Less Than 8 Cents Per Violation. | Virtu

Virtu Americas Broke Market Rules 88,500 Times and Paid Less Than a Speeding Ticket
EvilCorporations.com — Corporate Accountability Reporting

Virtu Americas Broke Market Rules 88,500 Times and Paid Less Than a Speeding Ticket Per Violation

A Wall Street market-maker spent 21 months routing illegal trade orders through U.S. stock exchanges. Regulators fined them $6,930.

● Medium Severity
TL;DR

Between October 2019 and July 2021, Virtu Americas LLC, a major Wall Street market-maker, ran an automated trading program that was misconfigured in a way that broke federal stock market rules 88,500 times. The rules exist to make sure trades are executed fairly across markets, protecting every investor who participates in U.S. stock markets. Virtu’s system sent the wrong type of orders, potentially skipping over protected price quotes and giving the firm an unfair edge. FINRA caught it. The penalty: $6,930 total, as part of a broader $200,000 multi-firm settlement. For a firm that processes millions of trades, this is not accountability. It is a rounding error.

The stock market only works if everyone plays by the same rules. When firms this powerful break those rules and walk away with pocket-change fines, the system is rigged against ordinary investors.

88,500
Illegal order routings by Virtu
$6,930
Fine paid by Virtu Americas
21 mo.
Duration of violations (Oct 2019 to Jul 2021)
$200K
Total fine across all firms in related action
<$0.08
Fine per illegal order routed
340
Registered individuals at Virtu Americas

The Allegations: A Breakdown

⚠️
Core Allegations
What they did · 5 points
01 Between October 2019 and July 2021, Virtu Americas used a misconfigured automated program to route 88,500 trade orders that failed to meet the legal requirements for intermarket sweep orders (ISOs) under federal securities rules. high
02 Virtu’s automated system sent orders marked as a certain type (ISOs) without including the required companion orders needed to sweep protected price quotes at other markets, violating the core purpose of those rules: fair price execution across all markets. high
03 The firm’s failure to properly route these orders means it potentially bypassed better-priced stock quotes available at other trading venues, a violation of the order protection framework designed to benefit all market participants. high
04 The violations were specific to “DAY ISOs,” a category of trade orders valid for an entire trading day. Virtu’s system was not configured to attach the required sweep orders to this category, despite it being a basic and well-known regulatory requirement. medium
05 FINRA identified the violations through its own cross-market surveillance program, acting on behalf of multiple stock exchanges. Virtu did not self-identify or self-report the problem; regulators found it. medium
🏛️
Regulatory Failures
How oversight broke down · 4 points
01 Virtu’s automated compliance program went unchecked for 21 months before FINRA’s surveillance caught the mismatch. The firm’s internal quality controls failed to detect or flag nearly 90,000 incorrectly routed orders during this period. high
02 The settlement agreement notes that Virtu “did not take reasonable steps” to verify its orders complied with federal rules, a standard explicitly required by Exchange Act Rule 611(c) for any firm responsible for routing ISOs. high
03 No individual executives or compliance officers at Virtu Americas were named, charged, or fined. The entire accountability structure fell solely on the corporation, which resolved the matter without admitting or denying the findings. medium
04 FINRA’s enforcement framework allowed Virtu to waive its right to a formal hearing and contest the allegations, resolving the matter quietly through an administrative settlement that requires no public admission of wrongdoing. medium
💰
Profit Over Compliance
Revenue prioritized over following the rules · 4 points
01 Virtu Americas operates as a high-frequency market-maker processing enormous trading volumes daily. A $6,930 fine for 21 months of rule-breaking represents a negligible cost of doing business for a firm of its scale. high
02 At less than eight cents per illegal order routing, the fine structure creates no real incentive for firms like Virtu to invest in rigorous automated compliance systems when the cost of getting caught is so low. high
03 The fact that this violation persisted for nearly two years before correction suggests that fixing it was simply not a priority. The firm reconfigured its system in July 2021 only after FINRA surveillance identified the problem. medium
04 Virtu was censured as part of this settlement, a formal reprimand that goes on the firm’s disciplinary record. Censure without meaningful financial penalties, however, functions primarily as paperwork rather than deterrence. low
⚖️
Corporate Accountability Failures
Weak penalties, no individual liability, settlement without admission · 5 points
01 Virtu accepted the settlement without admitting or denying the findings. This standard FINRA settlement structure allows firms to resolve serious rule violations without ever publicly acknowledging that they broke the law. high
02 Virtu’s Chief Compliance Officer signed the settlement on behalf of the firm. Despite signing a document confirming these violations, no individual within the firm faces personal liability, financial penalty, or professional sanction. high
03 By accepting the AWC settlement process, Virtu waived its right to a formal hearing, a written complaint, and appeal rights, meaning the public receives no formal adversarial proceeding and no detailed factual record developed through evidence. medium
04 FINRA’s settlement terms permanently bar Virtu from publicly denying the findings or claiming this AWC has no factual basis, yet the firm also never had to admit to wrongdoing in any public forum. medium
05 The broader multi-firm settlement totaling $200,000 involved eight major exchanges including NYSE, Nasdaq, Cboe, and others. The aggregate fine for all firms combined still represents a trivial amount compared to the trading revenues these companies generate. medium
📜
Legal Minimalism
Complying with form but not intent · 3 points
01 Virtu’s automated program was labeling orders as ISOs (a specific technical classification) while simultaneously failing to include the required companion orders that give those labels legal meaning. It used the correct terminology while ignoring the underlying rule. high
02 The AWC settlement process itself is a form of legal minimalism: FINRA offers firms a path to resolve violations without trial, without admission, and with predetermined penalties, structured to keep enforcement efficient rather than punitive. medium
03 Regulation NMS, the framework Virtu violated, was designed in 2005 specifically to ensure that all investors receive the best available price in the market. Virtu’s automated misconfiguration circumvented the practical operation of those protections for nearly two years. medium

Timeline of Events

Jul 2009
Virtu Americas LLC becomes a FINRA member firm, headquartered in New York with market-making and trade execution services.
Oct 2019
Virtu’s automated trading program begins routing DAY ISOs without the required companion sweep orders, violating Exchange Act Rule 611(c) and FINRA Rule 2010.
Oct 2019 to Jul 2021
88,500 illegal ISO routings occur across multiple stock exchanges over 21 months. Virtu’s internal compliance systems do not catch the error.
Jul 2021
FINRA’s cross-market surveillance program identifies the violations. Virtu reconfigures its automated program to correctly route all DAY ISOs with required companion limit orders.
Jan 15, 2026
Virtu’s Chief Compliance Officer Justin Miller signs the FINRA AWC settlement, accepting a censure and $6,930 fine without admitting or denying the findings.
Jan 21, 2026
FINRA formally accepts the AWC. The settlement becomes part of Virtu Americas’ permanent disciplinary record. Total penalty across all related firms: $200,000.

Direct Quotes from the Regulatory Record

QUOTE 1 The scope of the violation Core Allegations
“Between October 2019 and July 2021, Virtu violated Rule 611(c) of Regulation National Market System (NMS) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and FINRA Rule 2010 by failing to take reasonable steps to establish that 88,500 intermarket sweep orders (ISOs) routed by the firm to certain market centers met the requirements for ISOs.”

💡 This sentence is the entire case in 50 words: 88,500 violations over 21 months, and the official response is a fine of $6,930.

QUOTE 2 The legal standard Virtu failed to meet Regulatory Failures
“Exchange Act Rule 611(c) provides that trading centers, brokers, or dealers that are ‘responsible for the routing of an [ISO] shall take reasonable steps to establish that such order meets the requirements set forth in [Rule] 600(b)(47).'”

💡 “Reasonable steps” is not a high legal bar. Virtu failed to clear even that low threshold for 21 consecutive months.

QUOTE 3 How the misconfiguration worked Core Allegations
“The logic in Virtu’s automated program, however, was not appropriately configured to send limit orders marked as ISOs for DAY ISOs transmitted to the exchanges. Instead, in certain instances, Virtu routed limit orders not marked as ISOs instead of limit orders marked as ISOs.”

💡 The system was sending orders with the wrong labels and without the required protective companion orders, potentially skipping investor protections built into federal market structure rules.

QUOTE 4 The consequence: unexecuted protected quotes Core Allegations
“Due to the firm’s failure to route certain limit orders as ISOs, as it was obligated to do, the firm potentially failed to execute against protected quotations during the review period.”

💡 “Protected quotations” are the best available prices guaranteed to investors under federal law. Virtu potentially bypassed them, meaning investors may have received worse prices than they were owed.

QUOTE 5 The connection to honesty and fair dealing standards Regulatory Failures
“A violation of Exchange Act Rule 611(c) constitutes a violation of FINRA Rule 2010, which requires FINRA members to observe high standards of commercial honor and just and equitable principles of trade in the conduct of their business.”

💡 “High standards of commercial honor” is the standard Virtu violated. This is not a technicality. It is a fundamental obligation to the markets and to investors.

QUOTE 6 How the problem was finally fixed Regulatory Failures
“FINRA Surveillance identified this issue, and Virtu reconfigured the logic of its automated surveillance program in July 2021 to route all DAY ISOs with limit orders marked as ISOs.”

💡 Virtu did not self-report or voluntarily fix this issue. FINRA found it. The firm only corrected the problem after regulators caught it.

Commentary

What exactly did Virtu Americas do wrong?
Virtu ran a misconfigured automated trading program that sent 88,500 orders in a way that broke federal securities rules. Those rules require certain types of trade orders to be accompanied by companion orders that sweep the best available prices across markets, protecting investors from getting worse prices than what’s available. Virtu’s system skipped that step, potentially bypassing investor protections 88,500 times over 21 months.
Who was harmed by this?
The rules Virtu violated are part of Regulation NMS, a federal framework specifically designed to ensure that every investor, whether a retiree with a brokerage account or an institutional fund, gets the best available price when trading stocks. When a market-maker like Virtu bypasses these protections, it can mean investors receive worse executions than they are legally entitled to. With 88,500 violations, the potential impact is real and broad.
Is a $6,930 fine appropriate for this kind of misconduct?
No. At less than eight cents per illegal order, the fine is not a deterrent. For a firm that processes millions of trades and generates substantial revenue, $6,930 is a cost of doing business so small it would barely register in accounting. Meaningful enforcement requires fines that reflect the scale of violations and the profit potential associated with them. This penalty does neither.
How does this settlement work, and why didn’t Virtu have to admit wrongdoing?
FINRA’s Letter of Acceptance, Waiver, and Consent (AWC) process lets firms settle violations without a formal hearing. The firm consents to findings and sanctions in exchange for FINRA not pursuing the case further. Critically, firms accept findings “without admitting or denying” them. This structure resolves cases efficiently for regulators, but it means the public never gets a contested proceeding, never gets a detailed evidentiary record, and never gets an admission from the firm that it broke the rules.
Was anyone at Virtu personally held accountable?
No. The Chief Compliance Officer signed the settlement on behalf of the firm, but no individuals were named, fined, or sanctioned. This is the standard outcome in most corporate enforcement actions. When wrongdoing is systemic, meaning it lives in an automated system that ran unchecked for nearly two years, the architecture of corporate liability absorbs the penalty while the people responsible face no personal consequences.
Why did this take so long to catch?
Virtu’s own internal controls never identified the problem. 88,500 illegal order routings accumulated over 21 months without triggering any internal flag. This tells us that Virtu either did not have adequate compliance monitoring for this type of order, or that its monitoring systems were not meaningfully designed to catch this category of error. Either way, the firm failed its basic obligation to self-police its automated systems.
What can I do to prevent this from happening again?
Demand structural change in how FINRA calculates fines for automated trading violations. Write to your congressional representatives and ask them to require FINRA to scale penalties to firm revenue, not to a flat administrative rate. Support advocacy organizations working on financial market reform and investor protection. Follow FINRA’s public enforcement database to stay informed about which firms have disciplinary records. And if you are an investor, know that your broker’s compliance history is public at BrokerCheck (finra.org/brokercheck).
Is this an isolated incident, or does Virtu have a pattern of violations?
The settlement notes that Virtu has prior regulatory events visible in FINRA’s BrokerCheck database. The full scope of that history is publicly available, but this document does not detail prior actions. What this case does establish is that Virtu’s compliance infrastructure failed in a measurable and serious way for a sustained period, and the firm only corrected course after external surveillance caught the problem.

The FINRA enforcement order for this can be found by visiting this following link: https://www.finra.org/sites/default/files/fda_documents/2020066700205%20Virtu%20Americas%2C%20LLC%20CRD%2014983%20AWC%20ks.pdf

Here is a Reuters article about this same evil corporation: https://www.reuters.com/legal/government/virtu-large-market-maker-pay-25-million-sec-fine-over-client-trading-data-2025-12-03/

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