Securities Enforcement. Corporate Investigations. Financial Regulation.

Independent analysis of the laws, regulations, investigations, and enforcement actions shaping modern financial markets.

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GESMER UPDEGROVE

BRAEDEN ANDERSON

Braeden is one of the top securities lawyers in the country and was recognized by Best Lawyers: Ones to Watch® in America in the Financial Services Regulation Law and Securities Regulation categories. This honor is awarded to only the top 2% of attorneys in the United States and is based on a comprehensive peer-review survey.

Braeden helped lead Gesmer Updegrove to recognition in The Legal 500 United States for Corporate Investigations & White Collar Crime, Tier 3, and Finance: Fintech, Tier 4.

Braeden is active in the U.S. securities enforcement community through Securities Docket, where he has served on the 2025 and 2026 Advisory Boards and contributed video commentary through the Weekly Update.

Braeden was named the #1 United States author in FinTech in Mondaq’s Spring 2025 Thought Leadership Awards, reflecting the national reach and influence of his writing on fintech, securities regulation, and digital asset policy.

K. Braeden Anderson K. Braeden Anderson

The SEC Closes the Loop on Howey’s Application to Crypto

The SEC’s March 17, 2026 crypto guidance marks a turning point in digital asset regulation. By clarifying token classifications and, critically, when an investment contract begins and ends under Howey, the Commission introduces a lifecycle-based framework that brings long-awaited structure to the market. This article breaks down what the new interpretation means for crypto projects, investors, and regulatory strategy going forward.

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Anderson Insights K. Braeden Anderson Anderson Insights K. Braeden Anderson

SEC Signals Zero Tolerance for Unregistered Broker Activity

In a string of January 2025 settlements, the Commission reaffirmed that transaction-based compensation remains the defining hallmark of broker-dealer status under Section 15(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (“Exchange Act”). Individuals and firms operating as “finders” in private placements, often under the mistaken belief that they fall into a regulatory gray zone, are finding themselves squarely within the SEC’s enforcement crosshairs.

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