Foreign Members
SERIES 7 | SERIES 24 | FINANCIAL REGULATION COURSES
FINRA Rule 1021 establishes the specific regulatory obligations that apply to foreign members of FINRA — member firms that do not maintain a U.S. office responsible for preparing and maintaining the financial and other reports required to be filed with the SEC and FINRA.
The rule addresses three core obligations: the requirement to prepare all such reports and maintain a general ledger chart of accounts and any description thereof in English and U.S. dollars; the requirement to reimburse FINRA for any expenses incurred in connection with the examination of the foreign member's books and records; and related requirements reflecting the unique logistical and jurisdictional challenges of examining a broker-dealer whose primary records and personnel are located outside the United States. FINRA Rule 1021 was transferred without substantive change from NASD Rule 1090 into the Consolidated FINRA Rulebook as part of SR-FINRA-2019-009, effective May 8, 2019.
FINRA Rule 1021 sits within the 1000 Member Application and Associated Person Registration series, immediately following FINRA Rule 1020's exempt status approval requirement and immediately preceding FINRA Rule 1100's Member Application series marker.
Who Is a "Foreign Member"
The foundational definition that FINRA Rule 1021 operates around — imported from NASD Rule 1090 and confirmed in FINRA's own published guidance — is the definition of a foreign member as a member firm that does not maintain an office in the United States that is responsible for preparing and maintaining the financial and other reports required to be filed with the SEC and FINRA.
This definition is notably functional rather than nationality-based. A foreign member is not simply a non-U.S. firm — it is a firm whose U.S. regulatory reporting function is not anchored in a U.S. office. A firm incorporated and headquartered abroad that nonetheless maintains a U.S. office with its own personnel responsible for preparing and filing SEC and FINRA reports would not be a foreign member under this definition. Conversely, a U.S.-incorporated broker-dealer that conducts its operations primarily abroad and has no U.S. office responsible for regulatory reporting would fall within the definition.
This functional approach reflects the practical regulatory concern underlying FINRA Rule 1021 — the challenge is not the nationality of the member's ownership but the location of the regulatory compliance infrastructure. Where that infrastructure is outside the United States, FINRA faces logistical and jurisdictional complications in conducting its routine examination and oversight functions, and FINRA Rule 1021 addresses these complications through targeted obligations on the foreign member itself.
FINRA Rule 1021(a): English Language and U.S. Dollar Reporting Requirements
FINRA Rule 1021(a) requires a foreign member to prepare all reports required to be filed with the SEC and FINRA, and to maintain a general ledger chart of accounts and any description thereof, in English and U.S. dollars. This dual requirement — English language and U.S. dollar denomination — addresses the most immediate practical challenge of examining a foreign member: the accessibility of its records to FINRA's examination staff.
A general ledger chart of accounts maintained in a foreign language, or denominated in foreign currency, would require translation and currency conversion at every examination — creating delays, costs, and accuracy risks that the English-and-U.S.-dollar requirement eliminates by mandating that the foreign member perform these translations and conversions proactively as part of its ongoing record maintenance. By requiring these records to be maintained in English and U.S. dollars from the outset — not merely translated upon request — FINRA Rule 1021(a) ensures that examination staff can engage directly with the member's records without an intermediary translation step.
The chart of accounts is the foundational organizing document for a broker-dealer's accounting system — the complete listing of every account category used in the firm's general ledger, with descriptions of each account's purpose and the types of transactions recorded in it. For a foreign member, requiring this chart to be maintained in English and U.S. dollars ensures that FINRA examiners reviewing the firm's financial records can understand the accounting framework within which those records are organized, not merely the individual transactions recorded within it.
FINRA Rule 1021(b): Reimbursement of FINRA Examination Expenses
FINRA Rule 1021(b) requires a foreign member to reimburse FINRA for any expenses incurred in connection with the examination of the member's books and records. This reimbursement obligation reflects the additional costs that examining a foreign member's records and operations necessarily entails — travel expenses for FINRA examiners visiting overseas offices, translation costs for records not covered by the paragraph (a) English-and-U.S.-dollar requirement, and other incremental costs arising from the examination being conducted outside the domestic context where FINRA's ordinary examination infrastructure operates.
This cost-allocation approach — placing the incremental examination expenses on the foreign member rather than on FINRA's general budget — reflects a principle of regulatory cost responsibility: the firm whose structure creates the additional compliance and examination burden bears the financial cost of that burden. A domestic member whose records are maintained in English at a U.S. office imposes no such incremental cost on FINRA; a foreign member whose examination requires additional logistical arrangements imposes such costs, and FINRA Rule 1021(b) ensures the member bears them.
Foreign Members and the Broader FINRA Registration Framework
FINRA Rule 1021's existence reflects a broader reality — FINRA's membership extends to non-U.S. broker-dealers that conduct business with U.S. investors or in U.S. markets. A foreign broker-dealer registered with the SEC under the Exchange Act and conducting securities business with U.S. customers may be required to become a FINRA member, subjecting it to all applicable FINRA rules including those governing sales practices, supervision, capital, and recordkeeping — with FINRA Rule 1021 adding the foreign-member-specific obligations that make this FINRA oversight practically effective despite the geographic distance.
Foreign members are subject to the same FINRA Rule 1014(a) admission standards as domestic members and must go through the same MAP process under FINRA Rules 1011 through 1019. However, certain aspects of the MAP process and ongoing compliance obligations are adapted for the foreign context — FINRA Rule 1021's English-and-U.S.-dollar and expense-reimbursement requirements are the most specific such adaptations within the Rule 1000 Series.
The FINRA registration framework also accommodates foreign members' personnel through the registration categories of FINRA Rule 1220 — including the United Kingdom and Canada principal and representative categories this dictionary examined in its Rule 1220 entry, which enable individuals registered under the Financial Conduct Authority or applicable Canadian provincial regulators to satisfy specified FINRA registration requirements through equivalence recognition rather than requiring full U.S. qualification examination completion.
The Supervisory Implications of Foreign Member Status
A foreign member's absence of a U.S. office responsible for regulatory reporting does not eliminate its obligations under FINRA Rule 3110's supervisory system requirements — it creates a set of practical challenges for meeting those obligations that FINRA has addressed through guidance over time. NASD Notice to Members 01-81, the most comprehensive guidance document addressing foreign member issues, confirmed that foreign members must establish and maintain supervisory systems that comply with applicable FINRA rules regardless of where their personnel and offices are located, and that FINRA Rule 3110's (then Rule 3010's) supervisory requirements apply to U.S.-located activities even for foreign members.
For branch offices and OSJs located in the United States, a foreign member's supervisory obligations are identical to those of any domestic member with comparable U.S. operations — the foreign member must inspect all U.S. branch offices and OSJs, register all U.S.-located personnel in appropriate FINRA categories, and maintain the WSPs and supervisory infrastructure FINRA Rule 3110 requires. The foreign-member-specific obligations under FINRA Rule 1021 address the reporting and examination infrastructure rather than modifying the substantive compliance requirements applicable to the member's U.S.-located activities.
Connection to FINRA Rules 1011, 1014, 1020, 1122, 1210, 1220, 3110, 4110, and Exchange Act Section 17
FINRA Rule 1021 connects to FINRA Rule 1011 — whose definition of Associated Person encompasses foreign-affiliated and foreign-located personnel within a broad enough scope to cover the typical foreign member's personnel structure, including persons associated with the member whether located in the U.S. or abroad. It connects to FINRA Rule 1014 — whose fourteen admission standards apply equally to foreign member applicants, with particular relevance for Standards 5 (facilities), 6 (communications and operational systems), 11 (recordkeeping), and 13 (no circumvention) given the unique challenges foreign membership presents. It connects to FINRA Rule 1020 — as the immediately preceding provision addressing another specific membership category (firms changing their SEA Rule 15c3-3 exemptive status) within the same Rule 1000 Series framework. It connects to FINRA Rule 1122 — whose prohibition on filing misleading information applies equally to foreign members' SEC and FINRA submissions, with the English-and-U.S.-dollar requirement of Rule 1021(a) ensuring the accuracy of those submissions can be evaluated without translation barriers. It connects to FINRA Rules 1210 and 1220 — whose registration requirements and categories govern foreign members' U.S.-located and U.S.-facing personnel, including the UK and Canada equivalence provisions FINRA Rule 1220 addresses. It connects to FINRA Rule 3110 — whose supervisory system requirements apply to foreign members' U.S.-located activities in full. And it connects to Exchange Act Section 17 — which, together with SEA Rule 17d-1, governs the SRO designation for financial responsibility purposes that FINRA Rule 1020 references and within which FINRA Rule 1021's examination authority over foreign members ultimately derives its Exchange Act basis.
Examination Relevance and Key Takeaways
FINRA Rule 1021 is tested on the Series 24 examination in connection with the membership framework's application to foreign broker-dealers — understanding both which firms qualify as foreign members and what specific obligations foreign member status imposes.
The key points to retain are these: a foreign member is a FINRA member that does not maintain a U.S. office responsible for preparing and maintaining the financial and other reports required to be filed with the SEC and FINRA — a functional definition based on the location of the regulatory reporting infrastructure, not the nationality of the firm's ownership; FINRA Rule 1021(a) requires foreign members to prepare all SEC and FINRA required reports and maintain a general ledger chart of accounts and any description thereof in English and U.S. dollars — ensuring FINRA examination staff can engage directly with the member's records without translation barriers; FINRA Rule 1021(b) requires foreign members to reimburse FINRA for any expenses incurred in connection with the examination of the member's books and records — allocating the incremental cost of overseas examination to the member whose structure creates that cost; foreign members are subject to the same Rule 1014(a) admission standards and MAP process as domestic members, with Rule 1021 adding the foreign-member-specific English-language, U.S.-dollar, and expense-reimbursement obligations; and foreign members' U.S.-located activities are subject to the full range of applicable FINRA rules including Rule 3110's supervisory requirements, Rule 1210's registration requirements, and Rule 1220's registration categories including their UK and Canada equivalence provisions.
