By Jacob Bunge 
 

A trio of dissident candidates won election to the board of a critical U.S. futures-market regulator, swept in by a push to tighten oversight of the industry following two high-profile brokerage failures in less than a year.

James Koutoulas, John Roe and Jeff Malec, all managers of Chicago-based futures firms, were elected to the board of the National Futures Association, replacing standing directors after campaigning to change the culture of the agency.

"The public still needs some measure of accountability," said Mr. Malec in an interview.

The addition of several outspoken voices on market regulation to the regulator's board reflects lingering anger among brokers and investors over the collapses of MF Global Holdings Ltd. (MFGLQ) and Peregrine Financial Group Inc., which breeched a central tenet of the futures business: protecting investors' money.

An estimated $1.6 billion of client funds went unaccounted for in the October 2011 implosion of MF Global. About $215 million was seen lost in a long-running fraud perpetrated by Peregrine's chief executive, which spurred that firm into bankruptcy after the scheme came to light in July 2012.

The NFA, an industry-funded regulator based in Chicago, was responsible for inspecting Peregrine and drew sharp critiques after the fraud came to light. Exchange operator CME Group Inc. (CME) had overseen MF Global.

The NFA notified members of the board election results in a notice Wednesday. A spokesman for the agency said it "congratulates the newly elected members of our Board and we look forward to working with them."

Mr. Malec is chief executive of Attain Capital Management, a Chicago-based futures brokerage that was caught up in the collapse of Peregrine, because Peregrine handled trades on behalf of Attain's customers.

Mr. Malec said he feels the NFA bears "a big part of the responsibility" for the collapse of Peregrine, which has left its customers and creditors facing an estimated $190 million shortfall in funds. Last summer, Attain called for Congress to investigate the NFA's practices.

Mr. Koutoulas' firm, Typhon Capital Management LLC, was a client of both MF Global and Peregrine. He and Mr. Roe, who will represent commodity-fund managers on the NFA board, in November 2011 formed an ad-hoc group to argue for MF Global customers in the bankruptcy proceedings of that firm.

Mr. Roe is principal of BTR Trading Group Inc., also a former client of MF Global.

Mr. Koutoulas said in an interview that the NFA needs to mete out stiffer punishments for wrongdoers and hold big firms to the same account as smaller ones, particularly when it comes to dealing penalties.

"The trend in Washington toward more rules is the wrong way to go," Mr. Koutoulas said. "We want to show people that if they break rules, they are going to be punished."

Mr. Roe and Mr. Koutoulas said they want Jon Corzine, the former CEO of MF Global, to get a lifetime ban from the futures industry.

All three new directors said they will urge the NFA to further strengthen its auditing practices, which bore heavy criticism after Peregrine's Mr. Wasendorf was revealed to have misled authorities by faking financial documents for many years.

While the NFA already has beefed up automated reviews of futures account balances, Mr. Malec said the agency needs higher standards for hiring auditors, and Mr. Roe said in an interview that NFA examiners "need to focus on where money is being held rather than [firms'] sales practices."

The NFA has 27 members on its board of directors, with directorships allotted to exchanges, trade-clearing firms, fund managers, brokers and public directors. The elections of the new directors fill three of the six seats dedicated to funds and brokers.

Write to Jacob Bunge at jacob.bunge@wsj.com.

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