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SEC:
The Fox Is Guarding the Henhouse
By Jack Bouroudjian
Back
in July, an attorney at the
Securities and Exchange Commission named Darcy Flynn went public with
allegations that the SEC “followed a policy of systematically
destroying
documents” since at least 1993. In his whistleblower complaint, he
claimed that
Matters Under Investigation, typically related to possible wrongdoing
at Wall
Street firms, were often shredded or otherwise destroyed after cases
had been
dismissed.
If
you’re wondering whether some of
those MUI files included information on Bernie Madoff, credit default
swaps
between Goldman Sachs and AIG and other questionable activity related
to the
2008 meltdown, the answer is yes.
The
SEC is supposed to be the
vanguard, the front-line protection for investors who put their
hard-earned
money into equities markets. But in reality, it’s a $1.19
billion-dollar
government program that’s asleep at the switch, run by inept lawyers
and
careerist regulators who neither understand the regulations nor have
the
incentive to enforce them.
How
did we get to this point?
The
SEC was established by Congress in
1934 with the mission to “protect investors, maintain fair, orderly,
and
efficient markets and facilitate capital formation.” Created under the
Franklin
D. Roosevelt administration, the SEC was charged with regulating the
stock
market and preventing corporate abuse in the wake of the Crash of 1929.
The SEC
is the last surviving New Deal agency, and though it may be hard to
believe
based on Flynn’s allegations, its mission remains the same to this day.
FDR
knew that in order for the SEC to
be an effective guardian of the public’s investments, it needed to be
run by
people who understood the nuances of trading on Wall Street. Rather
than
appointing a career bureaucrat or white-gloved lawyer to head the
agency, he
went with a guy who had a little dirt under his nails: Joseph Kennedy.
Kennedy’s
past may have been a little
checkered, but he understood the Street as well as anyone—how it worked
on a
functional level and where it was vulnerable to abuse. One of Kennedy’s
first
actions as chair was to establish the Uptick Rule, which made it almost
impossible to ‘plunge’ the market. Kennedy knew that short selling
securities
on a down tick needed to be banned —after all, he made his money as a
market
plunger! Well, that and liquor.
Somewhere
between then and now,
capable, experienced SEC regulators who possessed a working
understanding of
the products they regulate have become extinct. They’ve been replaced
by
bumbling, bureaucratic attorneys who either have no clue about how Wall
Street
operates or simply choose not to care about abuses. How can the SEC
protect
investors when it’s been systematically destroying files related to the
very
investigations it’s supposed to investigate?
And
worse, if SEC regulators can’t
even enforce regulations already on the books, what’s the point of
piling on
even more nonsense like Dodd-Frank? The fox is guarding the henhouse.
Instead
of adding more hens, it might be time to rethink who’s on patrol.
I
come from the world of commodities
futures, which does not fall under the jurisdiction of the SEC. Futures
markets
are regulated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which was
spun off
in 1974. Although it’s the ultimate authority, the CFTC has evolved
into more
of a guide, providing a system of checks and balances rather than doing
the
actual policing. Enforcement is handled by the individual exchanges it
oversees—the CME, the CBOT, the NYMEX—which are all certified
self-regulating
organizations.
The
system is very effective. The
exchanges know that in order to maintain their SRO status, they must
remain in
strict compliance with regulations handed down from the CFTC. So they
take a
page out of FDR’s playbook and hire regulators with a little dirt under
their
nails. Obviously, I’m not talking about crooks like Joe Kennedy—I’m
talking
about regulators with real-world experience who can think outside the
box and
have the incentive to eradicate any abuse or wrongdoing.
In
the 25+ years I’ve been in the
industry, futures have grown from a second-tier asset class to a
mainstream
vehicle with tremendous popularity. I believe the CFTC/SRO system has a
lot to
do with that. On around one-fifth of the SEC’s annual budget, the CFTC
has been
a true guardian of the public interest, lending credibility to and
instilling
confidence in the futures markets.
After
a tumultuous August that picked
the scabs of 2008, today’s equities markets are desperately looking for
some of
that credibility and confidence. And thanks to Flynn’s whistleblower
complaint,
it’s pretty clear the SEC is not going to bring these things back. It’s
more
apparent than ever that a massive budget and a bunch of lawyers cannot
protect
the public interest.
It’s
time for the SEC to go. And
whatever is recreated needs to be run by people who understand the
markets and
products being traded. To paraphrase my old colleague and Nobel
Laureate,
Merton Miller, it’s never a question of the regulations. It’s a
question of the
regulators.
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