options and bought $703,600 of GameStop stock in one day during January, but his employer’s trade surveillan­ce system didn’t flag either of the trades.

In the settlement, MassMutual neither admitted nor denied state regulators’ findings. It said in a statement that it’s “pleased to put this matter behind us, avoiding the expense and distractio­n associated with protracted litigation.”

 ?? Ap File ?? WASN’T WATCHED CLOSE ENOUGH: Keith Gill, also known in social media forums as Roaring Kitty, testifies during a virtual hearing on GameStop on Feb. 18.
Ap File WASN’T WATCHED CLOSE ENOUGH: Keith Gill, also known in social media forums as Roaring Kitty, testifies during a virtual hearing on GameStop on Feb. 18.

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