Comment les entreprises américaines contournent le gel des introductions en bourse par la SEC

Wall Street trouve toujours un chemin - les sociétés américaines innovent face au blocage réglementaire
Stratégies d'évasion créatives
Alors que la SEC maintient son gel des IPO traditionnelles, les entreprises déploient des tactiques audacieuses pour accéder aux marchés capitaux. Les introductions en bourse directes gagnent du terrain, contournant les intermédiaires traditionnels. Les fusions SPAC reprennent vie, offrant une voie alternative vers les marchés publics.Finance 2.0 ou contournement réglementaire?
Les investisseurs institutionnels participent à des tours de table privés records, tandis que les plateformes de trading secondaire permettent une liquidité pré-IPO. Certaines sociétés optent même pour des inscriptions offshore, créant des structures complexes qui défient la supervision réglementaire.L'innovation financière ou le jeu du chat et de la souris continue - parce que quand il y a des milliards en jeu, les régulateurs courent toujours derrière les innovateurs.
Washington presses Tokyo to halt Russian energy imports
The comments came just as the United States ramped up efforts to cut off Russia’s energy revenue streams. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told Finance Minister Katsunobu Kato during talks in Washington last week that the trump administration expects Japan to stop importing energy from Russia altogether.
The push is part of the White House’s broader strategy to choke Moscow’s war financing and isolate it from global trade partners.
At the same time, Senate Majority Leader John Thune told reporters on Monday that the U.S. Senate will delay voting on new sanctions legislation targeting Russia until after President Donald Trump’s planned meeting with Vladimir Putin. “At the moment we’re kind of hitting the pause button,” Thune said.
The proposed bill would allow Trump to impose tariffs of up to 500% on imports from countries that continue buying Russian energy while not providing active support to Ukraine, a list that includes China, India, and Japan.
Thune previously said the Senate would hold a vote within about 30 days, but the bill has stalled for months despite backing from 85 senators. Trump has yet to give the green light, saying he wants to wait for his one‑on‑one with Putin before locking in new penalties.
Meanwhile, oil prices slipped for the second straight day on Tuesday as traders grew nervous about weak demand and a looming supply surplus. Brent crude futures fell 17 cents, or 0.28%, to $60.84 per barrel at 0343 GMT, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) for November delivery dropped 0.52% to $57.22.
The more active December contract slid 0.33% to $56.83. Prices reached their lowest since early May after rising concerns that the U.S.–China trade dispute could hurt global growth and reduce oil consumption.
Both Brent and WTI have moved into contango, a market condition where near‑term prices are cheaper than future contracts, suggesting ample supply and softening demand.
Analysts said the decline reflects both economic tensions between Washington and Beijing and the ongoing production policy of OPEC+, the alliance of oil‑producing countries led by Saudi Arabia and Russia, according to Reuters.
Despite weakening prices, OPEC+ is still pushing ahead with its plan to add more oil to the market, a decision that could extend the global glut through next year. Analysts expect the oversupply to grow, and the International Energy Agency last week projected a surplus of nearly 4 million barrels per day by 2026.
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