Wall Street Watchdogs Pull Back Amid Trump’s Deregulatory Push
Headcount is falling at agencies as the administration loosens restraints and embraces new markets like crypto and predictions.
The headquarters of the US Securities and Exchange Commission in Washington
Photographer: Saul Loeb/Getty Images
Finance has been moving fast. From crypto to prediction betting to exchange-traded funds to private credit, new markets—and risks—are proliferating. And in his second term in the White House, Donald Trump is going all-in on deregulation. The US Securities and Exchange Commission has flipped from its Biden-era skepticism of crypto to a full embrace. A new law, the Genius Act, has put digital stablecoins that act like dollars in a position to compete with banks for deposits. Regulators at the Federal Reserve are reversing an effort to beef up the capital cushions at large banks.
The shift is reflected in both policy and personnel. The SEC’s staffing has fallen by 18% since 2024; the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which regulates derivatives markets, was down 25% as of January. SEC Chairman Paul Atkins said in a speech that the two agencies will coordinate to usher in “a new golden age of regulatory coherence.” Critics of deregulation worry about what may fall through the cracks. Read on for a snapshot of what’s happening with US watchdogs.