Adds details of settlement, industry background, paragraphs 1-3
WASHINGTON, Jan 13 (Reuters) - Wall Street firms including Blackstone BX.N, Apollo Capital Management and Carlyle CG.O have agreed to pay more than $63 million for violating U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission rules over record-keeping, the regulator said on Monday.
The investment advisers and broker-dealers also admitted they violated rules in connection with employees' use of off-channel communications platforms such as WhatsApp, the SEC said in a statement.
The funds are the latest of dozens of Wall Street firms that have paid stiff penalties over the last few years to settle related charges. The SEC's investigative sweep, launched in 2021, has been a major initiative under outgoing SEC chair Gary Gensler that has ensnared big banks and others.
As part of the settlements announced on Monday, the firms acknowledged their conduct violated record-keeping provisions, and have begun implementing improvements to their compliance policies and procedures, the SEC said.
The firms are:
Blackstone Alternative Credit Advisors LP
Blackstone Management Partners LLC
Blackstone Real Estate Advisors LP
Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. LP
Charles Schwab & Co
Apollo Capital Management LP
Carlyle Investment Management LLC
Carlyle Global Credit Investment Management LLC
AlpInvest Partners B.V.
TPG Capital Advisors LLC
Santander US Capital Markets LLC
PJT Partners LP
(Reporting by Jasper Ward in Washington and Ismail Shakil in OttawaAdditional reporting and writing by Chris Prentice in New YorkEditing by Chris Reese and Matthew Lewis)
((ismail.shakil@tr.com;))
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