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Mea Culpa From SMBC Nikko After Client Breach

SMBC Nikko, the brokerage unit of Japanese lender Sumitomo
Mitsui Banking Corp, has apologised to clients after it was found
to be divulging insider information.
Japan's second biggest bank issued a mea culpa on
Friday, following an order to improve by the Financial
Services
Agency.
Japan’s watchdog told the unit that it must submit a report by 1
May showing who is responsible for
leaked information ahead of a share sale.
The Securities and Exchange Surveillance Commission
recommended to the FSA that the firm should be punished after it
found sales
staff disclosing insider information to clients about an upcoming
equity
offering.
“Today,
SMBC Nikko was issued a business improvement order
by the FSA based on...findings of deficient internal control
systems with
respect to undisclosed corporate information and inappropriate
solicitation
activities by SMBC Nikko,“ said the firm in a statement published
on Friday.
"We would like to apologise with our deepest sincerity for the inconvenience and concern this has caused to all of our customers and stakeholders," said SMBC Nikko.
“We will respond to the administrative action against SMBC
Nikko by the FSA with profound gravity by supervising SMBC
Nikko’s compliance
measures to prevent reoccurrence and by taking appropriate
efforts to further
strengthen our group wide compliance and control system.”