CFTC Chairman Michael Selig delivered keynote remarks at the FINRA 2026 Annual Conference reinforcing the critical role of self-regulatory organizations. His comments signal continued regulatory reliance on SROs for frontline oversight.
When the chairman of a major federal regulator takes the stage at another SRO's annual conference and spends his time praising the self-regulatory model, that's worth paying attention to. CFTC Chairman Michael Selig did exactly that in his keynote remarks at the FINRA 2026 Annual Conference on May 12, 2026.
Chairman Selig's thesis was direct: federal regulators cannot oversee modern markets alone. They need the SRO model.
Receive future blog posts by email.
"Modern financial markets are too complex, too fast-moving, and too interconnected to be effectively overseen by government agencies alone," Selig said. "That is precisely why self-regulatory organizations exist and continue to matter."
This isn't ceremonial language. It's a policy statement. The CFTC chairman stood in front of FINRA's membership and said the quiet part out loud: government agencies lack the bandwidth and proximity to do this job without SROs carrying a significant portion of the load.
Selig went further, articulating exactly why organizations like FINRA and the NFA remain central to the regulatory architecture:
"Effective oversight in modern markets requires both scale and specialization. Organizations like FINRA and the NFA sit right at the center of that design. They're closer to the day-to-day activity. They see trends earlier. They can respond faster. And importantly, they bring a level of technical expertise that complements what federal regulators are doing."
He specifically cited FINRA's broker-dealer oversight as an example: "FINRA's oversight of broker-dealers, for example, provides more robust oversight of member firms than the SEC could perform alone."
That's a meaningful endorsement from a sitting federal regulator.
Here's the practical takeaway. When federal regulators publicly affirm the SRO model this explicitly, it signals continued, and possibly increased, reliance on FINRA and NFA examinations, enforcement, and rulemaking.
For broker-dealers, this means FINRA exams remain your primary regulatory touchpoint. The SEC provides the statutory framework. FINRA executes the oversight. That dynamic isn't changing.
For firms with CFTC registrations, the same logic applies to NFA. Chairman Selig's comments suggest the CFTC sees NFA as essential to its supervisory capacity, not supplemental to it.
Chairman Selig's remarks weren't just a goodwill gesture. They were a policy signal. The self-regulatory model remains foundational to how federal regulators approach market oversight. For compliance officers, that means the work you do to stay current with FINRA and NFA requirements isn't peripheral. It's the main event.
Get new compliance intelligence delivered to your inbox.
No immediate rule changes result from Chairman Selig's remarks. However, the speech signals continued federal reliance on SRO oversight, meaning FINRA and NFA examinations and enforcement remain your primary compliance focus areas.
Selig's comments suggest ongoing coordination between federal regulators and SROs. Firms registered with both FINRA and NFA should expect examination teams that are aware of each other's activities and may share information.
Prioritize SRO exam readiness and stay current on FINRA and NFA rulemaking. Federal regulators are explicitly delegating frontline oversight to these organizations, which means your SRO relationship is your primary regulatory relationship.
The content in this blog is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice, regulatory guidance, or an offer to sell or solicit securities. GiGCXOs is not a law firm. Compliance program requirements vary based on business model, customer base, and regulatory classification.
For broker-dealers, investment advisers, FinTech, digital asset firms, and prediction markets. Experienced leadership. Accelerated by AI.