02.23.2018

Complex Products Back in SEC’s Sights

02.23.2018

Attendees at the 47th annual SEC Speaks conference hosted by the Practicing Law Institute found that everything old is new again.

Concerns over complex products once again came to the fore as Commissioner Kara Stein raised her concerns over whether the next-generation of complex products are appropriate for retail investors and whether they should be available to every type of investor.

Citing exotic strategies like straddles, strangles, iron condors, iron butterflies, twin-win notes, worst of notes, and buffered supper track notes, she questioned how many retail investors, as well as sales professionals, truly understood how these new products work.

Even more concerning to her has been their incorporation into passive investment strategies.

The rise in passive investments, as well as their typical blandness of following broad-based indexes like the S&P 500, have been a cattle call for financial engineers to create new products, according to Commissioner Stein.

“Today, indices have bespoke algorithmic methodologies and frequent rebalancing,” she added. “They can look more like active management than a purely passive instrument.”

Commissioner Stein turned to the Spielberg epic Jurassic Park to question the wisdom of creating “something scary, dangerous, and unpredictable.”

She quickly clarified that was not calling all complex products the financial equivalents of tyrannosaurus rexes or velociraptors, but that they deserved serious consideration.

“We know we can build products that take advantage of our technological and engineering capabilities,” said Commissioner Stein. “But the question should not be: ‘Can we develop and sell to investors a product that does XYZ?’ The question out to be; ‘Should we develop or sell to investors a product that does XYZ?’”

When the panel conversation turned to the hot topic of cryptocurrency, the regulator is moving with all due caution before establishing policy, according to Dalia Blass, director of the Division of Investment Management at the SEC.

“Cryptocurrencies have raised questions of valuation, liquidity, custody, arbitrage, and potential manipulation,” said Blass. “These are not easy questions, and people are working through them.”

Usually, a proponent of the free market, fellow panelist former-SEC Commission Daniel Gallagher approved of the Commission’s approach due to opaque nature of cryptocurrencies.

“It’s an area fraught with bad actors and products,” he said. “If you put the imprimatur of The 40 Act on a pile of crap, it is still crap. And creating futures contracts does not change it.”

It's been a month since we had our Women In Finance Awards in New York City at the Plaza! Take a look back tab some moments, and nominate for our upcoming awards in Mexico City and Singapore here: https://www.marketsmedia.com/category/events/

4

Citadel Securities told the SEC that trading tokenized equities should remain under existing market rules, a position that drew responses from various crypto industry groups. @ShannyBasar for @MarketsMedia:

SEC Commissioner Mark Uyeda argued that private assets belong in retirement plans, saying diversified alts can improve risk-adjusted returns and that the answer to optimal exposure “is not zero.” @ShannyBasar reporting for @MarketsMedia:

COO of the Year Award winner! 🏆
Discover how Jennifer Kaiser of Marex earned the 2025 Women in Finance COO of the Year recognition.

Load More

Related articles

  1. The expanded partnership enables TJM to offer clients improved capital & collateral efficiency.

  2. She will be chief legal officer and chief administrative officer of the crypto payments company.

  3. The firm aims to become the 'Everything Exchange' for trading.

  4. Cybersecurity is Top of Mind for FinServ

    The statement is an interim step while the SEC continues to consider the issues.

  5. Responses are open until 12 February 2026.