Geisha Kowlessar-Alonzo
As the T&T Securities and Exchange Commission (TTSEC) marked its 29th milestone on Saturday, the organisation stands as a testament to the resilience and adaptability required to navigate the volatile waters of modern finance.
TTSEC CEO Kester Guy told the Sunday Business Guardian that, in its journey, the TTSEC has moved away from the traditional, reactive rules-based framework toward a proactive, risk-based methodology.
This evolution is not merely a change in administrative policy, but a fundamental reimagining of what a regulator should be in an era defined by rapid digitisation, shifting social behaviour and the borderless nature of virtual assets.
The core of this transition lies in a philosophy that moves beyond sterile data to embrace the human impact of financial stability. Reflecting on this milestone, Guy explained that the most transformative achievement has been a strategic shift toward modernising operations with a human heart at the centre.
“We’ve moved from a rules-based framework to a risk-based framework, and we are focussed on modernising our operations. At the heart of it is about people. People are investors, so we spend and dedicate a lot of time to make sure that we provide the investing public with the appropriate guidance, advisories and education that is required to make sensible decisions,” Guy explained.
By placing the investor at the centre of the regulatory model, the TTSEC has fundamentally altered how it interprets market behaviour.
“We are about focussing on behaviour and ensuring that all the participants within the market behave, conduct themselves with the level of integrity.
“And so our entire toolkit is based on providing them with the enablement, the standards, the focus on what we expect from them, and ensuring that we hold them accountable to that,” Guy further explained.
While establishing these ethical standards remains a priority, the TTSEC recognises that accountability must now extend into the digital frontier.
Transitioning to the digital era
The commitment to transparency serves as a bridge to the TTSEC’s immediate future, specifically its 2026/2027 strategic vision.
In a world where financial products are delivered via digital platforms and promoted on social media, the TTSEC has shifted its regulatory base to match the technological sophistication of the market it oversees.
A modern regulator, Guy said, must be as agile as the technologies it monitors.
“Any reasonable regulator also needs to evolve to ensure that they keep abreast of the new and emerging technologies that are there within the system. We have seen the methodology for providing financial services, the mechanism and the delivery tools have shifted... To be appropriate and to be able to ensure that we are achieving our mandate, we have also shifted. So from a regulatory base, firstly, we have on-body tools, on-body service providers who can provide us with certain real-time intelligence to be able to properly police the perimeter of financial services,” he said.
Additionally, to ensure that the regulation of virtual assets is both effective and fair, the TTSEC has implemented a “sandbox” arrangement which allows it to study various business models and identify specific risks related to cybersecurity and operational integrity before implementing long-term rules.
“The first phase, we’ve created a sandbox. So it allows us to look at all those existing players, look at their business model... identify the risks... Through that sandbox arrangement, we are able to peer into these operations and find what are the appropriate standards, find what are the right size regulation that need to be adopted for them,” Guy added.
However, as the TTSEC embraces these innovations, it must simultaneously arm itself against those who use technology to exploit the public.
Combating AI fraud and misrepresentation
As the TTSEC embraces innovation, it must also combat the rise of digital fraud, specifically the use of AI and “deepfakes” to mislead the public.
Guy is firm in his stance that the TTSEC would not tolerate the misrepresentation of individuals for untoward schemes, and he urged the public to use the TTSEC as a resource before making investments:
“The commission does not support in any way a misrepresentation in people’s form and likeness, utilising tools, AI generated to fool people, hoodwink people, mislead people... Beyond all the regulatory powers that we already have...we have been expanding our networks, which include strengthening our engagement with TTPS to help treat with some of those criminal elements. In relating to investing, we say, please ask the questions first before you go giving up your money,” he advised.
This commitment to local investor protection serves as a blueprint for the TTSEC’s broader ambitions within the Caribbean.
Harmonisation and regional convergence
Looking toward the next decade, Guy said its goal is to cement its reputation as a trusted and responsive regulator, both nationally and regionally.
“We want to be known as an effective, engaging regulator. Everything we do is built on engagement and collaboration with stakeholders,” Guy said.
That regional role would take on added significance in June 2027, when T&T assumes the chairmanship of the Caribbean Group of Securities Regulators (CGSR).
“This is really about continuing work we’ve already started. It speaks to Trinidad and Tobago being recognised as a mature financial jurisdiction in the region,” Guy added.
A major focus of the CGSR is convergence around regulatory principles rather than identical legislation.
“We respect each sovereign right to formulate its own legislative rules and notwithstanding that is to ensure that the regulatory tools and the regulatory principles are delivered in a consistent and harmonised way.
Some key issues would be treating with disclosure standards, having standardised disclosure and awareness. Across the jurisdiction, some of the same entities are operating across the various jurisdictions. If they are all providing the same standard reporting then, it allows for a level of transparency and so on within each jurisdiction,” Guy explained.
He further noted that another area might be how to deal with crisis.
“If there’s an issue in one jurisdiction and the entities operate across borders within the region, how do we share information? What are the protocols to ensure that whatever is happening in one jurisdiction might be afforded to everybody else in the various jurisdictions? We have the regulatory colleges and so on where we sit down with each other and talk about what we see. And so we expect to continue to strengthen those frameworks to ensure that there can be seamless regulatory application despite the jurisdiction,” Guy added.
Groundwork for the next decade
The path ahead is defined by a clear strategy for ensuring long-term objectives are met through collaboration, education and technological excellence.
Guy’s reflections paint a picture of a TTSEC ready for the next decade:
“Financial regulation is continuously evolving. As a jurisdiction, as a commission, rather, we are also maturing. There’s a great future ahead of us. And we are very clear, we are becoming clearer in our strategy for ensuring that these long-term objectives are achieved. And we have everything in place. All parties, all partners have been identified. And we are doing the necessary groundwork so that we can achieve our long term objectives,” he added.
With its 29th anniversary, the TTSEC isn’t just celebrating its past; it is reinforcing the foundation for a more secure, digital and interconnected Caribbean future.
