- Senator Elizabeth Warren questioned SEC Chair Paul Atkins after fiscal 2025 enforcement actions fell to decade lows.
- SEC data showed 456 enforcement actions, including 303 standalone cases and US$17.9 billion in ordered monetary relief.
- Warren says the decline suggests regulatory retreat, while the SEC says it is refocusing on fraud and investor harm.
Senator Elizabeth Warren accused US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chair Paul Atkins of likely misleading Congress after newly released fiscal 2025 data showed enforcement actions falling to their lowest level in a decade.
Warren sent Atkins a letter on April 17 after the SEC released its annual enforcement figures on April 7. Her Senate Banking Committee statement said the data raised concerns that Atkins may have tried to mislead lawmakers about the state of agency enforcement during his Feb. 12 testimony.
SEC data showed the agency filed 456 enforcement actions in fiscal 2025, including 303 standalone actions and 69 follow-on administrative proceedings. Likewise, the agency said court and administrative orders imposed US$17.9 billion (AU$25.1 billion) in monetary relief, including US$10.8 billion (AU$15.1 billion) in disgorgement and prejudgment interest and US$7.2 billion (AU$10.1 billion) in civil penalties.
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Enforcement Decline Dispute
Warren’s office said enforcement activity dropped 20% under the Trump administration to its lowest level in more than 20 years. Her letter said the number of SEC enforcement actions initiated in fiscal 2025 was lower than at any point in the last decade.
Warren framed the decline as evidence that the regulator is stepping back from core oversight responsibilities, including after years of intense digital-asset enforcement. She asked Atkins to answer questions by April 28 and warned that deliberately misleading Congress can carry severe penalties.
SEC Chair Paul S. Atkins said the agency had stopped “regulation by enforcement” and was redirecting resources toward fraud, market manipulation, breaches of fiduciary duty and other investor-harm cases.
SEC Commissioner Mark T. Uyeda also defended the change, saying he supported moving away from enforcement as policymaking and returning to historical norms. The agency said fiscal 2025 was a transition period after new leadership arrived and litigation priorities shifted.
The enforcement report still pointed to large financial recoveries. SEC figures showed approximately US$262 million (AU$366.8 million) was returned to harmed investors, while whistleblower awards totalled approximately US$60 million (AU$84 million) across 48 people.
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