Reflections on Dual Regulation of Securities: A Case for Reallocation of Regulatory Responsibilities

Manning G. Warren
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

When Congress passed the National Securities Markets Improvement Act of 1996 (NSMIA), it unilaterally withdrew the preexisting power of the states to require pre-sale registration disclosures by issuers, including the power to conduct pre-sale disclosure review, merit review, or any other kind of fairness review in connection with most public and private offerings of securities conducted within the various states’ respective jurisdictions. It simply rewrote the 1933 Act’s savings clause to preempt most state laws requiring registration of, or imposing conditions on, a broadly-defined and open-ended group of securities and securities transactions. The passage of NSMIA inflicted a severe, if not fatal, wound on the dual system of securities regulation that had protected investors and their marketplace since the end of the Great Depression. This essay suggests an alternative approach that might contribute to the development of a more rational reallocation of state regulatory power than presently exists in NSMIA’s aftermath. First, the author addresses the remaining scope of state regulatory power given NSMIA’s dictates and prerogatives. Then, the author suggests for consideration significant alterations to the regulatory role traditionally performed by the states. These alterations include state withdrawal from the registration process, with the consequential demise of merit review, and, in its place, the development of a notification procedure accompanied by state criminalization of violations of both federal registration and state notification requirements. The author also suggests the adoption of corollary civil remedies to ensure supportive private reinforcement of the new regime. Finally, the author concludes that this reallocation of regulatory responsibility will realign the dual system of securities regulation to better achieve NSMIA’s elusive goal of regulatory uniformity. This suggested reallocation should serve the statutory policy of the Uniform Securities Act, that its interpretation be coordinated with the federal securities laws.
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证券双重监管的思考:一个监管责任再分配的案例
当国会通过1996年《全国证券市场改进法案》(NSMIA)时,它单方面撤销了各州要求发行人进行预售登记披露的原有权力,包括对在各州各自管辖范围内进行的大多数公开和私人证券发行进行预售披露审查、价值审查或任何其他类型的公平审查的权力。它只是重写了1933年法案的储蓄条款,以取代大多数要求注册或对广泛定义的开放式证券和证券交易施加条件的州法律。NSMIA的通过对自大萧条结束以来保护投资者及其市场的双重证券监管体系造成了严重(如果不是致命的话)伤害。本文提出了一种替代方法,可能有助于发展更合理的国家监管权力重新分配,而不是目前存在于NSMIA的后果。首先,鉴于NSMIA的指令和特权,作者论述了国家监管权力的剩余范围。然后,作者建议考虑对传统上由各州扮演的监管角色进行重大改变。这些改变包括各州从注册过程中退出,随之而来的是功绩审查的消亡,并取而代之的是一种通知程序的发展,伴随着对违反联邦注册和州通知要求的州的刑事定罪。作者还建议采取相应的民事补救措施,以确保私人对新制度的支持。最后,作者得出结论,这种监管责任的重新分配将重新调整证券监管的双重体系,以更好地实现NSMIA难以实现的监管统一目标。这种建议的重新分配应服务于《统一证券法》的法定政策,其解释应与联邦证券法相协调。
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