Exchange Act § 2 
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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June 6, 1934, c. 404, Title I, § 2, 48 Stat.
881
June 4, 1975, Pub.L. 94- 29, § 2, 89 Stat. 97 |
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