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About Us
About Us
The SIPC logo means your assets are protected under the Securities Investor Protection Act (SIPA).
We are a non-profit corporation that has been protecting investors for 50 years. We work to restore investors’ cash and securities when their brokerage firm fails. SIPC has recovered billions of dollars for investors. -
Cases & Claims
Cases & Claims
Steps SIPC takes to recover customer assets when a brokerage firm fails financially.
Find claim forms and deadlines for open cases here.SIPC has restored billions of dollars for investors. -
Investors
Investors
SIPC steps in when a brokerage firm fails financially, and assets are missing from customer accounts.
SIPC protects customer assets when a SIPC-member brokerage firm fails financially.
Understand how SIPC protection works if you have multiple accounts.SIPC has recovered billions of dollars for investors. Our job is to recover missing cash or securities if your brokerage firm has gone out of business. SIPC does not protect digital asset securities that are investment contracts that are not registered with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, even if held by a SIPC member brokerage firm.
SIPC has issued Investor Bulletins explaining SIPC’s protection and claims process. Click here for Part I ("SIPC Basics"). Click here for Part II ("Filing a SIPC Claim").
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Member Firms
Member Firms
Member Filing Requirements
Questions about filing requirements? Call the membership department at (202) 371-8300 or contact us.
Portal Information
Information about the SIPC broker-dealer portal.
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News & Media
News & Media
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Resources
Resources
- Contact Us
WASHINGTON, D.C. - November 13, 2002 - Deborah D. McWhinney, president of Schwab Institutional, and Armando J. Bucelo, Jr., a Miami attorney and former Freddie Mac director, were both confirmed by the U.S. Senate on November 12, 2002, to serve as the newest directors of the Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC), which maintains a special reserve fund authorized by Congress to help investors at failed brokerage firms.
Ms. McWhinney stated: "I will bring the vigilance and dedication that the role deserves. Individual investors are comfortable knowing that SIPC is behind them if anything should happen, and I will work hard to maintain and strengthen that confidence. In this era of uncertainty about the stock market, SIPC directors should bring nothing less than their full attention to their task … I promise to do so in the tradition of the many directors before me who have helped maintain a solid foundation beneath the strongest capital markets in the world."
Mr. Bucelo said: "I vow to be a strong advocate for fairness and common sense. I do appreciate and welcome the charge for which I have been selected with both eagerness and humility."
SIPC President Michael Don said: "We are delighted at SIPC to have people of the outstanding caliber of Deborah Doyle McWhinney and Armando Bucelo, Jr., joining our board of directors. These are important times at SIPC in terms of conveying a clear sense of our mission to the investing public. It is clear that our new directors will bring considerable energy and perspective to that central task."
Both Ms. McWhinney and Mr. Bucelo were named to the SIPC board of directors by President George Bush. They replace director Albert J. Dwoskin and acting Chairman of the Board Debbie Dudley Branson, respectively. The SIPC board of directors consists of seven individuals, five of whom are appointed by the President of the United States subject to U.S. Senate approval, one by the Secretary of the Treasury and one by the Federal Reserve Board.
Before joining Schwab in February 2001, Ms. McWhinney was group president of Engage Media Services Division, a premier Internet site performance measurement firm. Prior to her career at Engage, she was executive vice president of Business Planning and Strategy for Visa International. The majority of Ms. McWhinney's 17-year career was spent at BankAmerica Corporation, where she held various positions in systems, operations, and marketing in the consumer and wholesale divisions. Schwab Institutional, a division of Charles Schwab & Co., Inc., is a leading provider of custodial, operational and trading support for independent fee-based investment advisors and financial planners. Schwab Institutional represents about $230 billion in assets as of June 30, 2002 or nearly 30 percent of Schwab's client assets and 12 percent of its client accounts.
Mr. Bucelo is a Cuban-born American citizen who has practiced as an attorney for 23 years. He specializes in real estate, corporate and banking. He currently is a director of the National Housing and Development Corporation, which was created in 1997 to help preserve the nation's at-risk affordable housing stock, and is a trustee of Miami-Dade College, the largest community college in the United States. Mr. Bucelo also has been active as a director of the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Association (Freddie Mac) and as Cuban-American National Chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee.