Violation of Reporting Rules
FINRA Rule 7270B — Violation of Reporting Rules closes out the substantive obligations of the Rule 7200B Series by giving FINRA a mechanism to treat any failure to comply with the FINRA/NYSE Trade Reporting Facility's rules as a violation of FINRA's foundational commercial honor standard under Rule 2010. It does not add a new duty of its own.
Instead, it takes every obligation established earlier in the series, timely and accurate trade reporting under Rule 7230B, proper processing under Rule 7240B, the unconditional duty to honor locked-in trades under Rule 7250B, and audit trail accuracy under Rule 7260B, and makes clear that a breach of any of them can also be characterized as a breach of the industry's baseline standard of commercial honor and equitable dealing.
Overview and Regulatory Text
The rule provides that failure of a Participant, or a person associated with a Participant, to comply with any of the rules or requirements of the System may be considered conduct inconsistent with high standards of commercial honor and just and equitable principles of trade, in violation of Rule 2010. Two features of this language deserve close attention.
First, the word "any" places no limit on which trade reporting rule must be breached before this provision can apply; a violation of participation requirements, input mechanics, settlement obligations, or audit trail accuracy all fall within its reach equally. Second, the word "may" signals that this treatment is discretionary rather than automatic; FINRA is not required to charge every trade reporting violation as a Rule 2010 matter, and it retains judgment over when that additional characterization is warranted.
This structure gives FINRA a flexible enforcement tool rather than a rigid one. A firm's isolated, promptly corrected data accuracy lapse under Rule 7260B need not automatically become a commercial-honor finding, while a sustained pattern of reporting failures, or conduct suggesting deliberate disregard for the System's rules, can be escalated to that more serious characterization at FINRA's discretion.
The rule's brevity reflects this design choice: rather than attempting to enumerate which specific violations warrant Rule 2010 treatment and which do not, FINRA built a single connective provision and left the judgment of when to invoke it to its own enforcement discretion, informed by the facts of each case.
A Three-Way Identical Provision Across FINRA's Facilities
Rule 7270B is not only textually identical to Rule 7270A, its counterpart in the Rule 7200A Series; it is part of a broader pattern of near-identical drafting that extends to the Alternative Display Facility as well.
When FINRA updated its ADF rules, it explicitly confirmed that the ADF's own violation provision, now numbered Rule 7180, was drafted to be identical to Rules 7270A and 7270B governing the two trade reporting facilities. This three-way alignment across the ADF, the FINRA/Nasdaq Trade Reporting Facility, and the FINRA/NYSE Trade Reporting Facility signals something important: FINRA treats the principle that any trade reporting violation can be escalated to a Rule 2010 matter as a uniform standard across every facility through which members can satisfy their OTC trade reporting obligations, regardless of which facility a firm ultimately chooses to use.
This uniformity has a practical consequence for firms that report through more than one facility, whether by choice or through backup connectivity arrangements of the kind addressed elsewhere in the Rule 7200 Series.
A firm cannot expect a more lenient disciplinary posture by concentrating its reporting activity through one facility over another, since the underlying disciplinary bridge to Rule 2010 operates identically regardless of which facility processed the violation. Firms building compliance training around this provision can therefore teach it once, as a single unified principle applicable across the ADF, the FINRA/Nasdaq Trade Reporting Facility, and the FINRA/NYSE Trade Reporting Facility, rather than treating each facility's violation provision as requiring separate study.
Relationship to Rule 2010's Catch-All Function
Rule 2010 itself requires only that a member, in the conduct of its business, observe high standards of commercial honor and just and equitable principles of trade. Its breadth is deliberate, and it functions as FINRA's most frequently invoked provision precisely because its language reaches conduct not specifically addressed by any narrower rule.
Rule 7270B is a clear instance of how FINRA operationalizes that breadth in the trade reporting context: rather than leaving trade reporting violations to be evaluated solely against Rule 2010's general language on a case-by-case basis, FINRA built an explicit bridge naming the exact category of conduct, noncompliance with the Rule 7200B Series, that can support this characterization.
The practical effect is to give FINRA two charging options for the same underlying conduct. A firm that fails to honor a locked-in trade under Rule 7250B can be charged with that narrower violation alone, or with that violation together with a Rule 2010 charge under the bridge Rule 7270B provides, or in some cases with the Rule 2010 charge in place of the narrower one where FINRA's investigation and evidentiary record more naturally support the broader characterization.
This flexibility is precisely why firms should not treat any single trade reporting deficiency as necessarily minor simply because the underlying rule violated seems narrow or technical; the potential for Rule 2010 escalation exists regardless of how narrow the originating rule appears on its face.
Scope: Participants and Associated Persons
Rule 7270B's reach extends beyond the member firm itself to individuals, applying to any Participant or person associated with a Participant. This means the rule's disciplinary bridge is available not only against a firm as an entity but against the specific individuals, traders, operations personnel, or supervisors, whose conduct produced the underlying trade reporting violation.
A firm cannot insulate individual employees from this exposure simply by arguing that any violation was a firm-level, rather than personal, failing, particularly where an individual's own conduct directly caused or contributed to the underlying noncompliance.
This individual-level reach connects meaningfully to supervisory responsibility. A principal who becomes aware of a pattern of trade reporting deficiencies within their area of supervision, and who fails to take reasonable steps to remediate that pattern, can face exposure under Rule 7270B in their own right, separate from whatever liability the firm itself faces. This is consistent with the broader individual-accountability principle running through FINRA's disciplinary framework, and it means supervisory personnel cannot treat trade reporting compliance as solely an operations-department concern disconnected from their own personal regulatory exposure.
This scope also extends to non-supervisory personnel whose direct conduct produces the underlying violation, such as a trader who repeatedly submits inaccurate capacity indicators or an operations analyst who knowingly bypasses established reconciliation procedures.
FINRA's disciplinary history reflects that individual accountability under provisions like this one is not merely theoretical; associated persons have faced their own separate findings tied to trade reporting conduct, distinct from the firm-level disposition of the same underlying events.
Firms building training programs around trade reporting compliance should make this individual exposure explicit to relevant personnel, rather than allowing employees to assume that trade reporting compliance failures are exclusively a firm-level concern with no personal consequence attached.
Distinguishing Rule 7270B from the Narrower Rules It References
Because Rule 7270B has no independent elements of its own, distinct from whatever underlying rule was actually violated, it is worth being precise about what the rule adds versus what it merely enables. It adds no new reporting obligation, no new timing requirement, and no new data element. What it adds is characterization: the ability for FINRA to treat conduct already prohibited elsewhere in the Rule 7200B Series as also constituting a breach of the industry's foundational conduct standard.
A firm defending against a Rule 7270B-based charge is, in substance, defending against whatever underlying rule, Rule 7230B, Rule 7240B, Rule 7250B, or Rule 7260B, actually governs the conduct at issue, with the added stakes of a potential Rule 2010 finding layered on top.
This distinction matters for how firms should think about the relative seriousness of different trade reporting deficiencies. A Rule 7260B audit trail finding, eligible for streamlined disposition under FINRA's Minor Rule Violation Plan, sits at one end of the spectrum, while conduct severe or persistent enough to draw a formal Rule 2010 charge through the Rule 7270B bridge sits at the other.
The same underlying rule can produce findings anywhere along this spectrum depending on severity, pattern, and context, and Rule 7270B is the mechanism that makes the more serious end of that spectrum available to FINRA when the facts warrant it.
Enforcement Pathways and the Minor Rule Violation Plan
Not every violation potentially eligible for Rule 7270B treatment actually proceeds that way. FINRA maintains a Minor Rule Violation Plan under Rules 9216(b) and 9217, and Rule 7260B is itself explicitly enumerated within that plan, meaning many isolated audit trail findings resolve through a fine schedule rather than formal disciplinary proceedings.
The existence of this streamlined pathway does not eliminate Rule 7270B's relevance; it means FINRA exercises judgment, informed by severity, pattern, and context, in deciding whether a given trade reporting deficiency warrants the more serious formal characterization the Rule 7270B bridge makes available, or the more efficient disposition the Minor Rule Violation Plan provides.
Firms should not assume that because a specific underlying rule is generally Minor Rule Violation Plan eligible, every instance of noncompliance with it will automatically receive that lighter treatment. A pattern of repeated findings, conduct connected to broader supervisory failures, or violations occurring alongside other trade reporting deficiencies can each push FINRA toward the formal Rule 2010 characterization Rule 7270B enables, even where an isolated instance of the same underlying conduct might otherwise have qualified for streamlined disposition.
Regulatory History and Rulebook Placement
Rule 7270B was adopted by SR-NASD-2007-011, effective April 18, 2007, alongside the rest of the original Rule 7200B Series governing the newly established FINRA/NYSE Trade Reporting Facility. It was amended twice on the same date, December 15, 2008, first through SR-FINRA-2008-021 and separately through SR-FINRA-2008-057, both part of the broader rulebook consolidation described in Regulatory Notice 08-57.
The rule was subsequently renumbered from its original designation as Rule 7270C to its current Rule 7270B numbering through SR-FINRA-2008-066, effective January 1, 2009, part of the same series-wide reorganization that renumbered the other Rule 7200C provisions across the entire series.
The rule sits between Rule 7260B, Audit Trail Requirements, and the close of the Rule 7200B Series' substantive obligations, occupying the same structural position that Rule 7270A occupies within the Rule 7200A Series.
Reading the Rule 7200B Series in sequence, a firm encounters participation requirements, input mechanics, processing rules, the honor obligation, audit trail accuracy, and finally this disciplinary bridge, before the series would logically turn to questions of access termination in a facility that included such a provision explicitly.
Examination Relevance Across the FINRA Exam Suite
Series 24 candidates carry the greatest relevance to this rule, since a General Securities Principal supervising trade reporting operations must understand that any deficiency elsewhere in the Rule 7200B Series carries potential exposure beyond its narrower rule citation.
Series 24 candidates should be able to explain how FINRA's discretion under Rule 7270B interacts with the Minor Rule Violation Plan eligibility of rules like Rule 7260B, and should understand that a principal's supervisory response to a discovered deficiency can influence which enforcement pathway FINRA ultimately selects.
SIE candidates should retain the general principle that Rule 2010 functions as a catch-all conduct standard capable of reaching violations of narrower, more technical rules throughout FINRA's rulebook, a pattern this provision illustrates clearly in the trade reporting context. Series 7 candidates have limited direct exposure, since this rule operates primarily at the level of firm and desk supervision, though individual registered representatives should understand that the rule's reach to associated persons means personal accountability is possible in appropriate circumstances.
Series 63 and Series 65 candidates will not encounter Rule 7270B on either exam, as both are structured around state securities law and investment adviser regulation rather than FINRA's broker-dealer disciplinary framework.
Professional and Industry Relevance for Working Practitioners
For compliance and legal personnel, Rule 7270B is a reminder that resolving a narrow trade reporting deficiency does not automatically close the door to a broader commercial-honor characterization of the same underlying conduct. Firms negotiating the resolution of a trade reporting finding should consider not just the specific rule cited but the possibility that FINRA could pursue, or threaten to pursue, the same conduct through the Rule 7270B bridge, and should factor that possibility into settlement strategy and remediation planning from the outset rather than treating it as a separate, later-stage concern.
For supervisory principals, the individual-level reach of this rule underscores the value of documented, prompt remediation whenever a trade reporting deficiency is discovered within their area of responsibility. A supervisor who can demonstrate a clear record of identifying and correcting reporting deficiencies quickly is in a materially stronger position, both practically and reputationally, than one who allowed known issues to persist, should FINRA ever consider invoking Rule 7270B against that supervisor personally rather than, or in addition to, the firm.
Firms operating across the ADF, the FINRA/Nasdaq Trade Reporting Facility, and the FINRA/NYSE Trade Reporting Facility should build a single, unified escalation policy addressing this shared disciplinary bridge, rather than maintaining separate policies for each facility.
Because the underlying provision is textually identical across all three, a firm's approach to managing Rule 2010 exposure arising from trade reporting deficiencies should not depend on which specific facility processed the underlying violation, and a fragmented, facility-by-facility policy risks inconsistent treatment of substantively similar conduct depending on an accident of which facility happened to be involved.
Examination Relevance and Key Takeaways
Rule 7270B provides no independent substantive obligation; it functions as the bridge allowing any violation elsewhere in the Rule 7200B Series to be characterized as a breach of FINRA's Rule 2010 commercial honor standard, at FINRA's discretion rather than automatically. Its reach extends to Participants and associated persons alike, and it forms part of a broader three-way identical provision shared with Rule 7270A and the ADF's own violation rule, reflecting FINRA's judgment that this disciplinary bridge should operate uniformly across every facility through which members satisfy their trade reporting obligations.
The choice between formal Rule 2010 treatment and resolution through the Minor Rule Violation Plan turns on severity, pattern, and supervisory response rather than any fixed threshold within the rule's own text, and firms should plan their remediation practices with that discretionary reality firmly in mind.
Series 24 candidates and supervisory principals carry the greatest practical stake in this rule, given its direct relevance to how enforcement discretion operates across the trade reporting rules they supervise, while SIE candidates need only the conceptual grasp of Rule 2010's catch-all function. Series 7 candidates retain limited but meaningful awareness that individual accountability is possible under this rule's associated-person reach, and Series 63 and Series 65 candidates can treat this rule as entirely outside their tested scope.
For working compliance and supervisory professionals, prompt and well-documented remediation of any underlying trade reporting deficiency remains the most reliable way to influence how FINRA exercises the discretion this rule provides.
