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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. - July 3, 2012
The Securities Investor Protection Corporation today issued the following statement with respect to the court decision in the SEC suit seeking protection under the Securities Investor Protection Act for Stanford International Bank CD investors.
First, SIPC is grateful to the District Court for the time and effort it devoted to this important case.
This litigation was an unprecedented matter. SIPC entered into this process reluctantly and after great deliberation because the issues at stake were so fundamental to its mission.
As SIPC said from the beginning, the SEC had taken the unprecedented position that SIPC must provide financial guarantees for investors who chose to purchase CDs issued by an offshore bank in Antigua. If accepted, that position would have rewritten SIPC's 40-year mandate under the law.
SIPC's responsibility is to protect customers against the loss of missing cash or securities in the custody of failing or insolvent SIPC member brokerage firms. It was not created by Congress to combat misrepresentation or fraud or to guarantee an investment's value. SIPC is gratified that the court has now agreed with its position.
This decision notwithstanding, SIPC has great sympathy for the victims of this extraordinary Ponzi scheme that inflicted heartbreaking losses on thousands of people across the world.
Going forward, SIPC will continue its mission to protect the custodial function of a member firm in liquidation under the Securities Investor Protection Act. This means that SIPC protects customers against the loss of their securities and cash that are missing from the customer's brokerage account.