Dodd-Frank at Five: A Capital Markets Swan Song
Commissioner Daniel M. Gallagher
U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Washington, D.C.
Aug. 4, 2015
Thank you, David [Hirschmann] for that overly kind introduction. I appreciate the invitation to speak to you today. This will likely be my last formal speech as an SEC Commissioner, and I can think of no better audience than the Chamber’s Center for Capital Markets Competitiveness. The Center has remained a zealous and effective advocate for capital formation and free markets during a period in which these bedrocks of our economy have constantly been under attack, and it is an honor to be here today to share my thoughts with you. It is also special to have Commissioner Piwowar here today. I would like to thank him for his friendship and collegiality during our time together on the Commission.
After four years of sprinting through a marathon course, my time at the Commission is drawing to a close. It has been an honor and a privilege to serve as a member of the Commission, and I hope my contributions have helped further the debate on how best to accomplish the mission of the SEC.
Last month marked the fifth anniversary of the Dodd-Frank Act,[1] meaning that my entire tenure as a Commissioner has occurred in the midst of the first Five-Year Plan for our national economy. And, as is always the case with grandiose central plans, Dodd-Frank has backfired, strangling our economy, increasing the fragility of the financial system, and politicizing our independent financial regulators.
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While, as I’ll discuss further shortly, the Fed, FDIC and OCC were busy leveraging the financial crisis to grow their prudential empires, the SEC became the implementing tool for the long pent-up dreams of liberal policymakers and special interest groups. Indeed, Dodd-Frank stands as the only piece of major securities legislation in U.S. history that was rammed through Congress without bipartisan support.[2] Prior to the enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act, every major piece of securities legislation since the New Deal — including the Exchange Act which created the Commission, as well as the 1940 Acts, the 1975 Act amendments, the Remedies Act of 1990, NSMIA, and notably Sarbanes-Oxley — enjoyed bipartisan support. Obtaining such support for Dodd-Frank, however, would have entailed tempering the statute by legislative compromise, meaning its authors would have had to listen to competing ideas and jettison some of the “progressive” wish-list items jammed into the 2300-page behemoth.
If the SEC seems political nowadays, it is because of Dodd-Frank. Not only is it an incredibly ideological piece of legislation ill-suited to an independent agency explicitly constituted in a manner designed to ensure a bipartisan — or non-partisan — approach to regulation[3] — but it is also largely just a series of ill-formed mandates that need to be interpreted and implemented to have any practical effect. In passing Dodd-Frank, Congress delivered a message to the Commission similar to that of Henry Ford concerning the aesthetics of the Model T: “Any customer can have a car painted any color he wants so long as it is black.”
Dodd-Frank established the SEC as the scrivener for a hundred Congressional mandates stemming from one side of the political spectrum. Is it any wonder that since its passage, these mandates — ambrosia to members of one party, anathema to those of the other — have drawn out the different philosophies of the Commissioners? Is it any wonder that Commissioners from the party devoted to free market ideals chafe at being mandated to paint Congress’s Model T — or, more appropriately, their Edsel?
Dodd-Frank by its very nature has made the Commission look to the outside world like a microcosm of Congress itself. Indeed, it has called into question the very notion of “independent” agencies. In addition to politicizing the agency internally, Dodd-Frank has impaired the work of the SEC by placing it at a decided disadvantage to prudential regulators.
Just as “collectivization” served as both the means and the ends of Soviet Five-Year Plans, so too has “prudential regulation” provided additional tools for central bank apparatchiks to unleash their inner central planners in an attempt to fundamentally alter the very nature of our capital markets. This came as no surprise to some of us, as Dodd-Frank’s jurisdictional grants of authority to bank regulators were in large part the result of an unwitting Congress buying into a narrative contrived in large part by those very same regulators. The narrative held that, unlike clunky capital markets regulators like the SEC, prudential regulators were good enough and smart enough to run our economy — and doggone it, the 111th Congress liked it!
And so, Dodd-Frank created the Fed-dominated Financial Stability Oversight Counsel, or FSOC, the Fed-dominated SIFI designation process, the Fed-dominated Title VIII oversight regime for clearance and settlement, the FDIC-dominated Title II resolution process, and so on. While capital market regulators were tasked with writing long, complicated rules to interpret and implement the ill-formed mandates of the Dodd-Frank Act, prudential regulators were given greatly broadened authority over the economy. Dodd-Frank, in short, sought to make prudential regulators Masters of the Universe.
Since I became a Commissioner in 2011, I have seen the implications of this mindset play out in some very real ways. For example, while the Fed was busy proposing incredibly intrusive rules under Sect 165 of Dodd-Frank, the so-called Intermediate Holding Company rulemaking, a rulemaking that hugely impacted SEC registrants, we at the SEC were also busy — working on the conflict minerals disclosure rule. It was emblematic of the view of the SEC held by policymakers at the Fed that our staff was not consulted in a meaningful way before the Section 165 rules were proposed. To be fair, maybe the Fed was merely trying not to burden the SEC with trivial matters such as the fundamental structure of bank affiliated broker-dealers — after all, while the Section 165 rules were gestating, the Commission was making the U.S. financial markets safe by ensuring that Congolese tantalum would never again take down the likes of Lehman or AIG!
Within the FSOC, the SEC Chairman is just one vote out of 10, and together with the CFTC Chairman, one of two capital markets regulatory voices. What’s worse, as I and Commissioner Piwowar have emphasized many times in the past, these votes are the purview of the SEC Chairman, not the Commission itself. You might think this structural disproportionality would be reflected in FSOC’s vote tallies, with the capital markets regulators frustrated by their lack of voting power but holding their ground on principle. But, alas, FSOC has moved in harmony as each SEC Chairman since its inception has voted with the prudential regulators — even in the case of the Met Life designation vote, in which the FSOC’s sole insurance expert was the lone no vote.[4]
FSOC has proven to be a poor construct for monitoring and addressing potential systemic risk. To be clear, it is important to have that function, but the FSOC has clearly been the wrong way to approach it. An FSOC structured more like a regulatory college — where each organization is a member, as opposed to each regulatory head — and operated like a think tank, via the power of good ideas, backed by solid research, economics, and other science, instead of relying upon diktat, would be a good place to start.[5]
Until that happens, the SEC must be actively and publicly providing input to FSOC. The agency cannot simply go along for the ride. On this point, I have to tip my hat to Chair White for opening a comment file on the tortured OFR Report on asset managers in 2013.[6] But more is needed.
As troublesome as FSOC is, an even more dangerous charade is playing out in the international star chamber known as the Financial Stability Board, or FSB, where there are only three capital markets regulators on the thirty-five member steering committee. What’s more, the gaggle of central bankers on the FSB steering committee includes not only representatives from the European Commission, the European Central Bank, and the Basel Committee, but also central bankers from many of the individual countries that are members of these organizations.
Why is it that Spain and the Netherlands get invitations to the FSB cocktail parties, but Texas and South Carolina do not? It is a little-known fact that from 1945 to 1991, the Soviet Union had three seats in the United Nations — one for the USSR, and one apiece for the Ukrainian and Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republics. The FSB has moved this program of selective over-representation westward, but the principle is the same, comrades. This has allowed the Europeans — for whom capital markets are much less important than the United States — and their pro-prudential regulatory cohorts in the United States to relegate their capital markets counterparts to the kids table out in the hall. Apparently, the U.S. representatives can’t, or don’t want to, stand up for capital markets.
Prudential regulation is an important tool for bank regulators to use in supervising banks’ risk-taking activities, so as to ensure that risks are limited to an acceptable level and avoid posing an undue strain on the government insurance backstop — despite the moral hazard and expectations of “no losses” that the insurance itself creates. But in practice, “prudential” regulation can and has evolved into an opaque regulatory system in which the government’s invisible hand replaces the market’s, transcending rule enforcement and becoming the decision maker for ostensibly private enterprises.
The attempts by our prudential regulators and their international counterparts to de-risk the U.S. capital markets and make them look like the banking markets are not just philosophically wrong — they are an attack on U.S. competitiveness. As I have stated before, piling more regulatory burdens on our capital markets will only cause more activity to move overseas, where up-and-coming jurisdictions in Asia and elsewhere would be more than happy to gain market share.[7] And it will stifle domestic economic activity, as companies will be forced to line up for bank loans made scarce by new bank regulations rather than pursuing capital formation opportunities in the market.
In the bubble of the beltway, regulators can come to believe that they are omniscient, that they know better than Main Street America. They are often lured by special interest groups who insist that Americans must be coddled and that private enterprise is rapacious and greedy. So it takes a special breed to resist that siren song of greater regulatory power and authority. It takes those willing to play referee, rather than God. When the SEC rotely rubber-stamps the work of the prudential regulators and their umbrella organizations FSOC and FSB, we get less vibrant markets, more government backstops, more potential bailouts.
Along these lines, I tip my hat to IOSCO Chairman Greg Medcraft, who recently had the courage to break ranks from the party line espoused by his peers in Basel in announcing his view that the asset management industry does not pose a systemic risk. Importantly, Chairman Medcraft acknowledged a fundamental truth about capital markets regulation, one that I have been loudly making since the day I became a Commissioner — that “markets are all about taking risks and should be regulated in different ways to banks.”[8] Let’s hope that his voice is not like the sound of the proverbial tree falling in the woods.
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Despite these external threats to the U.S. capital markets and our regulation thereof, change must first start from within. As I have said many times over the last four years — you are what you prioritize.[9] It is more than abundantly clear that the SEC’s place in the pantheon of federal regulators cannot be taken as a right, or as immutable. We have to prove ourselves to be a smart, tough-but-fair regulator of the capital markets. It is when we are weak, or appear incompetent, that the barbarians storm the gates. And the only way for the SEC to remain a pre-eminent federal regulatory agency is for the Commission to commit to a robust and proactive agenda. With that, I’d like to share some final thoughts regarding the priorities for the main operating Divisions and Offices at the SEC.
Over the last seven years, the Division of Corporation Finance (“Corp Fin”) has unfortunately, and despite the best instincts of many key staffers, become a tool for advancing a radical shareholder rights agenda. Executive pay rules, stonewalling on shareholder proposal reform, and now the universal ballot — the Corp Fin agenda has confused protecting investor activism with protecting investors. Sometimes these two are aligned, but sometimes they are not. I am encouraged that the Chamber and other prominent organizations have banded together in the Corporate Governance Coalition for Investor Value to start challenging this dominant viewpoint.[10] Corp Fin’s commitment to review disclosure effectiveness is a positive step forward, but I also fear this will be yet one more vehicle for injecting a radical view of corporate disclosure, trying to involve information that any investor might find interesting, rather than information that a reasonable investor would find important in making an investment or voting decision — that is the heart of the SEC’s disclosure regime.
Corp Fin must also work to ensure that the opportunities inherent in our capital markets remain open and attractive to all businesses. Despite incremental improvements like Reg A+, which the Commission adopted this year,[11] small businesses are still highly constrained when it comes to capital formation, and often have no access to viable secondary markets. Indeed, many growing businesses have consciously avoided the public markets over the past decade because of the regulatory baggage that accompanies the offering regime, instead choosing the far simpler options of selling themselves or staying private. And who can blame them? Companies that go public get such “benefits” as shareholder proposals, social policy masquerading as disclosure requirements — tune in, by the way, for tomorrow’s SEC open meeting to adopt a final pay ratio rule for a textbook example of that — shareholder activists, and, best of all, creeping and continuing federal intrusion into corporate governance. Over the coming years, the manner in which Corp Fin addresses these issues will play a large role in determining whether our capital markets continue to be the engines that power our economy.
As for the SEC’s Investment Management Division, I am proud to say that it has made great strides in recent years, shepherding a nuanced money market fund rule to adoption and announcing a suite of rulemaking initiatives aimed at gathering better and more useful data in the fund space. But the Commission needs to continue to assert itself as a competent and effective overseer of the asset management industry, which has been under attack from the prudential regulators since the financial crisis. The FSOC and FSB have recently shifted their focus to the activities and products of asset managers rather than attempting the absurdity of declaring individual large asset managers as “systemically important.”[12] This does not mean, however, that they have abandoned their quest to de-risk the industry with prudential regulatory tools like capital requirements, which serve absolutely no purpose in an agency business. For the sake of the millions of investors who depend on our asset management industry, the Investment Management Division must stand its ground and defend its purview.
The Enforcement Division has done an admirable job in the wake of the financial crisis, resisting calls to storm Wall Street with torches and pitchforks while still addressing the miscreants, both large and small, corporate and individual, that plague our capital markets.
However, we need to be constantly reminded of the importance of being measured and thoughtful in exercising our enforcement authority. For example, throughout my tenure I have repeatedly called on the Commission to tread carefully when bringing enforcement actions against compliance personnel, who are often the only line of defense we have in detecting and preventing violations of the federal securities laws.[13] Recent enforcement actions holding compliance officers to a standard of strict liability will only serve to chill talented professionals from playing this vital role.[14] We also need to remain focused on affording respondents the due process rights to which they are entitled. The recent attention on the SEC’s use of administrative proceedings has fostered a healthy debate on this topic. I am confident the Enforcement Division will heed outside voices calling for introspection, such as the Chamber’s recent report in this area.[15]