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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
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WASHINGTON, DC – March 17, 2015 – The Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC) has joined Madoff Trustee Irving H. Picard, the Securities Investor Protection Act (SIPA) Trustee for the liquidation of Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC, in filing a petition before the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn a December 2014 ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Under that earlier decision, the Trustee was barred from recovering fictitious profits paid to Madoff customers and then returning those funds to the victims from whom they were taken.
The lower court ruling blocks Trustee Picard from proceeding with nearly all cases to recover the phony profits, despite the fact that no securities were actually purchased or sold. Both parties, SIPC and Trustee Picard, argue that the ruling, if left intact, would unduly inhibit any future SIPA trustee from recovering payments made to customers who unwittingly may have profited from such a Ponzi scheme or other fraud.
SIPC President Stephen Harbeck said: “SIPC believes that the trustee has the authority, as a matter of law, to recover certain payments made by Madoff to customers, when no actual securities transactions ever took place. The correct interpretation of the Bankruptcy Code and the Securities Investor Protection Act would allow the trustee to do the greatest good for the greatest number of Madoff's victims. The guiding principle of bankruptcy is equitable distribution. That is what the trustee seeks to accomplish, and SIPC supports this goal.”
The total amount distributed in the Madoff liquidation proceeding to date exceeds $7.2 billion, covering more than 54 percent of the losses of allowed claimants. The overall figure of $7.2 billion includes $823.7 million in committed advances from the SIPC.
When additional settlements awaiting distribution are taken into account, the total recovery to date in the Madoff liquidation proceeding totals $10.551 billion.