Robinhood fined $30 million in penalty fees—and this isn’t the first time

Robinhood Markets’ cryptocurrency division was fined $30 million by New York State financial regulators after the online trading platform was accused of violating bank secrecy and anti-money laundering obligations, according to a report filed this morning.

As part of the settlement, Robinhood will be required to hire an independent consultant to carry out an evaluation of the company’s compliance with the New York State Department of Financial Services’ regulations and remedy any errors that are found.

Robinhood Crypto’s “significant failures” according to the state of New York include inadequately staffing a cybersecurity program within the company, not allocating sufficient resources to address cybersecurity risks, and not transitioning from a manual transaction monitoring system to one the state requires for a company of Robinhood’s size in time.

“As its business grew, Robinhood Crypto failed to invest the proper resources and attention to develop and maintain a culture of compliance—a failure that resulted in significant violations of the Department’s anti-money laundering and cybersecurity regulations,” Adrienne Harris, superintendent of financial services for NYDFS, said in an announcement.

Today’s penalty is not the first time that Robinhood has been ordered to pay financial regulatory authorities. Last year, the company was ordered to pay $70 million in a settlement that alleged a series of issues, including service outages and sharing false or misleading information to customers. This marked the largest penalty ever issued by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.

Despite the allegations and fines from NYDFS, Robinhood says it is pleased with the progress it has made since addressing fines from last year.

“We have made significant progress building industry-leading legal, compliance, and cybersecurity programs, and will continue to prioritize this work to best serve our customers,” said Cheryl Crumpton, associate general counsel of litigation and regulatory enforcement at Robinhood, in a statement to Fast Company. “We remain proud to offer a more accessible, lower-cost platform to buy and sell crypto and are excited to continue to grow our business in a responsible manner with new products and services that our customers want.”

Wall Street seemed to agree. As of midday, Robinhood’s stock was up about 1%, trading at around $9 a share.

https://www.fastcompany.com/90775176/robinhood-fined-30-million-penalty-fees-crypto?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Creato 3y | 2 ago 2022, 18:21:01


Accedi per aggiungere un commento

Altri post in questo gruppo

Traveling abroad? Skip Apple Maps and Google Maps. Try these apps instead

Americans often receive a lot of grief for being less internationally traveled than citizens of other countries. But in recent years, more Americans are traveling abroad than ever before. Numbers

17 mag 2025, 11:30:05 | Fast company - tech
Treat yourself to a taste of the weird web of yesteryear

The web wasn’t always like it is now. It used to be weirder—in a good way. And it still can be.

After all, we all occasionally need a tranquil break amidst a hectic day—be it a beautiful

17 mag 2025, 11:30:04 | Fast company - tech
TikTok wants to help people unplug, but not everyone wants a digital detox

Feeling like you’ve overdone it on the scrolling? Now you can take a break from TikTok to meditate—without ever leaving the app.

TikTok’s new in-app meditation feature,

16 mag 2025, 23:50:03 | Fast company - tech
OpenAI launches Codex, an AI agent for coding

OpenAI launched a research preview on Friday of what it’s calling its most capable AI coding agent yet.

Codex, a cloud-based sof

16 mag 2025, 19:20:04 | Fast company - tech
How NFL teams turn schedule reveals into viral social media moments

For NFL teams’ social media departments, May 14 is the Super Bowl.

NFL Schedule Release Day has become an unofficial holiday on the league calendar. All 32 teams unveil their season sche

16 mag 2025, 19:20:03 | Fast company - tech
Meet the startup taking on Nintendo, Xbox, and PlayStation

Switch, PS5, and XBox might be the biggest names in video games, but David Lee and a group of entrepreneurial alums from companies like Apple, Google, Microsoft, and Meta are carving out a niche m

16 mag 2025, 14:40:04 | Fast company - tech