Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Paul Atkins testified before the House Financial Services Committee and the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs last week, presenting a comprehensive overview and update of the SEC’s priorities and initiatives. Consistent with his various remarks since the start of his tenure, Atkins’ remarks centered on capital formation, public company disclosure reform, digital asset regulation, and regulatory cost reduction. In addition to his prepared remarks, Atkins engaged in a broad discussion regarding proxy advisers, electronic delivery of documents, and other issues. This blog post summarizes key discussions from Atkins’ two days of testimony.
Capital Formation and IPOs
Chair Atkins identified reinvigorating the U.S. public markets as a central priority. He repeated a data point used in previous speeches: the number of exchange-listed companies has fallen by approximately 40% since the mid-1990s, from more than 7,800 to roughly 4,761 as of September 2025. The Chair attributed this decline to decades of “regulatory creep” and outlined a three-pillar plan to “make IPOs great again.” His plan focuses on (1) re-anchoring disclosures in materiality, (2) de-politicizing shareholder meetings by refocusing on significant corporate matters, and (3) providing public companies with litigation alternatives to protect innovators from frivolous suits while preserving remedies for investors harmed by fraud. Atkins expressed support for bipartisan legislation relating to capital formation currently under consideration in Congress, including the INVEST Act and the Empowering Main Street in America Act.
Disclosure Reform
A major theme of the testimony was the need to modernize and streamline public company disclosure requirements. Atkins observed that public companies collectively spend approximately $2.7 billion annually to prepare and file their annual reports—money not reinvested in their businesses. He emphasized that the SEC is not seeking to “gut” corporate disclosure, which he described as vital, but rather to modernize, rationalize, and streamline reports.
Proxy Advisors
Recent debate regarding the influence of proxy advisory firms, specifically Institutional Shareholder Services and Glass, Lewis & Co., was also raised during the testimony. The President and lawmakers have scrutinized the influence of proxy advisers. The Chair acknowledged that the SEC is “definitely looking at this whole ecosystem” of corporate governance and shareholder proposals. However, he called proxy advisers “a symptom of the underlying problem, and that’s the weaponization of shareholder proposals.”
Digital Asset Regulation
Atkins focused on the SEC’s approach to digital assets, endorsing congressional efforts to enact the CLARITY Act. A federal framework is long overdue, he said, while emphasizing that no SEC action would be more effective than nonpartisan market structure legislation. The SEC is working in coordination with the CFTC to ensure there are no gaps in oversight while providing market participants with certainty regarding jurisdictional authority as between the agencies.
Lawmakers also asked for updates on the Chair’s previously announced “innovation exemption” related to digital assets. Atkins explained that the SEC plans to provide guidelines for stocks that trade on blockchains this year. It is unclear whether the innovation exemption would follow the required notice and comment period for new regulation. “Notice and comment is important,” he said, “but the innovation exemption… would be… cabined, time limited, transparent and really anchored in strong investor protection.”
Enforcement
The Chair stressed that the SEC would be returning its enforcement priorities to root out fraud and remedy investor harm. Since he became Chair, the SEC has brought enforcement actions to address offering frauds, insider trading, accounting and financial frauds, and breaches of fiduciary duty by investment advisers.
Consolidated Audit Trail
Atkins addressed the SEC’s review of the Consolidated Audit Trail (CAT), observing that as the agency modernizes oversight for digital assets, it must also reassess whether legacy tools for traditional markets remain appropriately aligned with regulatory need and the public interest. He has directed SEC staff to conduct a comprehensive review of the CAT, covering governance, funding, potential cost-saving measures, scope, and security. The SEC has reduced originally-approved 2025 CAT operating costs by approximately $92 million, and additional CAT plan amendments would save approximately $7 million to $9 million annually.
Additional Updates
Throughout the hearings, Atkins indicated that the SEC is actively reviewing a number of additional matters, including the pending climate disclosure rule, an executive order on alternative investments in retirement accounts, Form PF reporting requirements for hedge funds, and efforts to reduce costs across the regulatory ecosystem. On electronic delivery, the Chair confirmed that the Commission plans to write a rule allowing electronic delivery of financial documents as the default option for investors and that he has “instructed the staff to work on that.”
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While the Chair outlined an ambitious agenda, many of the initiatives remain in the early stages of review. We will continue to provide updates.

