STATEMENT OF SECURITIES INVESTOR PROTECTION CORPORATION PRESIDENT
MICHAEL E. DON
June 22, 2001 - On the Release of the General Accounting
Office (GAO) Report "Securities Investor Protection: Steps Needed
to Better Disclose SIPC Policies to Investors
" We welcome the new report from the General Accounting Office,
which has reached many of the same conclusions that the Securities
Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC) did last year when we embarked
on a large-scale upgrade of our investor education services. Contrary
to some published reports, the GAO report does not find any significant
deficiencies on the part of SIPC and I encourage fair-minded individuals
to read the report for themselves in order to get an accurate grasp
of what the GAO actually concluded.
As to what the GAO recommends, I am pleased to report that SIPC
already has: Simplified and expanded our basic brochure for investors,
"How SIPC Protects You," which last month replaced the brochure
referenced in the GAO report. In particular, the new brochure, which
was released in May 2001, addresses directly the point of how investors
should document unauthorized trading claims in order to protect
their interests, a primary point raised in the GAO report. Another
key point in the GAO report, spelling out the consequences for small
investors of dealing with brokers unaffiliated with SIPC, also is
discussed in the new brochure. The brochure may be viewed online
by reporters at www.hastingsgroup.com/newsipc.pdf.
Overhauled the SIPC Web site to facilitate liquidation claims filing
and to better explain the extent and limitations of SIPC coverage.
Due to be unveiled to the public next month, the new SIPC Web site
includes a step-by-step online claims fill-out process that explains
each step of the filing process in plain English. The Web site SIPC
will unveil in July also includes on the homepage such key topics
as "What SIPC Covers . and What It Does Not" and "Why SIPC is NOT
the FDIC. " The new Web site directly addresses the GAO's points
both in regard to making it easier for investors to file liquidation
claims and also in terms of avoiding confusion between SIPC and
the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC).
In order to get the word out to more investors, SIPC also committed
last year to embark on wide-ranging investor education outreach
activities on an ongoing basis. In August, SIPC will join a major
investor organization to release a national opinion survey showing
exactly what investors do and do not know about key issues, including
points raised by the GAO. This will be the first step in a campaign
to get the facts directly to those individuals who most need to
understand how SIPC operates. Future steps in this campaign will
include public service announcements (PSAs) and other innovative
mass outreach techniques. In short, SIPC already has made the decision
to do what it can to reach out to and inform as many people as possible.
These voluntary steps on our behalf in the public's interest go
well beyond anything that the GAO recommended in terms of upgrading
our investor education efforts.
As to the question of U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
oversight of SIPC, we pride ourselves on the fact that the SEC has
never found a significant problem of any kind in how SIPC operates.
Additional oversight and review of our operations by the SEC is
not only something that we welcome but are 100 percent committed
to facilitate in whatever way is most productive for the Commission
in the interest of America's investors.
There is nothing in the GAO report that in any way tarnishes SIPC's
outstanding track record of help for the investors of America. From
its creation by Congress in 1970 through December 2000, SIPC advanced
$391 million in order to make possible the recovery of $3.8 billion
in assets for an estimated 443,000 investors. We estimate that more
than 99 percent of eligible investors have been made whole in the
failed brokerage firm cases that SIPC has handled to date.