Laws: Cases and Codes : U.S. Code : Title 15 : Section 78b


   
U.S. Code as of: 01/19/04
Section 78b. Necessity for regulation

      For the reasons hereinafter enumerated, transactions in
    securities as commonly conducted upon securities exchanges and
    over-the-counter markets are affected with a national public
    interest which makes it necessary to provide for regulation and
    control of such transactions and of practices and matters related
    thereto, including transactions by officers, directors, and
    principal security holders, to require appropriate reports to
    remove impediments to and perfect the mechanisms of a national
    market system for securities and a national system for the
    clearance and settlement of securities transactions and the
    safeguarding of securities and funds related thereto, and to impose
    requirements necessary to make such regulation and control
    reasonably complete and effective, in order to protect interstate
    commerce, the national credit, the Federal taxing power, to protect
    and make more effective the national banking system and Federal
    Reserve System, and to insure the maintenance of fair and honest
    markets in such transactions:
        (1) Such transactions (a) are carried on in large volume by the
      public generally and in large part originate outside the States
      in which the exchanges and over-the-counter markets are located
      and/or are effected by means of the mails and instrumentalities
      of interstate commerce; (b) constitute an important part of the
      current of interstate commerce; (c) involve in large part the
      securities of issuers engaged in interstate commerce; (d) involve
      the use of credit, directly affect the financing of trade,
      industry, and transportation in interstate commerce, and directly
      affect and influence the volume of interstate commerce; and
      affect the national credit.
        (2) The prices established and offered in such transactions are
      generally disseminated and quoted throughout the United States
      and foreign countries and constitute a basis for determining and
      establishing the prices at which securities are bought and sold,
      the amount of certain taxes owing to the United States and to the
      several States by owners, buyers, and sellers of securities, and
      the value of collateral for bank loans.
        (3) Frequently the prices of securities on such exchanges and
      markets are susceptible to manipulation and control, and the
      dissemination of such prices gives rise to excessive speculation,
      resulting in sudden and unreasonable fluctuations in the prices
      of securities which (a) cause alternately unreasonable expansion
      and unreasonable contraction of the volume of credit available
      for trade, transportation, and industry in interstate commerce,
      (b) hinder the proper appraisal of the value of securities and
      thus prevent a fair calculation of taxes owing to the United
      States and to the several States by owners, buyers, and sellers
      of securities, and (c) prevent the fair valuation of collateral
      for bank loans and/or obstruct the effective operation of the
      national banking system and Federal Reserve System.
        (4) National emergencies, which produce widespread unemployment
      and the dislocation of trade, transportation, and industry, and
      which burden interstate commerce and adversely affect the general
      welfare, are precipitated, intensified, and prolonged by
      manipulation and sudden and unreasonable fluctuations of security
      prices and by excessive speculation on such exchanges and
      markets, and to meet such emergencies the Federal Government is
      put to such great expense as to burden the national credit.



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