- From GameStop to SPACs, valuations look a lot like bubbles
- Looming threat to incoming SEC chief is a crash on his watch
From the mania engulfing
The looming threat for Gensler, 63, is that the good times could end on his watch, triggering a crash that hits retail investors who’ve contributed to the boom particularly hard. That wouldn’t just create a big problem for the incoming SEC chief, but also for Federal Reserve Chairman
“We’re in a bubble, and bubbles burst,” said
Speculative furor has been building in stocks for the better part of a year, fueled by the Fed’s easy-money policies and an army of first-time traders who’ve embraced commission-free brokerage apps like Robinhood’s while stuck at home during the coronavirus pandemic. After bottoming last March, the S&P 500 has soared almost 70%, pushing measures of valuations based on profits and sales to the highest since the dot-com era.
The frenzy has gotten particularly wild this week, stirring anxieties in Washington. In a Wednesday statement, the SEC said it’s actively monitoring volatility in options and equity markets, and working with other regulators to assess the situation. Yellen and Biden’s economic team are also keeping a close eye on the trading of companies whose stock prices have soared in recent days, according to White House Press Secretary
Meanwhile, Senator
Gensler’s Tools
Gensler, who didn’t respond to a request for comment, is expected to take a much harder line at the SEC than market watchdogs did in the Trump era. He frequently sparred with finance executives when he imposed aggressive new rules on swaps trading while leading the
They include using the bully pulpit to call out conduct the SEC doesn’t like and threatening enforcement actions. In the case of SPACs, which are also known as blank-check companies, Gensler could temper some of euphoria by slow-walking new deals. And he might push brokers to do a better job in disclosing the dangers tied to stock options and margin accounts that retail investors have used to supersize their bets -- or their losses.
Still, there are arguments to be made that Gensler should tread carefully. Equities -- along with housing -- are considered one of the few bright spots at a time when the U.S. economy is being ravaged by Covid-19. Plus, he wouldn’t want to announce any moves that trigger a selloff for stocks, thus causing losses for the mom-and-pop investors that the SEC is focused on protecting.
Gensler’s plans for navigating this terrain will be front-and-center in the coming weeks when the Senate considers his nomination. While hearings before the Senate Banking Committee haven’t yet been scheduled, he’s all but assured to be grilled about traders teaming up on Reddit to drive stocks higher, whether the
‘Groundhog Day’
SPACs are among the investment crazes that have been particularly lucrative for Wall Street, as the offerings are underwritten by banks and often started by hedge fund managers and private-equity firms. They attracted a record $80 billion last year with everyone from billionaire investor
SPACs raise money by selling shares and the proceeds are eventually used to acquire a company, so investors are ostensibly wagering on the sponsor’s ability to pull off a good deal. In the meantime, they operate as corporate shells that trade on exchanges with no profits or revenue.
John Britt, a retired SEC lawyer who reviewed SPACs for the agency in the 1980s and 1990s when they were called blind pools, said many of the deals that the regulators evaluated in his time were garbage and bad for shareholders over the long term. To protect investors, some of the SEC staff adopted an informal approach of asking lots of tough questions that they hoped sponsors couldn’t answer, prompting them to ultimately give up and go away. Gensler’s SEC might want to bring back that approach, he noted.
“It’s groundhog day in the investment world,” Britt said. “They were bad news then and they are bad news now. They should just ban them.”
Stern Messages
One of the most powerful ways for any SEC chairman to discourage unwanted behavior is making speeches and issuing public statements.
Gensler’s predecessor,
Gensler could have a similar impact by saying the SEC is examining online posts for signs of collusion or stating that the agency’s enforcement division has launched investigations into whether traders are utilizing social media to manipulate markets -- such as coordinating efforts to drive up certain stocks before dumping them.
“I expect that Gensler will stick to the usual role of sounding like a stern parent and will not seek special rules to chill the market,” said Columbia Law School professor
--With assistance from
To contact the reporters on this story:
To contact the editors responsible for this story:
Gregory Mott
© 2021 Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. Used with permission.
Learn more about Bloomberg Law or Log In to keep reading:
See Breaking News in Context
Bloomberg Law provides trusted coverage of current events enhanced with legal analysis.
Already a subscriber?
Log in to keep reading or access research tools and resources.