When Tobago-born Kester Guy was appointed as the chief executive officer (CEO) of the Trinidad and Tobago Securities and Exchange Commission (TTSEC), effective December 1, 2023, he was the first substantive holder of that position since July 31, 2020, when the three-year contract of Haydn Gittens, the previous CEO, expired.
In his first interview with a local media house, Guy gave the assurance that the Commission, under his watch, ”is constantly looking at its processes to determine how we can improve the standard of service we offer to the public.”
Responding to a question about the pace at which the TTSEC moves and the responsiveness of the TTSEC staff, Guy said the commission continues to review issues related to the speed of service “and where there are complaints, please encourage them to bring it to our attention. This is so that we can ensure that our stakeholders know exactly where we stand in terms of what is the expected service delivery, and then we can be appropriately judged relative to what is the expected appropriate service delivery.”
Guy does not believe that the commission should be judged on its ability to attract companies to register.
“If you create an incentive for the regulator to attract persons to register and have to turn around and regulate them, you run the risk of creating a particular moral hazard, because I can improve my chances by just approving anybody. So when we look at how we are judge the regulator, we need to make sure we are judging them using the right metrics,” he said.
He added that if there are ten companies seeking registration and he believes none of the ten would be good for investors, then those companies should not be allowed to participate in the market.
“Because if I do and things go wrong, then the said market is going to come and say, ‘Well, where was the SEC? Were they sleeping? But then I will say, but you judge me based on how much I could register? Okay, you see the point,” said Guy.
Asked whether the Commission can do anything about the domestic stock market, which is in its third year of decline, the Commission’s boss said, “The TTSEC has a role to ensure that markets are fair and transparent and to ensure that the environment for capital market development is appropriate and conducive to business.
“Having said that, I think the starting point is about truly understanding what is what is happening within our market. To that extent, the TTSEC recently held a forum with stakeholders, which included all the major players, and the dialogue was geared to facilitate discussion on what is happening in our capital markets. This would allow us collectively identify what the issues are, if they are specific issues, and a proposed way to go forward for correcting those issues...There are some things that might be factors that we can control, and there are some exogenous factors outside of our realm and might just be the trajectory of how the economic environment is tending towards.”
Questioned on why the TTSEC did not mandate that Corporation Sole make a takeover bid for Republic Financial Holdings Ltd, when the holder of State assets went past 29.9 per cent of the commercial bank last year, Guy said, “Specific market activities and specific concerns of potential breaches would be handled in a closed environment. I would not want to disclose, at this stage, what the Commission has done. I would say, the commission a framework that monitors everything that happens on the market. If there is anything that contravenes any of our established statutes and responsibilities, the Commission has an obligation to engage the relevant stakeholders. That is all I will say on that specific issue.”
About Kester Guy
Guy brings a strong and suitable academic and professional background to his job as the regulator of the local securities industry.
In the news release announcing his appointment, the TTSEC noted that Guy has “a solid macro-economic foundation” for the job. He read for a BSc in economics and mathematics (first class honours) from the Cave Hill campus of The University of the West Indies. He also holds an MSc in economics from UWI St Augustine.
Guy’s Masters thesis was on capital markets with a specific concentration on the liquidity return relationship in the T&T stock market.
“We were measuring the notion that whether stock market prices factored in a premium for illiquid assets was true. In other words, why would someone want to hold an illiquid asset? The notion is that there is a liquidity premium that is built in. So if I want to incentivise someone for holding something that cannot be easily traded, I need to provide them with an additional incentive,” said Guy.
That additional incentive would be a higher dividend than the market in the case of stocks and a larger coupon, in the case of bonds. His thesis looked at both dividend payouts and capital gains for holding an instrument for a long period, compared with a shorter time horizon.
“I concluded that notwithstanding the role of news and other factors that may impact price changes, there was a small liquidity premium built in, not by design, but by practice,” he said, adding that his study demonstrated that the global phenomenon was true in locally traded entities.
The securities regulator recalled that the supervisor of his thesis was Dr Anthony Birchwood and he worked closely with Dr Dave Seerattan, research fellow at UWI St Augustine, and Dr Shelton Nicholls, former deputy governor at the T&T Central Bank.
Asked if he would say he is an expert on the local stock market, Guy said, “I am the regulator of the Trinidad and Tobago stock market. I studied that in great detail, so I would say yes, I am an expert in market activity.”
Among his lecturers at the St Augustine campus were Dennis Pantin, Dr Lester Henry, Dr Dhanaysar Mahabir, Dr Sonia Teelucksingh and Gregory Mc Guire.
After receiving his post-graduate degree in 2006, Guy spent two years at the research department of the Central Bank.
In 2008, he migrated to Barbados, taking up a similar position at the Central Bank of Barbados (CBB). Promoted to senior economist in 2013, he was named as the CEO of the Deposit Insurance Corporation of Barbados, while continuing to perform the role of senior economist at the Barbados central bank. He returned to his substantive position at the CBB in 2015, as an assistant director of its research department. Dr Kevin Greenidge, the current Governor of the CBB, was one of three directors of the research department at the time.
Guy spent over six years at the Barbados Financial Services Commission, rising to become the CEO of the organisation, which is responsible for supervising and regulating non-bank financial institutions, whose remit includes insurance companies, pension plans, mutual funds, credit unions and investment service companies.
Guy, who has been the CEO at the TTSEC, for nine months, describes his time there was a “smooth and seamless transition,” because the managers there are a group of “very talented competent people” and also because a significant part of his career has been focused on financial regulation.
“I am coming in with a very clear sense of purpose, a very clear sense of objectives and ideas as to how we would like to see things done, and an extensive amount of engagement. So I can use practical examples of things that have worked before, that might be applicable here,” he said.