SEC Commissioner Uyeda Remarks on Disclosure, Proxy Voting, and Tokenization
Summary
SEC Commissioner Mark T. Uyeda delivered remarks on March 12, 2026, discussing ongoing reviews of Regulation S-K disclosure requirements and challenges in fund proxy voting. The speech also touched upon the potential impact of tokenization on equity securities and the need for regulatory evolution.
What changed
SEC Commissioner Mark T. Uyeda delivered remarks at the Investor Advisory Committee meeting on March 12, 2026, highlighting key areas of focus for the Commission. These include a comprehensive review of Regulation S-K to modernize public company disclosure requirements, aiming to reduce burdens without compromising investor protection. Additionally, Uyeda discussed the complexities and rising costs associated with fund proxy voting, emphasizing the need for a well-functioning system to align fund actions with shareholder interests.
The remarks also addressed the emerging issue of tokenization of equity securities, drawing parallels to past financial innovations like money market funds and ETFs that necessitated regulatory adaptation. The Committee is considering a draft recommendation on this topic, underscoring the SEC's commitment to evolving its rules to accommodate new technologies while upholding investor protection and market integrity. While these remarks do not impose new obligations, they signal areas of ongoing regulatory consideration and potential future rulemaking or guidance.
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Speech
Remarks for the Investor Advisory Committee Meeting
Commissioner Mark T. Uyeda Washington D.C.
March 12, 2026
Good morning. Nearly four years ago, I returned to the SEC as a Commissioner. That timeframe roughly corresponds to when a particular cohort of individuals were named to the SEC’s Investor Advisory Committee and began their terms. Today is the final Committee meeting for this cohort, who will complete their terms in the near future: Brian Schorr, Paul Roye, Colleen Honigsberg, James Andrus, Gina-Gail Fletcher, Christine Lazaro, Andrew Park, and Dr. David Rhoiney. Thank you for your service to the Committee and the investing public. I appreciate the significant time and effort that each of you have put into being a member of the Committee.
Today’s meeting will have panel discussions on public company disclosure reforms and fund proxy voting. Regulation S-K is the core public company disclosure framework governing non-financial information. Over the decades, Regulation S-K has ballooned into a laundry list of requirements that are sometimes duplicative, outdated, or immaterial. Last year, Commission staff were instructed to start a comprehensive review of Regulation S-K and solicited public input as part of the Commission’s efforts to modernize these long-standing disclosure requirements. I do not think that many people appreciate the significant effort it takes to provide good disclosure. It is much more than simply writing sentences on a document. For every disclosure, there are controls, procedures, documentation, and approvals that stand behind them. It is not a costless exercise. Thus, it is timely for the Committee to have a discussion on public company disclosure, especially as to what reforms might reduce unnecessary burdens on public companies without compromising investor protection and capital formation.
Today’s second panel will discuss fund proxy voting. Satisfying the quorum requirement has long been a challenge for funds, particularly when many retail investors hold their fund shares through intermediaries such as investment advisers or broker‑dealers. The rising costs associated with conducting fund proxy campaigns ultimately fall on fund shareholders and reduce fund performance. A well‑functioning proxy voting system is needed to ensure that funds can take actions in the interest of shareholders, such as adding board members, amending fundamental policies, or pursuing certain fund mergers to reduce expenses. I look forward to hearing your ideas on practical ways to modernize the fund proxy voting framework and the role the SEC should play in that effort.
Lastly, the Committee will be considering a draft recommendation on the tokenization of equity securities. This recommendation follows the Committee’s discussion of this issue at its last meeting in December. Throughout its history, the SEC has witnessed financial innovation that the federal securities laws did not originally contemplate. In the 1970s, money market funds emerged as a instrument to deal with the sky-high interest rates, prompting the Commission to issue exemptive relief until these products were ultimately codified in Rule 2a‑7. A similar pattern followed with ETFs, which began as a way to provide investors with intraday liquidity. For years, the Commission granted individual exemptions to allow ETFs to operate until adopting Rule 6c‑11. Tokenization of equity securities may be the next example of an innovation that could bring significant benefits to investors but does not fit neatly into the existing regulatory framework. I appreciate the Committee’s efforts to recognize that the advent of new technologies means that our rules may need to evolve but keeping in mind the goals of protecting investors and maintaining fair, orderly, and efficient markets.
Thank you to the Committee members and the panelists for your time in preparing for this meeting. I look forward to the discussions to follow.
Last Reviewed or Updated: March 12, 2026
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