U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler testifies before a House Financial Services Committee oversight hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., on Sept. 27, 2023.
Jonathan Ernst | Reuters
Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Gary Gensler spoke this morning at the Practising Law Institute’s 56th annual conference on securities regulation.
It sounded awfully close to a farewell speech.
“It’s a remarkable agency,” Gensler said of the SEC, which he has led since April, 2021.
“It’s been a great honor to serve with them, doing the people’s work, and ensuring that our capital markets remain the best in the world.”
Gensler reviews accomplishments
Gensle offered a review of what he has accomplished.
Most notably, Gensler highlighted the many disclosure rules the SEC has enacted, including disclosure on data breaches, executive pay versus performance and additional disclosures on those seeking to control and buy more than a 5% stake in a company.
Gensler made only passing reference to his most controversial disclosure rule, on climate change, which has been challenged in court.
“Congress put in place important provisions about disclosure because information about securities creates a public good,” he said.
On market structure, Gensler noted he had put in place new rules on central clearing of Treasuries and shortening of the settlement cycle for stocks from two days to one day, and had recently passed rules that allow stocks to be quoted in increments of less than a penny.
Defense of crypto stance
Gensler offered a full-throated defense of his approach to crypto.
Gensler repeated his assertion that while he bitcoin is not a security, the SEC’s focus ” has been on some of the 10,000 or so other digital assets, many of which courts have ruled were offered or sold as securities” and are therefore subject to the SEC’s purview.
He again asserted anyone offering to sell securities needs to register, and that intermediaries such as broker-dealers, exchanges and clearinghouses also need to be registered.
He said that the failure to properly police the crypto industry had resulted in “significant investor harm” and that “the vast majority of crypto assets have yet to prove out sustainable use cases.”
Proud to serve
Gensler did not say he was resigning, but the tone was clear.
“I’ve been proud to serve with my colleagues at the SEC who, day in and day out, work to protect American families on the highways of finance,” he said at the end of his speech.
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Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell speaks Wednesday afternoon at the Economic Club of Chicago, delivering policy remarks with markets on edge over the effect of President Donald Trump’s tariffs.
The appearance will be the last public speech Powell delivers before the central bank’s rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee meets May 6-7. Markets widely expect the FOMC to keep its key overnight borrowing rate unchanged in a range between 4.25% and 4.50%.
However, Powell will have the chance to expound on where the Fed is heading from here. Recent statements from officials largely reflect a view that Fed policy is well positioned to adjust to risks posed by the economy.
In remarks earlier this month, Powell said he sees Trump’s tariffs raising inflation and slowing growth, keeping the Fed in check at least for now.
Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading. Nvidia — Shares tumbled more than 7% after Nvidia said that it will record a $5.5 billion charge tied to exporting H20 graphics processing units to China, along with other destinations. The company said in a regulatory filing that the U.S. government informed Nvidia it would require a license to export the chips to several countries including China. Shares of Advanced Micro Devices and Micron Technology fell 7% and 1%, respectively, in sympathy. ASML — Shares of the Dutch semiconductor equipment firm lost 5% after ASML missed order expectations and warned of greater demand uncertainty from China tariff restrictions. ASML CEO Christophe Fouquet said that tariff-driven uncertainty with some of ASML’s customers could drag the company into the lower end of its full-year revenue guidance. Interactive Brokers — Shares tumbled 9% after the electronic trading platform posted first-quarter earnings of $1.88 per share, excluding items, which came in below the $1.92 per share analysts had expected, per LSEG. The company’s adjusted revenue of $1.40 billion came in line with forecasts. Interactive Brokers also announced a dividend hike of 7 cents to 32 cents per share, alongside a four-for-one stock split. United Airlines — Shares added nearly 2% after the airline earned an adjusted 91 cents per share in its first quarter, while analysts polled by LSEG had expected earnings of 76 cents per share. However, United Airlines’ $13.21 billion revenue was below the forecast $13.26 billion. J.B. Hunt Transport Services — The transportation giant shed 7% after reporting a year-over-year drop in revenue and operating income. However, the company also posted a first-quarter beat on both the top and bottom lines. Omnicom Group — Shares slipped 5%, despite the media company posting first-quarter adjusted earnings of $1.70 per share, while analysts polled by LSEG had penciled in earnings of $1.62 per share. Travelers — The stock jumped about 2% after the insurance company’s first-quarter earnings topped Wall Street’s expectations. Travelers posted adjusted earnings of $1.91 per share, above the 78 cents per share that analysts polled by LSEG had penciled in. U.S. Bancorp — The bank shed 1%, despite posting better-than-expected first quarter results on both the top and bottom lines. Tesla — Shares slipped 3%. A Tuesday report from Reuters , citing sources with direct knowledge of the matter, said that President Donald Trump’s tariffs on Chinese goods could disrupt Tesla’s plans to mass produce its Cybercab and Semi electric trucks in the U.S. Hertz Global — The rental car company climbed 20%. Pershing Square disclosed a new share position worth around $46.5 million in a regulatory filing . Advanced Micro Devices — The semiconductor stock declined 7% after the company said it expects that the latest U.S. export restrictions could result in charges of around $800 million . — CNBC’s Sean Conlon and Pia Singh contributed reporting. Get Your Ticket to Pro LIVE Join us at the New York Stock Exchange! Uncertain markets? Gain an edge with CNBC Pro LIVE , an exclusive, inaugural event at the historic New York Stock Exchange. In today’s dynamic financial landscape, access to expert insights is paramount. As a CNBC Pro subscriber, we invite you to join us for our first exclusive, in-person CNBC Pro LIVE event at the iconic NYSE on Thursday, June 12. Join interactive Pro clinics led by our Pros Carter Worth, Dan Niles, and Dan Ives, with a special edition of Pro Talks with Tom Lee. You’ll also get the opportunity to network with CNBC experts, talent and other Pro subscribers during an exciting cocktail hour on the legendary trading floor. Tickets are limited!
U.S. President Donald Trump meets with El Salvador President Nayib Bukele (not pictured) in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 14, 2025.
Kevin Lamarque | Reuters
Wall Street banks just posted their biggest-ever haul from stock trading as the opening months of President Donald Trump‘s tenure led to upheavals across asset classes — and the need for institutional investors around the world to position themselves for a new regime.
When including Citigroup and Wells Fargo, the six largest U.S. banks put up $16.3 billion in stock trading in the quarter, 33% more than a year earlier and higher than in previous periods of tumult, like the 2020 coronavirus pandemic or the 2008 global financial crisis.
The performance, which helped every bank except Wells Fargo beat expectations for the quarter, was deemed “spectacular,” “extraordinary” and “awesome” by analysts in conference calls over the past week.
It’s a twist on the anticipated Trump boom for Wall Street.
Trump’s second time in office was supposed to be good for Wall Street’s dealmakers, the investment bankers handling billion-dollar acquisitions and high-profile IPO listings. Instead, deal activity has remained tepid, and the biggest beneficiaries so far have been sitting on bank’s trading floors.
While equities traders put up the biggest gains during the first quarter, according to their earnings releases, fixed income personnel also saw higher revenue on rising activity in currencies, commodities and bond markets.
“So long as the volatility continues — and there’s no reason to believe it’s going to stop anytime soon — equities trading desks should remain plenty busy,” James Shanahan, a bank analyst at Edward Jones, said in a phone interview.
While investment banking has remained muted as corporate leaders put off making strategic decisions amid ongoing uncertainty, professional investors have “a lot to play for” as they seek to rack up gains, Morgan Stanley CEO Ted Pick said Friday.
Booming trading results will help big banks as they set aside potentially billions of dollars for soured loans as the economy weakens further, Shanahan said. JPMorgan executives said Friday that their models assume U.S. unemployment will rise to 5.8% later this year. Unemployment stood at 4.2% in March, according to data from the Labor Department.
The environment leaves regional banks, which mostly lack sizeable trading operations, in a “tough spot” amid stagnant loan growth and elevated borrower defaults, Shanahan added.
‘Significant moves’
The first quarter is typically a busy one for trading as investors at hedge funds, pensions and other active managers start their performance cycles anew.
That was especially true this year; hours after his January swearing-in ceremony, Trump said that he would soon implement tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico. The next month, he began escalating trade tensions with China, while also targeting specific industries and products like automobiles and steel.
The dynamic — in which Trump introduced, and then scaled back sweeping tariffs with profound implications for American businesses — reached a fever pitch in early April, around his so-called “Liberation Day” announcements. That’s when markets began making historic moves, as both equities and government bonds whipsawed amid the chaos.
The heightened activity levels could mean that the second quarter is even more profitable for Wall Street’s giants than the first.
“We obviously saw significant moves in equity markets as people positioned for a different kind of trade policy during March” that led to “higher activity for us in a variety of ways,” Goldman CEO David Solomon told analysts on Monday.
So far in the second quarter, “the business is performing very well and clients are very active” Solomon said.
Wall Street has evolved since the 2008 financial crisis, which consolidated trading and investment banking among fewer, larger firms after Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns were wiped out.
Led by folks including Morgan Stanley’s Pick — who is credited with overhauling the firm’s fixed income business and taking its equities franchise to new heights before he became CEO last year — Wall Street’s dominant trading desks are providing ever-faster execution and larger credit lines to professional investors all over the world.
Rather than wagering house money on bets, they have leaned more to facilitating trades and providing leverage for clients, meaning they profit from activity, whether markets go up or down.
“We’ve been working with clients nonstop,” Pick said on Friday. “For all of the concerns about what could come down the road in the real economy, the market-making and the ability to transact to clients as they up and down their leverage levels has been very orderly.”