FINRA floats voluntary buyouts to trim headcount
3 min read
Ting Shen/Bloomberg
The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority is asking for voluntary buyouts from employees, for the third time in the last five years.
A source familiar confirmed that a buyout program has been offered to FINRA personnel. Previous rounds came in 2020 and 2024.
“As a self-regulatory membership organization, FINRA must continually adapt to support our mission of protecting investors and ensuring that the U.S. securities markets are the most vibrant in the world,” a FINRA spokesperson said in an email. “FINRA is realigning our organization, programs, and resources to maximize efficiency and impact, and drive innovation.”
FINRA is the self-regulatory organization that oversees the broker-dealer sector. The group, which is privately funded by its broker-dealer members, reports to the SEC. The organization also floated voluntary retirement or incentive programs in 2020 and 2024, according to the
As of January 31, 2024, 187 eligible employees had accepted the “voluntary incentive program” with separation dates in 2024 and 2025, according to the 2024 report. FINRA reported “special termination benefits” of approximately $33.3 million in 2024 in connection with the VIP, it said in the report.
FINRA’s operating expenses in 2025 are expected to total around $1.37 billion, according to the
employees, not including contractors, the budget summary said. That’s up from 3,619
in 2020. The increase is “largely attributable to contractor conversions and additional staff needed to support regulatory operations in order to respond to the demands of an evolving marketplace and expansion in FINRA’s regulatory responsibilities,” the budget summary said.
Ninety percent of FINRA’s operating expenses are driven by compensation and technology costs, the organization said.
President and CEO Robert Cook, at
FINRA has “brought in outside consultants to help us figure out how we could be more efficient in our processes,” Cook said. “We’ve shrunken our real estate footprint. We’ve had voluntary buyouts. So these are things we’ve been doing over the years.”
The voluntary buyouts come amid a larger culling and scrutiny of financial regulators under the Trump administration. The Securities and Exchange Commission has reduced its headcount by 15% since the beginning of the current fiscal year, SEC Chair Paul Atkins
In April, a
The constitutionality of self-regulatory organizations like FINRA has also been
In June, the U.S. Supreme Court