SEC Commissioner Peirce Talks Innovation at Exchange 2026

The Securities and Exchange Commission should focus on enabling retail investor access to innovation rather than limiting products through merit-based judgments, according to Commissioner Hester Peirce. In a discussion with Todd Rosenbluth, head of research at TMX VettaFi, during the Exchange conference in Las Vegas, Peirce shared insight from her term at the SEC and examined the agency’s role moving forward.

Topics included the recent approval of ETF share classes for mutual funds, expanding retail access to private markets, the SEC’s approach to crypto products, and her vision for the agency as her term winds down.

Investor protection includes ensuring people have access to products that serve them best, according to Peirce. She also added that the approval of ETF share classes for mutual funds took longer than it should have, The process was painful and required working through operational challenges beyond regulatory approval. The previous administration did not allocate resources to the issue, which contributed to delays.

The conversation shifted to another access question: private markets. Public markets have shrunk relative to private market growth, raising questions about whether the SEC is doing retail investors a disservice by making private market access difficult, according to Peirce.

Enabling exposure through ETFs makes sense because retail investors would access private investments through professional managers in diversified products, according to Peirce. Fund sponsors must determine whether private holdings sit within illiquid asset limits.

Crypto and Emerging Products

Turning to cryptocurrency, Peirce argued that the SEC should treat these products like any other investment vehicle rather than taking positions unique to crypto that create different standards. The SEC now has generic listing standards in place, creating movement in the space. The agency will work with sponsors interested in products outside those standards.