About the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority
The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA), is the largest
non-governmental regulator for all securities firms doing business in
the United States. All told, FINRA oversees over 5,000 brokerage firms,
about 172,000 branch offices and more than 676,000 registered
securities representatives.
Created in July 2007 through the consolidation of NASD and the member
regulation, enforcement and arbitration functions of the New York Stock
Exchange, FINRA is dedicated to investor protection and market
integrity through effective and efficient regulation and complementary
compliance and technology-based services.
FINRA touches virtually every aspect of the securities business—from
registering and educating industry participants to examining securities
firms; writing rules; enforcing those rules and the federal securities
laws; informing and educating the investing public; providing trade
reporting and other industry utilities; and administering the largest
dispute resolution forum for investors and registered firms. It also
performs market regulation under contract for The NASDAQ Stock Market,
the American Stock Exchange, the International Securities Exchange and
the Chicago Climate Exchange.
FINRA has approximately 3,000 employees and operates from Washington,
DC, and New York, NY, with 15 District Offices around the country.
"The creation of FINRA is the most significant modernization of the
self-regulatory regime in decades," said Mary L. Schapiro, Chief
Executive Officer of FINRA. "With investor protection and market
integrity as our overarching objectives, FINRA is an investor-focused
and more streamlined regulator that is better suited to the complexity
and competitiveness of today's global capital markets."
FINRA believes investor protection begins with education. Using the
internet, the media and public forums, we help investors build their
financial knowledge and provide them with essential tools to better
understand the markets and basic principles of saving and investing. In
addition, the FINRA Investor Education Foundation is the largest
foundation in the United States dedicated to investor education. As of
June 2007, the Foundation had approved $10.4 million in grants and an
additional $10.2 million in direct investor education programming.
In today's fast-paced and complex global economy, FINRA is a trusted
advocate for investors, dedicated to keeping the markets fair, ensuring
investor choice and proactively addressing emerging regulatory issues
before they harm investors or the markets.