US Supreme Court clips SEC’s wings with recent rulings

The Supreme Court made a host of decisions at the start of July that spell trouble for regulators—including the SEC.

Clean air, fishing boats, and truck stops sound more like parts of a summer vacation than anything to do with financial services, but these are the root issues of a few US Supreme Court judgements that have piled pressure on the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

In early July, the Supreme Court made a series of decisions designed to curb administrative overreach of the country’s regulatory bodies. This included the landmark decision to end the so-called Chevron deference, a 40-year

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CME: CFTC OKs clearing move to Google Cloud

The CFTC has given the Chicago-based exchange approval to run its clearing and settlement infrastructure on the Google Cloud Platform, while the exchange and vendor have extended their partnership to last until at least 2037.

Cutting through the hype surrounding the FDTA rulemaking process

A bill requiring US regulators and institutions to adopt a machine-readable data framework for reporting purposes applies to entity identifiers, but not security identifiers, in a crucial difference, writes Scott Preiss, SVP and global head of Cusip Global Services.

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