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

It is difficult to see the policy logic of this: why provide restitution to someone whose money was lost by a securities law violation, but not to an individual whose car was stolen, or whose house was robbed? The state serves as a general but not a complete or comprehensive insurer against different types of individual misfortunes. Where is the logic of favoring victims of securities fraud over other persons in need?

What is the point of throwing in Rule 2010 on so many enforcement actions? Rule 2010 should be renamed the "Violating Any Other FINRA Rule" rule.

This was not a suit that could be in any way justified on the basis of the statute. As the Court stated, "The key language in each of the provisions at issue [in Dodd-Frank] is 'may,' which is permissive and reflects Congress's grant of discretionary rulemaking authority to the SEC." In short, there is simply no plausible argument that the SEC was required to adopt any rule that had the specific requirements that the plaintiffs favored.

Private litigants may be granted some leeway in…

Would the development of a federally backed and regulated digital dollar cause a huge inflow of foreign money into the U.S. dollar, as the world's ultimate safe asset? If so, this has tremendous significance for every national economy.