Hedge Funds Trading Treasuries to Be Tagged Dealers by SEC

Hedge funds and proprietary trading firms that regularly trade US Treasuries are set to be labeled as dealers by the Securities and Exchange Commission — a tag that brings greater compliance costs and scrutiny.

The SEC on Tuesday boosted oversight of trading by the firms, which are increasingly responsible for liquidity in the world’s biggest government bond market. The new regulations also apply to market participants in other government bonds, equities and additional securities.

Wall Street’s main regulator under Chair Gary Gensler has homed in on the Treasuries market and the private-funds industry as needing more guardrails. Although some aspects of the plan are softer than the agency’s original approach, Tuesday’s overhaul could still force dozens of firms to register as dealers and face new regulations.

Under the rules, dealers include firms that buy and sell securities for their own account as part of the regular course of their business. The label also carries more oversight from the industry-backed Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.

The SEC has maintained that registering is necessary for firms that make up such a large amount of Treasuries trading volume. The regulator said the plan will ensure that firms engaged in similar activities are regulated in a similar way as many firms active in the market are already labeled as dealers.