Subject: File Number S7-02-22
From: Megan Roche
Affiliation:

Apr. 16, 2022


Dear Ms. Countryman:

I am writing with deep concern about the SEC’s proposal to expand its
definition of an “exchange” and an “alternative trading system” (ATS).
As written, the proposed rulemaking does not clarify what additional
trading systems or protocols the SEC intends to regulate under the
expanded definitions. Since existing SEC rules and regulations
applicable to exchanges and ATSs are essentially designed to regulate
stock exchanges, this ambiguity causes grave concern. It is also
completely unclear how any trading system or protocol not already
regulated by the SEC could possibly comply with the rules designed for
exchanges and ATSs. That the Commission felt the need to clarify the
expanded definition would not capture platforms like web chat platforms
and utilities exemplifies the problem: if the expanded definition of a
securities exchange could be interpreted to capture such software, what
software couldn’t be?

Accordingly, it seems obvious to me that this proposed rulemaking will
be unable to accomplish successfully any of the SEC’s policy objectives.
The severe regulatory uncertainty this rule would create would not
enhance oversight, nor would it improve regulatory outcomes; instead, it
would stifle innovation, entrench existing businesses and business
models, and harm the U.S. public, who might otherwise have benefited
from a flourishing and competitive market ecosystem.

Consider how such regulatory uncertainty could affect trading software.
First of all, does the proposed rule apply to trading software at all,
and if so, to which types of trading software? Would individual
developers be required to register as an exchange or ATS solely because
they contributed discrete lines of code to a broader tool that could
possibly be used to help buyers and sellers interact? Must software
developers now consider themselves responsible for trading activity that
occurs completely without their involvement?

These are questions that market participants will be compelled to ask,
and to which neither they nor any policy maker will be able to provide
answers. It is imperative that the SEC clearly define what it does and
does not intend to newly capture with this rulemaking. And
unfortunately, the SEC did not.

Nowhere else is the inappropriateness of this regulatory ambiguity more
pointed and punishing than in the realm of decentralized finance (DeFi).
Within DeFi, parties transact using open-source software. DeFi software
is often built by multiple parties; one developer may create only a
single part of the ultimate protocol, and developers have no ongoing
oversight or control over either the further development of that
protocol or its operation. It would not simply be difficult and
nonsensical for such a developer to fulfill the supervisory
responsibilities for trading activity that the SEC requires of an
exchange; it would be impossible.

That means the expanded definition in the proposed rulemaking would have
but one inevitable outcome: developers would have to second-guess—at the
very least—contributing to these kinds of open-source projects. Of
course, without these contributors, these open-source projects cannot
develop—at least not in the United States. This is a clear example of
the chilling effect of the regulatory uncertainty the Commission would
create with this rule.

Merely making software available to the public should not be captured
under the SEC’s exchange or ATS registration framework, and the SEC
should clearly state that.

As a policy matter, SEC regulations should not prohibit the public from
benefiting from innovations in financial markets. While relatively new,
DeFi protocols have already provided significant benefits and
innovations, like offering people the security and transparency of
blockchains in an accessible, nondiscriminatory, democratic way. Moving
forward with this proposal as written would create a regulatory
advantage for incumbents in traditional finance. What’s more, it would
cede the future of these DeFi markets to other countries—including
significant competitors to the United States who are already seeking to
create more attractive regulatory regimes for open-source financial
software development.

Consequently, I strongly oppose the SEC’s unacceptably broad proposal to
expand its definition of an “exchange” and an “ATS,” and I emphatically
urge the SEC to reconsider. At a minimum, the SEC should issue a new
proposal that makes clear exactly which trading systems and protocols
the SEC intends to regulate. Furthermore, this new proposal should have
a robust cost-benefit analysis and comment period. Finally, this new
proposal should provide the public adequate time to respond—rather than
the, as Commissioner Peirce called it, “unconscionably reckless” 30-day
period allotted for responses to this incredibly complex proposal. The
SEC should understand that any proposed rulemaking that is 654 pages
long and contains more than 220 separate requests for comment on a
variety of issues requires more than 30 days to study and analyze.

For all of these reasons, I stand opposed to the SEC’s proposal, and
respectfully request that the SEC take actions to rectify what I
consider to be a grave mistake.



Please don't stifle innovation in this new tech in the USA. We have a
chance to lead the world in it.

Sincerely,

Megan Roche