Regulatory Bodies
The U.S. securities industry operates under a layered regulatory structure. Understanding who regulates what is essential for the SIE exam — and for your career in finance.
The Regulatory Hierarchy
Think of securities regulation as a pyramid. At the top sits Congress, which passes laws like the Securities Act of 1933 and Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Below that, federal agencies and self-regulatory organizations (SROs) enforce these laws and create additional rules.
| Regulator | Type | Primary Focus |
|---|---|---|
| SEC | Federal Agency | Overall securities markets |
| FINRA | Self-Regulatory Organization | Broker-dealers and their employees |
| MSRB | Self-Regulatory Organization | Municipal securities |
| SIPC | Non-profit Corporation | Customer asset protection |
| Federal Reserve | Federal Agency | Monetary policy, bank holding companies |
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is the primary federal regulator of the securities industry. Congress established it in 1934 following the stock market crash of 1929.
Key Functions
- Enforces federal securities laws — The SEC investigates and prosecutes violations of securities laws, including fraud, insider trading, and market manipulation
- Reviews registration statements — Companies must register securities with the SEC before offering them to the public
- Oversees market participants — The SEC supervises exchanges, broker-dealers, investment advisers, and SROs like FINRA
- Protects investors — Through disclosure requirements, the SEC ensures investors receive accurate information
In Practice
When a company wants to go public through an IPO, it files a registration statement (Form S-1) with the SEC. The SEC reviews this document to ensure adequate disclosure — but importantly, SEC approval does not mean the investment is safe or recommended.
Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA)
FINRA is the largest self-regulatory organization (SRO) overseeing broker-dealers in the United States. It operates under SEC supervision but is not a government agency — it's a private, non-profit organization.
Key Functions
- Licenses securities professionals — FINRA administers qualification exams like the SIE, Series 7, and Series 63
- Creates and enforces rules — Broker-dealers must follow FINRA rules on sales practices, supervision, and customer protection
- Monitors trading activity — FINRA surveils markets to detect insider trading, manipulation, and other violations
- Examines member firms — Regular compliance inspections occur at least every four years
Important Distinction
FINRA regulates broker-dealers and their registered representatives, not investment advisers. Investment advisers are regulated by the SEC or state regulators depending on their assets under management.
Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board (MSRB)
The Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board (MSRB) creates rules governing transactions in municipal securities (bonds issued by states, cities, and other local governments).
Key Functions
- Writes rules for municipal securities dealers and municipal advisors
- Operates EMMA — The Electronic Municipal Market Access system provides free public access to municipal bond information
- Does NOT enforce its own rules — FINRA and the SEC enforce MSRB rules for broker-dealers; banking regulators enforce them for banks
On the Exam
Remember: The MSRB is a rulemaking body, not an enforcement body. This distinction frequently appears on the SIE.
Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC)
SIPC is a non-profit corporation that protects customers if a brokerage firm fails. Every registered broker-dealer must be a SIPC member.
Coverage Details
| What SIPC Covers | What SIPC Does NOT Cover |
|---|---|
| Securities (stocks, bonds) | Market losses |
| Cash in brokerage accounts | Bad investment advice |
| Up to $500,000 per customer | Losses from fraud |
| Including $250,000 for cash | Commodity futures |
Critical Point
SIPC is not like FDIC insurance for banks. SIPC only protects against broker-dealer failure — if the firm goes bankrupt and your assets are missing. It does not protect you if your investments lose value.
Federal Reserve Board
The Federal Reserve (often called "the Fed") is the central bank of the United States. While not primarily a securities regulator, it plays important roles relevant to the SIE.
Key Functions
- Sets monetary policy — Controls interest rates and money supply, which affects securities prices
- Regulates margin requirements — Regulation T governs how much investors can borrow to buy securities
- Supervises bank holding companies — Including those that own broker-dealers
How Regulators Work Together
These regulators don't operate in isolation — they coordinate oversight:
- SEC oversees FINRA and approves its rules
- FINRA enforces SEC rules and its own rules at broker-dealers
- MSRB writes rules that FINRA and the SEC enforce
- SIPC steps in only when a broker-dealer fails
Real-World Example
If a registered representative at a broker-dealer commits fraud selling municipal bonds:
- FINRA would investigate the rep's conduct and potentially bar them from the industry
- SEC could bring civil charges
- MSRB rules would determine what standards were violated
- SIPC would only be involved if the broker-dealer itself failed
Key Takeaways
- The SEC is the ultimate federal authority over securities markets
- FINRA directly regulates broker-dealers and their employees
- The MSRB writes rules for municipal securities but doesn't enforce them
- SIPC protects customers when brokerage firms fail — not from market losses
- The Federal Reserve influences markets through monetary policy and margin rules
Which organization administers the SIE exam and other securities qualification exams?
SIPC protection covers which of the following?
Which statement about the MSRB is correct?
1.2 State Regulation
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