Chandrasen, Abhichon
Description
Securities markets have become increasingly important financial
institutions in creating economic growth. Investment from
different types of investor - local, foreign, retail, and
institutional - injects much-needed capital to listed companies
to expand their businesses. To persuade investors to invest in
those markets, one of the key conditions is the presence of an
effective investor protection regime. In Thailand, lack of
investor protection is a...[Show more] particularly important regulatory issue,
especially in cases involving protection of retail investors.
This lack of investor protection can be attributed mainly to Thai
retail investors generally lacking adequate knowledge and
sophistication to protect themselves from complex fraud. It is
most striking that retail investors are more often than not taken
advantage of by their own brokers, who ideally should be the ones
who protect their interests.
This research attempts to enhance the current Thai
anti-brokerage-fraud regime through the use of Donald R.
Cressey’s Fraud Triangle Theory to identify contributing
factors - pressure, opportunity, rationalization - leading to the
commission of fraud and regulatory violations by Thai securities
brokers, taking into account Thai cultural and business contexts,
and then to develop recommendations in response to those factors.
An empirical approach with qualitative data analysis is employed.
The researcher realises that the best way to investigate all
relevant dynamics is to interview securities brokers, regulators,
and representatives of investors to obtain information about
their respective roles in the securities market, as well as their
views and perceptions of brokerage fraud, and their opinions of
the current anti-fraud regime.
This thesis focuses on deterrence of four related low-level
frauds and regulatory violations, which – ranging from less
severe to most severe – are:
1) The offence of failing to properly record trading orders;
2) The offence of making trading decisions on behalf of clients;
3) The offence of using a client's account for the broker's own
benefit; and
4) The offences of deception and misappropriation.
Proposals to enhance deterrence of the regime, that is, to reduce
pressure, to remove opportunities, and to limit rationalisations,
are developed under Ian Ayres and John Braithwaite’s
responsive-regulation approach, where effective regulatory
strategies respond to the conduct of the regulatees and to the
industry context. The recommendations start from education-based
and persuasion-based strategies implemented externally by
government agencies, and then escalate to deterrence-based
measures of administrative and criminal sanctions when a lack of
positive response from brokers and securities companies is
evident. The use of corporate-based strategies of fraud
prevention and detection through internal control mechanisms is
also discussed in the latter part of the thesis.
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