The newly proposed Senate legislation aims to preemptively halt the Securities and Exchange Commission's (SEC) impending regulation concerning artificial intelligence (AI) usage within financial services.
This rule, initially revealed last July, mandates financial institutions to disclose and rectify any conflicts of interest arising from their deployment of AI technologies, ensuring client interests are placed above corporate profits.
SEC Chairman Gary Gensler has highlighted the risks associated with AI technologies making erroneous assumptions about investors or displaying biases towards the financial firm’s own offerings. In response, over twenty Republican legislators have petitioned the SEC to retract the proposed rule, citing prohibitive compliance costs that could deter firms from integrating innovative technologies, including AI.
The Protecting Innovation in Investment Act, introduced by Senators Ted Cruz (R-TX) and Bill Hagerty (R-TN), seeks to prevent the SEC from finalizing this rule. Senator Hagerty criticized the SEC's regulatory approach, suggesting it could burden American consumers with unnecessary costs and hinder technological innovation within the financial sector. He advocated for the SEC to enhance its technological governance before imposing regulations on private sector innovations.
Despite a growing bipartisan acknowledgment of the need for AI regulations, there remains a lack of consensus on the specifics of such legislation. Senator Cruz emphasized the role of new technologies in democratizing stock market access for Americans, cautioning that overregulation by the SEC could disadvantage the investors it aims to protect.
The opposition from Cruz and Hagerty to one of the initial federal proposals on AI governance underscores the complexities surrounding the enactment of new federal regulations. With the Senate bill currently lacking Democratic support, its progress is uncertain, especially with the Senate under Democratic control.
However, this legislation sets a foundational argument for future discussions, particularly if the Republicans secure the Senate in upcoming elections. Utilizing the Congressional Review Act, Republicans could potentially repeal any recently finalized rule with a simple majority in both chambers, bypassing the usual 60-vote requirement in the Senate.
Despite the absence of Democratic co-sponsors, concerns about the rule extend across party lines. Representative Ritchie Torres (D-NY) has voiced apprehensions regarding the rule's broad applicability, which could extend beyond AI to encompass nearly all technologies employed by investment advisors and broker-dealers. He also noted the departure from the SEC's traditional approach of requiring disclosures of potential conflicts rather than their outright elimination.
More Articles
How Sterling Trustees Aligns with Advisors—and Avoids the Bank Trust Conflict
Sterling Trustees combines fixed-fee independence, proprietary Salesforce-based technology, and advisor-first service to streamline trust administration and eliminate the conflicts that often plague traditional trust companies. The firm delivers same-day distributions, automated trust committee decisions, and comprehensive support for complex assets—from art and racehorses to private equity—while helping advisors navigate the $84 trillion generational wealth transfer with 80% client retention rates through strategic trust structures.
The Case for Bitcoin, Deregulated Banks, and a Reset U.S. Market Cycle: Insights from Wellington-Altus
Wellington-Altus’s Jim Thorne outlines why advisors should rethink digital assets, regional banks, and the current market cycle, arguing that a structural shift in credit, policy, and purchasing power is already well underway. He views Bitcoin as legitimate portfolio protection against 8% annual money supply growth, sees deregulated regional banks driving localized lending and economic growth, and believes April’s correction reset the typical four-year market cycle, potentially setting up significant gains ahead.