US exchanges, SEC in talks to ease public company regulations
- The SEC discontinued the joint certification process for stock capital increases due to low public adoption, effective immediately upon notice issuance.
- This change follows a review amid ongoing concerns that under Chairman Gensler, the SEC overstepped its authority, especially regulating precious metals markets.
- Paul Atkins, a former SEC member nominated to lead the agency, plans to halt these regulatory overreaches while Congress is urged to prohibit 'regulation by enforcement.'
- Economist David Burton described the need for 'basic rules for responsible actors to follow' to protect innovation and economic growth amid a U.S.-China race for cryptocurrency dominance.
- The SEC’s shift and leadership changes may affect market regulation, but slow Senate confirmations and entrenched independent bureaucrats limit swift policy realignment.
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SEC discontinues joint certification for capital stock increase applications - BusinessWorld Online
THE SECURITIES and Exchange Commission (SEC) has discontinued the use of joint certification for applications to increase capital stock through cash infusion due to weak public adoption. In a notice on Wednesday, the SEC Financial Analysis and Audit Department said the decision followed a review of the joint certification requirement for applications to increase capital stock via cash infusion. “It has been observed that there is a low rate of a…
US Exchanges, SEC in Talks to Ease Public Company Regulations
U.S. exchange operators are in talks with the Securities and Exchanges Commission on easing regulatory burdens for public companies, as they seek to encourage more richly valued startups to list, according to four people familiar with the matter.
US exchanges, SEC in talks to ease public company regulations
U.S. exchange operators are in talks with the Securities and Exchanges Commission on easing regulatory burdens for public companies, as they seek to encourage more richly valued startups to list, according to four people familiar with the matter.
U.S. exchanges, SEC in talks to ease public company regulations
U.S. exchange operators are in talks with the Securities and Exchanges Commission on easing regulatory burdens for public companies, as they seek to encourage more richly valued startups to list, according to four people familiar with the matter.
Even in the motherland of capitalism, stock exchange operators are fighting to attract companies to trade their shares there. To attract more startups, US stock exchanges apparently want to relax their rules.
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