Barron's - USA (2021-02-08)

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18 BARRON’S February 8, 2021


tomer orders were executed at inferior


prices, the SEC found. Robinhood


didn’t admit or deny the agency’s find-


ings. “We are fully transparent in our


communications with customers


about our current revenue streams,” a


Robinhood spokesperson says, adding


that the company has improved its


best-execution processes.


Investors are also looking for the


SEC to hand back their megaphone.


Last year, the commission made it


tougher for investors to get share-


holder proposals on corporate proxy


statements, in part by raising the own-


ership threshold required to submit a


proposal. Another 2020 rule gave


management a louder voice in the


third-party proxy advice used by


many institutional investors. Major


elements of both rules will generally


first apply in the 2022 proxy season.


The effect of the rules was to “muz-


zle the voice of shareholders,” says


Amy Borrus, executive director of the


Council of Institutional Investors.


“Shareholders large and small are look-


ing to the SEC to step up its mission to


be the investor’s advocate,” she says,


including by reversing the two rules.


Another corporate governance is-


sue expected to receive renewed atten-


tion is a bit of unfinished business


from the soon-to-be 11-year-old Dodd-


Frank Act. The law directed the SEC


to adopt rules requiring public compa-


nies to claw back improperly awarded


incentive compensation in the event of


certain financial restatements. The


commission proposed a clawback rule


in 2015, but never completed it.


New laws that reshape financial


regulation will be difficult with the


Democrats’ razor-thin Senate advan-


tage. That makes the nominees to lead


the SEC and the Consumer Financial


Protection Bureau all the more impor-


tant. The personnel at the top of these


independent agencies “matters enor-


mously,” says Aron Szapiro, head of


policy research at Morningstar, and


President Biden has put forward picks


that reflect the Democratic consensus,


which is “very focused on ESG and


protecting investors.”


Gary Gensler, Biden’s pick to head


the SEC, pushed for greater transpar-


ency in derivatives trading when he


was chairman of the Commodity Fu-


tures Trading Commission. Rohit


Chopra, a commissioner of the Federal


Trade Commission and Biden’s choice


for CFPB director, advocated for bet-


ter treatment for borrowers in an ear-


lier stint as the CFPB’s student-loan Illustration by Matt Chase


W


hether you invest in


oil-and-gas companies


or trade Bitcoin, finan-


cial regulation under


the Biden administra-


tion will make its mark


on your portfolio—and


may even change the way you invest.


Regulatory actions on the horizon


are likely to give shareholders access


to new data to aid their decision-mak-


ing about companies, including man-


datory disclosures of climate risks and


board diversity. Rule changes could


also give them a louder voice in corpo-


rate-governance discussions.


Investor protection will come to the


fore, experts say, as regulators revisit


conflicts of interest in investment ad-


vice and tackle newer challenges, like


cryptocurrency regulations.


The financial-services industry


faces tougher enforcement of securi-


ties laws and consumer financial-pro-


tection rules, while industries across


the board must weigh how any new


required disclosure of environmental,


social, and governance (ESG) factors


will be perceived by investors and


ratings firms.


The to-do list for financial regula-


tors, meanwhile, is getting longer and


more pressing.


The volatile trading inGameStop


(ticker: GME) and other securities “is


going to be at the top of the SEC’s


agenda,” says Dennis Kelleher, head of


the public-interest group Better Mar-


kets and a member of the Biden tran-


sition’s agency review team for securi-


ties regulators. One issue he expects


the Securities and Exchange Commis-


sion to examine: the true costs to in-


vestors of commission-free trades.


Robinhood, the online trading app


at the center of the GameStop frenzy,


last year agreed to pay $65 million to


settle SEC claims that it didn’t ade-


quately disclose payments it received


from trading firms in exchange for


routing customer orders to them, an


arrangement known as payment for


order flow. Although Robinhood ad-


vertised commission-free trades, cus-


Biden’s Team


Puts Its Focus


On Financial


Regulation


Cryptocurrency, climate-risk


disclosure, consumer protection,


and the volatile trading in


GameStop are all expected to


be focuses of the SEC and


other regulatory agencies.


What investors can expect.


By ELEANOR LAISE

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