The Regulators
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), which was
created in 1934, is the principal regulator of securities markets in the
United States. Before 1929, individual states regulated securities activities.
But the stock market crash of 1929, which triggered the Great Depression,
showed that arrangement to be inadequate. The Securities Act of 1933 and the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 consequently gave the federal government a
preeminent role in protecting small investors from fraud and making it easier
for them to understand companies' financial reports.
The commission enforces a web of rules to achieve that goal.
Companies issuing stocks, bonds, and other securities must file detailed
financial registration statements, which are made available to the public. The
SEC determines whether these disclosures are full and fair so that investors
can make well-informed and realistic evaluations of various securities. The
SEC also oversees trading in stocks and administers rules designed to prevent
price manipulation; to that end, brokers and dealers in the over-the-counter
market and the stock exchanges must register with the SEC. In addition, the
commission requires companies to tell the public when their own officers buy
or sell shares of their stock; the commission believes that these "insiders"
possess intimate information about their companies and that their trades can
indicate to other investors their degree of confidence in their companies'
future.
The agency also seeks to prevent insiders from trading in
stock based on information that has not yet become public. In the late 1980s,
the SEC began to focus not just on officers and directors but on insider
trades by lower-level employees or even outsiders like lawyers who may have
access to important information about a company before it becomes public.
The SEC has five commissioners who are appointed by the
president. No more than three can be members of the same political party; the
five-year term of one of the commissioners expires each year.
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission oversees the futures
markets. It is particularly zealous in cracking down on many over-the-counter
futures transactions, usually confining approved trading to the exchanges. But
in general, it is considered a more gentle regulator than the SEC. In 1996,
for example, it approved a record 92 new kinds of futures and farm commodity
options contracts. From time to time, an especially aggressive SEC chairman
asserts a vigorous role for that commission in regulating futures business.