A Conversation with Industry Stalwarts:
Richard Grasso & Harvey Pitt
Over the past three weeks, STA has received significant input from a broad range of market participants, with respect to a letter we submitted to the House Financial Services Committee, just ahead of its virtual hearing on the market volatility we experienced in late January and early February. The title of the hearing is “Game Stopped? Who Wins and Loses When Short Sellers, Social Media and Retail Investors Collide,” and the CEOs of Robinhood, Citadel, Melvin Capital Management and Reddit will be among the witnesses.  
 
Some of the opinions we expressed in our letter to Congress are set forth below, and we want to take this moment to thank everyone who took time to speak with us. In particular, we want to thank former SEC Chairman Harvey Pitt and former NYSE Chairman and CEO Richard "Dick" Grasso. Both provided invaluable historical perspective; as well as guiding principles and insights. Their contributions enabled us to appreciate the value that regulators, legislators and free markets bring to solutions that improve the integrity of our markets and enhance the protections to the investors we serve. 
Richard Grasso
former President & CEO
NYSE
Harvey Pitt
CEO
Kalorama Partners
&
former SEC Chairman
Like most hearings, this will be an opportunity for Members of Congress to ask questions on behalf of their constituents. It will also be an opportunity for the witnesses, who were decision makers at the center of the volatility, to provide answers and statements for the record. Investors and all those involved in the financial services industry should come away with a better, albeit incomplete, understanding of what did and did not happen amid the market frenzy and begin to develop a picture of what should be fixed or improved.

As we’ve written in the past, our markets are in a constant state of evolution and there are times when certain events serve as clarifying moments that drive discussion of inefficiencies. In the aftermath of such events, solutions born from free markets, legislative actions or regulation are implemented to correct these inefficiencies, allowing the evolutionary process to advance. This process has repeated consistently since the signing of the Buttonwood Agreement in 1792.

Where GameStop falls on the long list of events that have played a role in our market structure is still too early to determine. However, it is safe to say that there have been few events that have attracted as much attention and elicited as many strong but divergent opinions on what is right and wrong about our markets today. When evaluating an event and trying to determine the best way forward, diversity of opinions is a good thing. The challenge, however, is channeling and organizing differences of opinion in a manner that ensures they yield their full potential benefit. We hope our letter is a constructive contribution to conversations that will ultimately determine the short- and long-term actions. 

STA Letter: Developments in the Markets Benefiting Investors: The democratization of the markets, which has been an overwhelmingly positive, but not a new development, has been at the core of many conversations recently.
 
Grasso - An early catalyst in the democratization of our markets occurred in 1975, when the SEC ordered the end of fixed commission rates for all securities transactions. When the fixed commission schedule was eliminated, that gave birth to discount brokerage firms like Charles Schwab, Quick & Reilly and all of the firms that followed them. When you eliminate fixed commission rates, you incentivize people to invest, and that is great for the country.

STA Letter: Decouple short-term responses from long-term: STA supports the efforts of regulators in conducting a rigorous investigation into potential violations of rules and laws. Simultaneously, the regulatory agencies also need to gather data.
 
Grasso - The common ingredient in what makes the industry great and makes the whole process work is investor confidence and that is being challenged right now. Regulators need a two-track focus, guided by improving market integrity and providing investor protection. Examiners need to go in and do a post mortem of what’s happened thus far, and apply broker dealer disciplines to newer entrants that are designed like e-commerce platforms. 

Pitt - People have to take a step back and focus on what the actual problems are and respond thoughtfully, particularly when there is no need to act precipitously. Gather data, set up short- and long- term goals, which is what we did after 9/11. 


STA Letter: Decouple Entity Specific Issues from Broad Market Structure Issues: STA believes it is imperative to decouple events and issues which may be specific to one entity or market participant from those which may have industry-wide implications or could represent a market-wide inefficiency. 

Pitt - Any response needs to differentiate systemic issues from entity-specific issues. Entity-specific issues can be dealt with under the existing authority and investigative powers that the Commission has. In this sense, that’s an aspect of the problem that shouldn’t taint, influence or color the approach of how you deal with the entire marketplace, and make the system stronger. 


STA Letter: Facilitating individual investing: Brokerage firms want to empower investors and make investing easy.  

Grasso - A best practice standard on the part of broker dealers could be to warn their customers transactionally when they believe, having the knowledge of their customers' risk tolerance and profile, that an investment or trade carries extreme risk. If I were running a broker dealer, I would have been giving my customers a Surgeon General’s warning, “This investment that you’re about to make may be hazardous to your wealth.”

Pitt - As we talk about facilitating the effective use of self-investing and empowering investors, we need to make clear to investors that, at different levels of trading sophistication, there are different types of issues they will confront and it is in their interest to self-assess what their skill levels are. Then, they can obtain access to self-directed trading that is tailored to their skill level. This won’t prevent people who want to engage in sophisticated trading but aren’t equipped for it from doing so, but what you can do is facilitate their ability to self-direct by helping them identify the skill sets they have and the skill sets they’ll need. 


STA Letter: Social media: Social media continues to play an ever-increasing role in the markets. This should be embraced, but in a pragmatic way.

Grasso - Main street media fueled the speculation by reporting and portraying this as a David vs Goliath scenario. That was unfortunate. Regulators need to investigate whether manipulation occurred by somehow tracking a person’s comments to their actions.

Pitt - Whenever anyone’s conduct is subject to scrutiny you should take a holistic approach to who the individual is. What training, background and what standards are these investors used to, and should those standards apply when they engage in conduct outside their formal professional activities. How you deal with social media is an example—licensed professional can never discard the professional standards to which they have undertaken to adhere. 
More about Richard "Dick" Grasso
Richard "Dick" Grasso was chairman and chief executive of the New York Stock Exchange from 1995 to 2003, the culmination of a career that began in 1968 when Grasso was hired by the Exchange as a floor clerk. He headed up the exchange during the greatest boom in its 215-year history and was widely praised for reopening the exchange less than a week after the
September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks
 
Mr Grasso was raised in Jackson Heights, New York, attended Pace University for two years before enlisting in the Army. Mr. Grasso still serves as an adviser to exchanges because of his experience in New York and his reputation in the financial world
More about Harvey Pitt
Harvey L. Pitt is the Chief Executive Officer of the global business consulting firm, Kalorama Partners, LLC, and its law firm affiliate, Kalorama Legal Services, PLLC. Prior to founding the two Kalorama firms, Mr. Pitt served as the twenty-sixth Chairman of the United States Securities and Exchange Commission. In that role, from 2001 until 2003, Mr. Pitt was responsible, among other things, for overseeing the SEC’s response to the market disruptions resulting from the terrorist attacks of 9/11, for creating the SEC’s “real time enforcement” program, and for leading the Commission’s adoption of dozens of rules in response to the corporate and accounting crises generated by the excesses of the 1990s.

Former Chairman Pitt received a J.D. degree from St. John’s University School of Law, and his B.A. from the City University of New York (Brooklyn College). He was awarded an honorary LL.D. by St. John’s University in June 2002, and was given the Brooklyn College President’s Medal of Distinction in 2003.
Save the Date!

STA 88th Annual Market Structure Conference

   October 6-8, 2021
JW Marriott Washington DC