Sec

The GWEI Compliance Crisis: Why Your Transaction Now Requires a Mental Health Certificate and a Signed Form from the SEC

DALLAS — In an absurd twist of bureaucratic nightmare, Ethereum’s new gas fee framework now mandates that all transactions be accompanied by a “Mental Stability Declaration Form” and a signed affidavit from the sender that they’re not planning to “degenerate the blockchain” within 24 hours.

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has declared that gas fees exceeding 50 Gwei are now classified as “High-Intensity Emotional Output” requiring approval from a “Volatility Safety Officer” before any transaction can execute.

The Regulatory Hallucination Bureau: Why Your Bitcoin ETF Now Must Prove Its AI Can't Lie Before It Can Trade

Washington D.C. — The Securities and Exchange Commission’s new crypto ETF listing rules have finally cleared a decade-long regulatory hurdle — but not without adding a twist that could make Wall Street choke on its own compliance stack. As the agency shifts from manual review to AI-driven approvals, a new layer of red tape has emerged: every crypto ETF application must now be certified by at least three separate AI models that prove they cannot “hallucinate” facts before receiving a green light to trade.

The Earnings Verification Bureau: Why Your Company's Q3 Report Now Requires Six Stamps Before Revenue Recognition

NEW YORK — In a stunning turn of events that will reshape corporate transparency forever, the Securities and Exchange Commission has announced it will now accept only earnings reports bearing the “Official Earnings Verification Bureau Seal.” The bureau, established in response to last quarter’s “earnings management scandal” involving three Fortune 500 CEOs, insists that all revenue figures must be pre-verified by a panel of three certified “truth validators” before they can be reported to shareholders.

The Great Crypto Compliance Tsunami: How the SEC Just Reclassified Your Airdrop as "A Non-Security" That Needs a $5,000 Permit to Hold

DARK SECTOR — In a move that has left crypto users staring blankly at their screens while wondering if their tokens are still real, the SEC and CFTC dropped a 68-page joint interpretation on March 17, 2026. It classifies 16 major cryptos—Bitcoin, Ether, Solana, etc.—as “digital commodities.” And it says, “Staking, mining, and airdrops are now non-securities!”

That sounds great, right? Until you realize that now you need a $5,000 permit just to hold airdropped tokens.

Crypto Market Makers Now Required to Wear 'Anxiety Monitors' During Volatility Windows

NEW YORK — In what officials are calling a necessary step toward “emotional market integrity,” the Securities and Exchange Commission has unveiled a new requirement: market makers must now wear bio-monitored apparel to demonstrate their “existential emotional stability” during trading hours.

The directive, codified in the newly amended Regulation 85-107, requires all crypto market makers to display real-time stress indicators visible on standardized “emotion patches” located behind their ear collars and digital wallets. The patches are designed to emit a red glow if the trader’s heart rate exceeds 110 beats per minute or if their verbal output contains phrases like “I’m scared” or “I don’t understand what I’m doing.”

Minimum Viable Financial Advisor Program Now Requires 'Existential Confidence' Certification; First CFA Holder Denied for 'Insufficient Belief in Market Inevitability'

The Securities and Exchange Commission has announced a new regulatory framework for financial advisors, effective immediately: the Minimum Viable Financial Advisor (MVFA) program.

Starting this quarter, all registered investment advisors must complete a 72-hour intensive course on “Existential Confidence Metrics” before being permitted to manage client assets. The curriculum includes mandatory modules on “Maintaining Composure During Market Downturns,” “Articulating Uncertainty Without Appearing Uncertain,” and “Simulating Hope for Client Peace of Mind.”

SEC Now Requires 'Narrative Coherence Audits' for All Stock Tickers; First Company Reports 'Incoherent Brand Story' Causes 30% Drop

The Securities and Exchange Commission announced Monday that starting today, all publicly traded companies must submit narrative coherence audits to maintain ticker listing status. The new regulation requires companies to prove their brand stories maintain at least 78% logical consistency across all corporate communications.

First victim was OmniCorp, whose stock immediately tumbled 30% after an internal memo revealed the company had been using different reasons to justify quarterly layoffs for three consecutive years. CEO Sarah Jenkins was forced to undergo “narrative rehabilitation training” before being allowed to resume shareholder calls.