Steven Lofchie is a Partner based in New York. He advises financial institutions and corporate clients on the securities laws and the Commodity Exchange Act, with particular focus on the regulation of broker-dealers, swap dealers, investment funds and other market intermediaries. Steven's transactional practice focuses on securities credit and derivative transactions.

Recent Articles & Comments

Note that the prohibition applies to derivatives on cryptoassets, not to transactions in the assets themselves.

The issuance of , in combination with the SEC's recent issuance of a in the wake of the financial crisis, signals that the agency is undertaking a more sophisticated analysis of overall market risk. This is a very positive direction for the regulator. It is important that the agency becomes equally sophisticated as to economic issues as it is with respect to purely legal issues, since the law must appropriately flow from, or at least take significant account of, the underlying economics.…

In some respects, the most interesting aspect of Rule 2165, even as it exists now, is that it purports to authorize broker-dealers to decline to follow a customer's instructions as to the customer's assets - even where there is no legislative authority. FINRA and the SEC ought to press Congress or the States to adopt authorizing legislation, so that broker-dealers are not vulnerable to litigation.

In addition, FINRA should require broker-dealers to report all holds put on customer…

For anyone interested in how the debt markets and the economy work, this is a must-read. The agency and the authors of the report should take a bow for turning out something in short order that is both understandable and useful as analysis.

While proponents of Dodd-Frank may believe that the legislation provided substantial safety benefits, that is not in fact so clear, or at least the picture is not so one-sided. In this regard, the report makes the following observations: