The SEC proposed rules to enhance the corporate disclosure of company hedging policies for directors and employees. The proposal requires an issuer to disclose whether it permits directors and employees to hedge their exposure to the company's securities that they own or that are granted to them as compensation. The proposal amends Regulation S-K to require annual proxy disclosures about whether directors and employees are permitted to hedge or offset any decrease in the market value of equity securities granted by a company as compensation or otherwise held by them, as well as the equity
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Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System ("FRB") Governor Jerome Powell spoke out against "misguided" proposals to place limits on the Federal Reserve's (the "Fed's") ability to respond to financial crises. He delivered his remarks at the Catholic University of America. In particular, Governor Powell criticized three types of "misguided" proposals – namely, to: "audit the Fed" ( i.e., subject the Fed's conduct of monetary policy to congressional auditing); require the Fed to adopt and follow specific equations for setting monetary policy, and to face immediate congressional hearings
The SEC's technical corrections to the Asset-Backed Securities Disclosure and Registration Rules were published in the Federal Register. The amendments reinstate language that was inadvertently removed and make other technical corrections to rules that were published on September 24, 2014. See: 80 FR 6652.
The SEC imposed sanctions against four China-based accounting firms that refused to turn over documents relating to investigations of potential fraud. According to the SEC, an administrative law judge issued an initial decision finding that the four firms "willfully refused to provide the SEC with workpapers and related documents in connection with their audit work for nine China-based companies that had securities registered in the U.S." The sanctioned firms are members of large international networks associated with the "Big Four" accounting firms and are registered with the Public Company
Scholars from the Mercatus Center at George Mason University submitted a letter to FINRA regarding it's rule proposal to implement the Comprehensive Automated Risk Data System ("CARDS"). According to the letter, while FINRA claims that the collection of standardized data for CARDS will enhance investor protection, using the data to assess broker and investor activity and then providing report cards to firms "will likely result in FINRA staffers' judgments increasingly determining how money is invested." The letter further commented that FINRA's increased influence over how customer money is