Economy April 7, 2026

SEC Reports $17.9 Billion in Monetary Relief, Files 456 Enforcement Actions in Fiscal 2025

Agency secures significantly larger financial remedies in FY2025 even as enforcement case count falls from prior year

By Nina Shah
SEC Reports $17.9 Billion in Monetary Relief, Files 456 Enforcement Actions in Fiscal 2025

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission said it obtained orders for $17.9 billion in monetary relief during fiscal year 2025 and filed 456 enforcement actions in that period. Fiscal year 2025 concluded on September 30. The figure marks a substantial rise in financial remedies compared with $8.2 billion recovered in fiscal year 2024, when the agency recorded 583 enforcement actions. Republican Chairman Paul Atkins, who assumed leadership of the SEC in April last year, has indicated a priority on concentrating enforcement work on fraud.

Key Points

  • The SEC obtained $17.9 billion in monetary relief during fiscal year 2025, consisting of $10.8 billion in disgorgement and prejudgment interest and $7.2 billion in civil penalties.
  • The commission filed 456 enforcement actions in fiscal year 2025, down from 583 enforcement actions in fiscal year 2024.
  • Fiscal year 2024 totals were $8.2 billion in financial remedies, including $6.1 billion in disgorgement and prejudgment interest and $2.1 billion in civil penalties.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission disclosed on Tuesday that it secured orders for monetary relief totaling $17.9 billion during its fiscal year 2025, and that it filed 456 enforcement actions across that fiscal period. Fiscal year 2025 ended on September 30.

The agency contrasted that outcome with fiscal year 2024, when it obtained orders for $8.2 billion in financial remedies and recorded 583 enforcement actions. According to the SEC, the fiscal year 2025 monetary relief of $17.9 billion comprised $10.8 billion in disgorgement of ill-gotten gains and prejudgment interest and $7.2 billion in civil penalties.

For comparison, the SEC said the fiscal year 2024 total of $8.2 billion in financial remedies consisted of $6.1 billion in disgorgement and prejudgment interest and $2.1 billion in civil penalties.

Republican Paul Atkins took the helm of the commission in April last year. Since assuming that role, he has stated that he wants to steer the agency's enforcement resources toward fraud-focused work.


Context and implications

The SEC's disclosure lays out two clear numerical shifts between the two most recent fiscal years: a marked increase in total monetary relief collected in fiscal year 2025 and a decline in the number of enforcement actions filed in that same year compared with fiscal year 2024. The agency's breakdown of the FY2025 totals attributes the larger overall sum to both disgorgement and higher civil penalties.

Details about individual cases, the makeup of defendants, or sector-by-sector breakdowns of enforcement activity were not provided in the agency's summary. The SEC's statement focused on aggregate monetary outcomes and the count of actions filed.

Quote from the agency

"In connection with its fiscal year 2025 enforcement actions, the Commission obtained orders for monetary relief totaling $17.9 billion, of which was $10.8 billion in disgorgement of ill-gotten gains and prejudgment interest and $7.2 billion in civil penalties," the SEC said on Tuesday.

The SEC also reiterated the fiscal year 2024 breakdown: $6.1 billion in disgorgement and prejudgment interest and $2.1 billion in civil penalties.

Beyond the aggregate figures and the statement regarding the chairman's stated enforcement focus, the public summary does not provide further operational detail about enforcement priorities, caseload composition, or timing of individual actions.

Risks

  • Variation in enforcement volume and monetary remedies between fiscal years creates uncertainty about year-to-year enforcement patterns; this affects entities subject to SEC oversight.
  • The agency's public summary does not include case-level detail or sector breakdowns, limiting clarity on which market participants were most affected.
  • A stated change in leadership and an expressed priority to focus on fraud could alter enforcement emphasis, though the summary does not provide specifics on operational shifts.

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