The Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC) is the first line of defense for investors in the United States if their brokerage firm fails. Think of it as an insurance policy, but not for your investments themselves—it’s for your account. Created by the U.S. Congress in 1970, SIPC is a non-profit, member-funded corporation. All registered broker-dealers in the U.S. are required to be members. Its primary mission is to restore investors' securities (like stocks and bonds) and cash that are in their accounts when a brokerage firm becomes insolvent. It's a crucial safety net that helps maintain investor confidence in the U.S. capital markets. However, it's vital to understand its limitations. SIPC is there to protect you from the risk of your broker going bust and losing your assets, not from the risk of you making a bad investment that loses value.
SIPC protection kicks in when a member brokerage firm is financially liquidated due to bankruptcy or other financial difficulties, and customer assets are found to be missing from their accounts. This could happen due to theft, fraud, or just catastrophic record-keeping. SIPC works to make you “whole” again by restoring the “net equity” of your account as of the date the liquidation begins. The coverage limits are quite generous:
For instance, if your failed broker was holding 1,000 shares of XYZ Corp. for you, SIPC's job is to get you those 1,000 shares back. If they can't, they'll provide the cash value of those shares as of the filing date, subject to the overall limits.
This is the single most important thing to remember about SIPC. It is not a shield against poor investment decisions or the natural ups and downs of the market. Getting this wrong is a common and costly mistake. SIPC will not reimburse you for:
Investors often confuse SIPC with the FDIC (Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation). They serve similar purposes—protecting consumers from financial institution failure—but they operate in completely different worlds.
One protects your investments from a broker failure; the other protects your savings from a bank failure.
For a value investor, SIPC is a comforting backstop, but it should never be your primary safety strategy. Your real protection comes from your own diligence.
For European investors, it's worth noting that the European Union has a similar framework through the Investor Compensation Scheme Directive (ICSD), which mandates that member states have schemes protecting investors up to a certain amount (commonly €20,000), though the specifics can vary by country.