- SEC among agencies affected by rolling back Chevron deference
- Industry push against regulator gets lift from court decision
Wall Street is poised to win more battles with the
The high court’s 6-3 decision may turbocharge challenges to the agency’s efforts on everything from crypto to insider trading. The new limits add to a string of court setbacks for Chair
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Although the regulator is just one of dozens affected by the rollback of the so-called Chevron deference, it’s by far the most important to Wall Street. The doctrine stems from the 40-year-old Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council ruling and the case the Supreme Court just ruled on to weaken it didn’t specifically involve financial regulation.
“This is a sea change,”
Less discretion for agencies could hit the SEC particularly hard because the agency interprets and applies old laws, said Ty Gellasch, executive director of the
“Losing deference from the courts cripples the ability of the SEC to oversee the rapidly changing markets,” said Gellasch, adding that Congress is unlikely to fill the void. “Changing the law is too slow, too hard and too skewed toward those with the money to effectively police the markets.”
Crypto and Climate
The SEC’s closely watched enforcement case against crypto giant
Ahead of the ruling, legal experts also pointed to new SEC climate reporting rules for public companies as among those that could be most vulnerable. The regulator stayed the rule in April amid a spate of court challenges and it is also being appealed in federal court.
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Meanwhile, the path for resuscitating the SEC’s rules requiring hedge funds to detail more fees and expenses to investors could also be more difficult. A federal appeals court in New Orleans recently vacated those regulations in June, saying that the agency “exceeded its statutory authority.”
The SEC’s Rule 10b5-1, a regulation to protect against insider trading, has also benefited from Chevron deference,
“Overruling Chevron straightaway affects every administrative agency out there. Period. Full stop,” he said Friday. However, Petron said that a Supreme Court decision
(Updates with lawyer comment in final paragraph.)
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Stephanie Stoughton
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