A man wearing a blue suit with a white shirt and a tie, with his arms crossed, smiling and standing against a plain background.

BRAEDEN ANDERSON

This work began as one lawyer writing carefully about issues he studies and practices.

It now reaches over a million readers, alongside 20,000 newsletter subscribers and 160,000 YouTube followers.

Thank you for being part of this community.

Looking for something specific?

The full Anderson Insights archive is now searchable. Use the search bar to find past content by topic, agency, or keyword. Try searching: “SEC v. Jarkesy,” “ATS regulation,” “custody” or “digital assets”

Hi, I’m Braeden.

I'm a partner at Gesmer Updegrove LLP, where I lead the Securities Regulatory and Enforcement and Digital Assets practice areas. I’ve served as Assistant General Counsel at Robinhood, practiced at Kirkland & Ellis and Sidley Austin, and represented clients in high-stakes matters before the SEC, DOJ, FINRA, and state regulators.

I write and make content for people who don’t have time to guess: founders, lawyers, regulators, and smart operators who know better than to rely on Google or the AI answer without context.

I've been recognized by U.S. Best Lawyers: Ones to Watch® for Financial Services and Securities Regulation, and listed in Marquis Who’s Who in America for contributions to law and public service.

Enjoy the content. I hope you find what you’re looking for. And if you want to talk something through, don’t hesitate to reach out. I’d love to hear from you. It’s really cool when readers become clients.

K. Braeden Anderson K. Braeden Anderson

Commissioner Uyeda’s 2026 Disclosure Blueprint: What “Enhancing” the Public Company Framework Could Mean in Practice

On January 26, 2026, SEC Commissioner Mark T. Uyeda delivered the Alan B. Levenson Keynote Address at the 53rd Annual Securities Regulation Institute in Coronado, California, laying out a clear theme for the Commission’s next phase of disclosure policy: tighten the focus on materiality, reduce low-value compliance load, and recalibrate requirements for smaller issuers. The speech is notable not just for its tone, but for its specificity. Uyeda does not speak in abstractions. He names the parts of Regulation S-K he thinks are ripe for revision and ties the policy direction to a broader institutional effort.

Read More