Hester Peirce believes that if the SEC is “confident in its investigative work” and analysis, it doesn’t need to “demand silence on the part of settling defendants.”
United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Commissioner Hester Peirce disagreed with her agency’s denial of a petition to amend its 1972 “gag rule,” which forbids defendants from denying or refusing to admit to the SEC’s allegations following a settlement. “The policy of denying defendants the right to criticize publicly a settlement after it is signed is unnecessary, undermines regulatory integrity, and raises First Amendment concerns,” Peirce wrote, adding that if the SEC is “confident in its investigative work” and analysis, it doesn’t need to “demand silence on the part of settling defendants.”
U.S. Congress members seek to repeal the SEC’s Staff Accounting Bulletin 121 (SAB 121). This bulletin limits banks wishing to hold their client’s cryptocurrency assets, requiring them to keep their investor’s assets on the balance sheet. Representatives Mike Flood, Wiley Nickel and Senator Cynthia Lummis introduced a resolution under the Congressional Review Act to formally disapprove SAB 121 and cease its legal force. U.S. lawmakers have argued that it jeopardizes the willingness of regulated banks to act as crypto custodians and treats crypto holdings differently than other assets.
Leaders of the U.S. House Financial Services Committee and Subcommittee on Digital Assets, Financial Technology and Inclusion called for a longer comment period on a proposed rule from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), claiming its impact on the digital asset space would be “unclear” if implemented. Representatives Patrick McHenry, Mike Flood and French Hill question how a November 2023 proposal “would apply to specific entities within the digital asset ecosystem.” The CFPB rule suggested extending its supervisory authority over depository institutions, including digital assets in its “funds” definition and allowing it to target wallets.