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BRAEDEN ANDERSON

Welcome to Anderson Insights.

We provide authoritative analysis on securities and commodities regulation, SEC and FINRA enforcement, and legal developments affecting crypto, digital assets, fintech, and financial services.

Authored by Braeden Anderson, Anderson Insights is written for market participants, legal professionals, founders, investors, compliance leaders, and institutions seeking practical insight into complex regulatory developments.

Explore our latest legal writings below. To discuss a regulatory question, enforcement issue, digital asset matter, or potential engagement, contact Braeden Anderson directly or submit a confidential inquiry.

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17 CFR Part 200 Explained: SEC Organization, Authority, Divisions, and Enforcement
Anderson Financial Regulatory Law Guide K. Braeden Anderson Anderson Financial Regulatory Law Guide K. Braeden Anderson

17 CFR Part 200 Explained: SEC Organization, Authority, Divisions, and Enforcement

17 CFR Part 200 explains the SEC’s organization, statutory authority, division responsibilities, regional offices, ethics rules, and delegated authority. This guide explains what the rule says and why it matters for SEC investigations, examinations, broker-dealer issues, investment adviser matters, disclosure questions, and financial regulatory strategy.

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AI Fintech Startups Are Building Money Businesses. Financial Regulation Comes Earlier Than Founders Think.
K. Braeden Anderson K. Braeden Anderson

AI Fintech Startups Are Building Money Businesses. Financial Regulation Comes Earlier Than Founders Think.

AI fintech startups may need financial regulatory counsel when their products involve money transmission, payments, custody, RIA registration, broker-dealer registration, digital assets, stablecoins, AML, sanctions, capital formation, or bank partnerships. This article explains the key legal questions founders should ask before launching, scaling, fundraising, or responding to regulatory scrutiny.

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From Meme Stocks to Market Structure: Why WallStreetBets’ SEC Comment Letter Matters
K. Braeden Anderson K. Braeden Anderson

From Meme Stocks to Market Structure: Why WallStreetBets’ SEC Comment Letter Matters

For years, WallStreetBets occupied a strange place in American finance. To some, it was internet chaos masquerading as investing. To others, it became a symbol of populist resistance against Wall Street institutions perceived to hold structural advantages over ordinary investors. At different moments, the community has been described as reckless, manipulative, hilarious, irresponsible, democratizing, dangerous, and misunderstood, often all at once. Now, the same online community that helped fuel the GameStop frenzy, triggered Congressional hearings, embarrassed hedge funds, and forced regulators to confront the power of coordinated retail trading has entered a very different arena: SEC rulemaking.

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SEC Moves Toward Rescinding “No-Deny” Settlement Policy
K. Braeden Anderson K. Braeden Anderson

SEC Moves Toward Rescinding “No-Deny” Settlement Policy

The White House is reviewing the SEC’s plan to rescind its long-standing “no admit, no deny” settlement policy, often criticized as a “gag rule.” The proposal, listed by OIRA as “Rescission of Policy Regarding Denials in Settlements of Enforcement Actions,” could reshape SEC enforcement settlements by allowing companies and individuals to resolve cases without being barred from publicly disputing the allegations.

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