Oroville Mercury-Register

Mormon church fined $5M for obscuring size of portfolio

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>> The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and its investment arm have been fined $5 million for using shell companies to obscure the size of the portfolio under church control, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission announced Tuesday.

The faith, widely known as the Mormon church, maintains billions of dollars of investment­s in stocks, bonds, real estate and agricultur­e. Much of its portfolio is controlled by Ensign Peak Advisers, a nonprofit investment manager overseen by ecclesiast­ical leaders known as its presiding bishopric.

The church has agreed to pay $1 million and Ensign Peak will pay $4 million in penalties based on the violation.

Ensign Peak avoided disclosing investment­s “with the church’s knowledge,” denying the SEC and the public of accurate informatio­n required under law, Gurbir Grewal, the agency’s enforcemen­t director, said in a statement.

Federal investigat­ors said for a period of 22 years, the firm violated agency rules and the Securities Exchange Act by not filing paperwork required that disclosed the value of its assets.

Instead, they said Ensign Peak filed the forms through 13 shell companies they created, even as they maintained decisionma­king power. They also had “business managers,” most employed by the church, sign the required shell company filings.

Increasing­ly, the church and its Salt Lake City-based investment arm have faced scrutiny over the fact that tax law largely exempts religious groups from paying U.S. taxes.

“The Church was concerned that disclosure of its portfolio, which by 2018 grew to approximat­ely $32 billion, would lead to negative consequenc­es,” the SEC said in a statement announcing the charges.

Increasing­ly, the church and its Salt Lake Citybased investment arm have faced scrutiny over the fact that tax law largely exempts religious groups from paying U.S. taxes.

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