A US appeals court overturned an SEC rule on fee and expense disclosure for hedge funds and equity firms, citing congressional overreach.
On June 5th, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals’ three-judge panel unanimously ruled against the SEC, according to court documents.
This came after six industry groups challenged the rule, arguing it would raise compliance costs and drastically change the sector.
The SEC “exceeded its statutory authority,” Judge Kurt Engelhardt wrote on behalf of the three judges. “The promulgation of the Final Rule was unauthorized, no part of it can stand.”
The 656-page SEC rule required funds to release quarterly performance and fee reports, conduct yearly audits, and stop giving special treatment to some investors.
The SEC claimed Congress expanded its role to oversee private funds, citing two sections of the Dodd-Frank Act passed after the 2008 financial crisis.
However, Judge Engelhardt shot down these claims, saying “neither section grants the Commission such authority.”
The case represents a blow to the regulator’s claimed congressional authority over the sector. Vocal critics of the regulator in the crypto industry have also floated similar criticism over the last few years.
Consensys Senior Counsel Bill Hughes commented, “this is the same off-key performance from the SEC that has been the hallmark of these last three-plus years.”
The SEC loses in court again, and another rulemaking is vacated.
The question presented was whether the SEC had the authority from Congress under an existing statute to make the rule directed at private funds advisors. The court found that, no, it did not.
The court found… pic.twitter.com/R6D3eAgxmk
— Bill Hughes : wchughes.eth
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