notices - See details
Notices
Enterprising Investor Default Hero Image
27 April 2012 Enterprising Investor Blog

Fact File: Annual Budget of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission

Enterprising Investor Blogs logo thumbnail

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, which is charged with ensuring the proper functioning of U.S. financial markets worth at minimum $18,929 billion in market capitalization (the NYSE, NASDAQ, and AMEX combined), has a paltry annual budget of just $1.321 billion.

Why paltry?

To put this in perspective:

  • The SEC budget is 99.99% smaller than the markets it is supposed to protect.
  • The SEC budget is equal to $1 for every $14,329 that it is charged with protecting.
  • The SEC’s recent additional budgetary request amounts to an additional $0.13 for every $1,000,000 it supervises.

To further contextualize the SEC's funding, we've compared its budget to various other line-items in the U.S. federal budget.

  1. The SEC budget of $1.321 billion versus U.S. budget line item for:
    • “Agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting: surveys, investigations, and research” — $1.1 billion, or 16.7% smaller than the SEC budget.
    • “Recreational and sporting services” — $4.2 billion, or 217.9% larger than the SEC budget.
    • “Fish and wildlife service” — $1.6 billion, or 21.1% larger than the SEC budget.
    • “Marshalls service” — $1.2 billion or 9.2% smaller than the SEC budget.
    • “General property and records management" — $2.3 billion, or 74.1% larger than the SEC budget.
  2. The SEC budget of $1.321 billion is 0.03% of the entire 2013 U.S. budget of $3.803 trillion.
  3. The SEC budget is $1 for every $2,878.88 spent on other programs.
  4. The SEC budget of $1.321 billion versus key 2011 financials for just one major bank, Citigroup:
    • Bank profits of $11.1 billion, equivalent to 7.4 more SECs.
    • Total assets of $1,873.9 billion, equivalent to 1,417.5 more SECs.
    • Net working capital of $33.8 billion, equivalent to 24.6 more SECs.
    • Citi's vague net working capital line-item “other, net” is $9.3 billion, equivalent to 6.0 more SECs.
    • The closest line-item to the SEC budget in Citi's financial statements is “proceeds from sales of premises and equipment, subsidiaries and affiliates, and repossessed assets,” which was $1.323 billion. Put another way, Citigroup disposed of assets last year that were worth more than the SEC’s entire budget.
    • This is just one major bank in the United States and represents just 12.7% of the total assets of the United States’ largest 50 banks at $14.8 trillion
  5. The SEC budget of $1.321 billion versus just three investment professionals that the market regulator will ultimately be charged with overseeing under the Dodd-Frank financial reform legislation:
    • Ray Dalio of Bridgewater Associates earned $3.9 billion in 2011, equivalent to 1.9 more SECs.
    • Carl Icahn of Icahn Capital Management earned $2.5 billion, equivalent to 89% of another SEC.
    • James Simons of Renaissance Technologies earned $2.0 billion, equivalent to 51.4% of another SEC.