Document Type

Article

Publication Title

Lewis & Clark Law Review

Abstract

The SEC adopted new rules in 2005 governing registered public offerings in the United States. Few, if any, of the rules make sense if we start from a presumption that investors are rational and are able to account properly for any information they receive during the public offering process. In this Article, I examine the new rules and assess the implicit behavioral assumptions about investors contained in the rules. I also provide an assessment of the behavioral biases that may affect regulators at the SEC. Regulator biases may lead the SEC to take an ad hoc evaluative process often ending with a reference to “investor confidence” in justifying new regulations. As a minimal solution, I propose that the SEC bear the burden of specifying its assumptions behind investor behavior explicitly together with how regulations will benefit investors suffering from such biases (as well as how other investors are affected by the regulations). Taking such an approach will lead to a more consistent approach in how the SEC deals with investor biases and reduce unnecessary regulation (as opposed to the SEC’s present ad hoc approach as typified in the public offering rules). To the extent other more public choice factors motivate regulation and references to “investor confidence” are merely a pretext, my proposal would help bring transparency to these other factors by focusing attention on whether the “investor confidence” rationale, in fact, is justified.

First Page

85

Volume

10

Publication Date

2006

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