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Wall Street's top regulator says a report on meme stock mania is coming this summer

Wall Street's top regulator says a report examining meme stock mania will be coming "sometime this summer."

The big picture: It will "detail the range of activities" that came out of the January events," SEC chair Gary Gensler said Thursday at a third congressional hearing held to dissect the GameStop trading phenomenon.


Why it matters: The report could be a blueprint for tougher regulation — or a signal that the market chaos won't lead to anything beyond the attention frenzy that's since dried up.

Catch up quick: Gensler fielded the majority of lawmaker questions, though two of the saga's other key players — the head of a clearinghouse and the top executive at the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority — testified alongside him.

One fiery exchange: Gensler was pressed on whether investing is gambling. He wouldn't say.

  • "It's risk-taking and risk-taking can be in different forms — I'm trying to use my words carefully," Gensler said.
  • It's a debate that has dragged in legendary investors like Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger, who have blamed Robinhood for turning the stock market into a casino — something the trading app pushed back on.
  • Gensler noted the SEC is examining options for apps like Robinhood that "gamify" and reward more trading.

Worth noting: For a hearing about GameStop, several lawmakers focused on everything but. The result was a broader glimpse of Gensler's agenda as head of the SEC, though he often dodged questions by noting he's only been at the agency for a few weeks.

  • On cryptocurrency exchanges: Gensler hinted Congress could play a role in bringing better "investor protection" since they "currently have no regulatory framework."
  • On climate change disclosures: They could help bring "some consistency and comparability" for companies that disclose climate risk.

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States that voted for Biden lose 3 net House seats after Census count

Population shifts mean five states that voted for Joe Biden will lose seats in the House when congressional districts are redrawn later this year, new Census numbers released Monday show, but will gain seats in two other states. Only twoTrump-voting states will lose a seat.

Why it matters: Apportionment and redistricting — the process of redistributing political power among and within the states— comes as Democrats hold slim majorities in both congressional chambers and Republicans have a strong grip on the process of re-drawing district lines.

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Driving the news: Bank of Japan governor Haruhiko Kuroda told parliament on Friday the BOJ would not allow yields on government debt to continue rising further above the BOJ's 0% target.

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Podcast: The art and business of political polling

The election is just eight days away, and it’s not just the candidates whose futures are on the line. Political pollsters, four years after wrongly predicting a Hillary Clinton presidency, are viewing it as their own judgment day.

Axios Re:Cap digs into the polls, and what pollsters have changed since 2016, with former FiveThirtyEight writer and current CNN politics analyst Harry Enten.

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