The SEC just fired a warning shot across international waters. On September 5th, the agency announced the launch of a new Cross-Border Task Force aimed squarely at rooting out fraud by foreign companies—and the professionals who help them operate in American markets.
Why It Matters
This isn’t just bureaucratic noise. It’s the first big enforcement signal from Chairman Paul Atkins since he took over in April. After months of staying tight-lipped on enforcement priorities, Atkins is now making it clear: old-school fraud is back in the SEC’s sights, and the agency’s going global.
Who’s in the Crosshairs?
The new task force will focus on foreign companies that abuse U.S. markets—especially through schemes like “pump-and-dumps,” where stock prices are artificially inflated before insiders cash out. But it's not just the companies that are under scrutiny.
Auditors, underwriters, and other so-called “gatekeepers” who facilitate foreign issuers’ access to the U.S. capital markets are now on notice. These intermediaries are supposed to protect the integrity of the market. If the SEC suspects they’re cutting corners—or looking the other way—they could be held just as accountable as foreign companies themselves.
Spotlight on China
The SEC says we should expect particular attention on companies from jurisdictions like China, “where governmental control and other factors pose unique investor risks.” While the SEC has scrutinized Chinese companies before, this new task force signals a broader—and potentially more aggressive—approach.
A “Back to Basics” Move
Atkins has promised to take the SEC back to basics, focusing on traditional market manipulation and fraud rather than sweeping regulatory experiments. The new cross-border task force fits that mold perfectly: targeted, old-school enforcement with a modern, cross-border twist.
As Atkins put it, the agency welcomes foreign companies to U.S. markets—but “will not tolerate bad actors” exploiting international borders to dodge accountability.
What to Watch
This task force represents a clear shift toward targeted, fraud-focused enforcement – exactly what the new administration promised.