Paul Atkins, introduced at the Texas Stock Exchange event as "chairman of the SEC," presented a three-part agenda he said is intended to revive U.S. public markets and reduce regulatory frictions that deter companies from going public.
Atkins told the audience that decades of cumulative rulemaking have narrowed the path to becoming a public company and argued the SEC should return to "first principles." He described three pillars: modernize and streamline required disclosures to emphasize materiality, leave corporate governance questions primarily to state law rather than using disclosure to impose governance norms, and provide litigation alternatives to protect innovators from frivolous suits while preserving avenues for meritorious shareholder claims. "Materiality, in short, must reclaim its place as the SEC's North Star," he said.
Atkins framed the agenda as an effort to reduce compliance burdens that he said have made public listings less attractive and pushed promising companies to stay private or seek private financing. He characterized the goal as enabling markets where companies can raise capital and investors can share in their success, saying regulatory clarity will help restore competition among listing venues.
Why it matters: the chairman’s remarks outline priorities that, if translated into rules or enforcement choices, could change disclosure standards and the agency’s role in corporate-governance matters. Atkins’ speech was a policy statement rather than a notice of proposed rulemaking; no formal SEC action was announced at the event.
Atkins closed by saying he looks forward to working with industry and state leaders on these objectives and reiterated the agency’s obligation "to put the investor first," while aiming to reduce unnecessary regulatory burdens.