SEC Updates Wall Street Rules For Security-Based Swaps, Adds More Transparency
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) announced new rules on Thursday related to security-based swaps, updating reforms passed in the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act.
The new rules and regulations allow security-based swaps trading platforms to register with the regulatory agency. This will grant the facilities to receive a process and regulations for how it should execute its trades.
“The adoption makes a traditionally opaque market more transparent,” SEC Chair Gary Gensler said.
What Security-Based Swaps Are: Security-based swaps are a way for firms to bet on the future performance of a security or commodity without necessarily owning the underlying commodity. This makes it easier for firms to hedge against existing positions, and can often be a "win-win" scenario for both firms involved in the trade.
The SEC hoped the new rules would lead to more transparency in the security-based swap world, which accounted for more than $8 trillion a year, according to Bloomberg.
“To enhance transparency and oversight of the over-the-counter derivatives market, Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act requires the Commission to implement a regulatory framework for SBS that requires the registration and regulation of SBSEFs and mitigates conflicts of interest on SBSEFs and SBS exchanges,” a fact-sheet from the SEC reads.
A handful of companies were expected to register with the SEC using its new regulations. The SEC’s new rules were part of a larger effort to make Wall Street more transparent, which lawmakers have been calling for since the 2008 financial crisis.
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Posted-In: Gary Gensler U.S. Securities and Exchange CommissionGovernment Regulations SEC General