Today, trading stocks and options, bet in MLB games, and buying cryptocurrency is sometimes swipe away on the same app. Integrating these markets would be a strong argument to integrate two federal agencies charged with regulating them, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
And now is the time to do it. The Senate Agriculture Committee, which oversees the CFTC, is competing for President Donald Trump’s nomination chairman, Brian Kintenz. The remaining CFTC commissioners indicate they plan to retire by the end of the year. Meanwhile, the SEC could have Republican vacant seats in the near future once Commissioner Hester Perth’s term ends.
This setup creates the perfect scenario for Congress to pass laws to integrate these two agencies. On a bipartisan basis – considered for over 30 years. Quintenz could become the SEC’s third Republican secretary when Peirce departs and applies His past experiences as a CFTC commissioner To smooth the transition.
Beyond timing convenience, why merge SEC and CFTC? First, the line between the two regulatory jurisdictions is always blurred. Early discussions focusing on futures related to securitiesand the current confusion A jurisdiction dispute has emerged over regulations on unstable coin crypto products. The passing of the Genius Act has brought clarity to Stablecoins, but the merged SEC-CFTC will soon remove uncertainty about which agencies will oversee other crypto innovations.
More importantly, the market has changed. The CFTC began as an institution that regulates agricultural futures; Most of today’s futures and derivatives Links to financial products and products. Agricultural futures account for only a small sliver in the market.
Plus, the growth of event contracts – the option to pay based on whether a particular event takes place or not – and CFTC approval for event agreements It is related to sports Effectively legalized sports gambling across the USfolds its market into CFTC’s regulatory reach. In short, all markets for financial products are merged, including stocks, debt, options, commodities and currency futures, crypto and current sports betting.
Additionally, the same players participate in and employ the same tactics in all markets. Institutional investors, such as hedge funds, apply not only stocks and bonds, but also big data, algorithms and artificial intelligence. Event contract and Sports betting market. And, as mentioned above, retail investors – non-professional market participants trading with personal accounts – can open Same app Trade stocks, options, crypto and sports-related event agreements anytime, anywhere via the phone.
The merged SEC-CFTC reduces compliance costs for businesses that currently have to comply with two sets of regulations. And it will allow for better coordinated enforcement activities against bad actors scam retail investors in multiple markets. Both agencies have a similar structure – five commissioners and mostly bare majority from the Presidential Party to maintain independence – a key factor in our partisan era.
Certainly, as with mergers, there are some operational difficulties as culture and practices coincide. However, there are basically SEC and CFTC. resemble mission And the role. They just regulated different markets. Currently, the SEC and CFTC need to join forces to maximize investors, promote capital formation, and maintain a fair, orderly and efficient (now unified) market.
The market is fused. So does regulators.
Carl Lockhart is an assistant professor of law at the Faculty of Law, DePaul University. His latest article, “Betting on Everything,” approaches the Boston College Law Review.
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