Trump nominates cryptocurrency advocate Paul Atkins as SEC chair
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[December 05, 2024] By
ALEX VEIGA
President-elect Donald Trump announced Wednesday that he intends to
nominate cryptocurrency advocate Paul Atkins to chair the Securities and
Exchange Commission.
Trump said Atkins, the CEO of Patomak Partners and a former SEC
commissioner, was a “proven leader for common sense regulations.” In the
years since leaving the SEC, Atkins has made the case against too much
market regulation.
“He believes in the promise of robust, innovative capital markets that
are responsive to the needs of Investors, & that provide capital to make
our Economy the best in the World. He also recognizes that digital
assets & other innovations are crucial to Making America Greater than
Ever Before,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.
The commission oversees U.S. securities markets and investments and is
currently led by Gary Gensler, who has been leading the U.S.
government’s crackdown on the crypto industry. Gensler, who was
nominated by President Joe Biden, announced last month that he would be
stepping down from his post on the day that Trump is inaugurated — Jan.
20, 2025.
Trump, once a crypto skeptic, had pledged to make the U.S. “the crypto
capital of the planet” and create a “strategic reserve” of bitcoin.
Money has poured into crypto assets since he won. The value of bitcoin,
the largest cryptocurrency, passed $100,000 Wednesday. And shares in
crypto platform Coinbase have surged more than 70% since the election.
Paul Grewal, chief legal officer of Coinbase, congratulated Atkins in a
post on X.
“We appreciate his commitment to balance in regulating U.S. securities
markets and look forward to his fresh leadership at (the SEC),” Grewal
wrote. “It’s sorely needed and cannot come a day too soon.”
Congressman Brad Sherman, a California Democrat and a senior member of
the House Financial Services Committee, said he worries Atkins would not
sufficiently regulate cryptocurrencies as SEC chair.
“He’d probably take the position that no cryptocurrency is a security,
and hence no exchange that deals with crypto is a securities exchange,”
Sherman said. “The opportunity to defraud investors would be there in a
very significant way.”
Atkins began his career as a lawyer and has a long history working in
the financial markets sector, both in government and private practice.
In the 1990s, he worked on the staffs of two former SEC chairmen,
Richard C. Breeden and Arthur Levitt.
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Paul Atkins, a former SEC Commissioner and current CEO of Patomak
Partners, arrives at Trump Tower, Nov. 28, 2016, in New York. (AP
Photo/ Evan Vucci, File)
His work as an SEC commissioner
started in 2002, a time when the fallout from corporate scandals at
Enron and WorldCom had turned up the heat on Wall Street and its
government regulators.
Atkins was widely considered the most conservative member of the SEC
during his tenure at the agency and known to have a strong
free-market bent. As a commissioner, he called for greater
transparency in and analysis of the costs and benefits of new SEC
rules.
He also emphasized investor education and increased enforcement
efforts against those who steal from investors over the internet,
manipulate markets, engage in Ponzi schemes and other types of
fraud.
At the same time, Atkins objected to stiff penalties imposed on
companies accused of fraudulent conduct, contending that they did
not deter crime. He caused a stir in the summer of 2006 when he said
the practice of granting stock options to executives before the
disclosure of news that was certain to increase the share price did
not constitute insider trading.
U.S. Rep. Patrick McHenry, a North Carolina Republican and chairman
of the House Financial Services Committee, said Atkins has the
experience needed to “restore faith in the SEC.”
“I’m confident his leadership will lead to clarity for the digital
asset ecosystem and ensure U.S. capital markets remain the envy of
the world,” McHenry posted on X.
Atkins already has some experience working for Trump. During Trump's
first term, Atkins was a member of the President’s Strategic and
Policy Forum, an advisory group of more than a dozen CEOs and
business leaders who offered input on how to create jobs and speed
economic growth.
In 2017, Atkins joined the Token Alliance, a cryptocurrency advocacy
organization.
Crypto industry players welcomed Trump’s victory in the hopes that
he would push through legislative and regulatory changes that
they’ve long lobbied for.
Trump himself has launched World Liberty Financial, a new venture
with family members to trade cryptocurrencies.
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