Showing posts with label Schapiro. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Schapiro. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

That’s going to require simplifying, consolidating this enormously complicated, segmented structure

TO BE NOTED: From Bloomberg:

"U.S. Considers Stripping SEC of Powers in Regulatory Overhaul

By Robert Schmidt and Jesse Westbrook

May 20 (Bloomberg) -- The Obama administration may call for stripping the Securities and Exchange Commission of some of its powers under a regulatory reorganization that could be unveiled as soon as next week, people familiar with the matter said.

The proposal, still being drafted, is likely to give the Federal Reserve more authority to supervise financial firms deemed too big to fail. The Fed may inherit some SEC functions, with others going to other agencies, the people said. On the table: giving oversight of mutual funds to a bank regulator or a new agency to police consumer-finance products, two people said.

The 75-year-old SEC, chartered to oversee Wall Street and safeguard investors, has seen its reputation tarnished as some lawmakers blamed it for missing the incipient financial crisis and failing to detect Bernard Madoff’s $65 billion Ponzi scheme. Any move to rein in the agency is likely to provoke a battle in Congress, which would need to approve the changes, and draw the ire of union pension funds and other advocates for shareholders.

“It would be a terrible mistake,” said Stanley Sporkin, a former federal judge and enforcement chief at the SEC. “Whatever the SEC has done or didn’t do, it is still the premier investor protection agency around.”

SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro’s agency has been mostly absent from negotiations within the administration on the regulatory overhaul, and she has expressed frustration about not being consulted, according to people who have spoken with her. She has pledged to fight any attempt to diminish the SEC, they said.

Geithner, Summers

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and National Economic Council Director Lawrence Summers are leading the administration’s effort to redraw the lines of authority for policing the financial system.

“We’re going to have to bring about a lot of changes to the basic framework of oversight, so there’s better enforcement,” Geithner, said May 18 at the National Press Club in Washington. “That’s going to require simplifying, consolidating this enormously complicated, segmented structure.”

Geithner may be asked about his plans for a regulatory revamp at a Senate Banking Committee hearing on financial-rescue efforts in Washington today.

Treasury spokeswoman Stephanie Cutter didn’t respond to requests for comment. The SEC also didn’t immediately respond.

Dinner Meeting

Geithner was set to discuss the proposals at a dinner last night with Summers, former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker, ex-SEC Chairman Arthur Levitt and Elizabeth Warren, the Harvard University law professor who heads the congressional watchdog group for the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program.

President Barack Obama has said he wants to sign legislation on regulatory changes by year-end. House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank, a Massachusetts Democrat, is planning hearings with the aim of drafting a bill by the end of June.

The SEC’s job is to regulate stock markets, police securities sales and make sure public companies make adequate disclosures to investors about their finances. The commission has five members, with the chairman and two commissioners typically from the president’s political party and the other two from the party not in the White House.

Schapiro was appointed by Obama to replace Christopher Cox, who was named by President George W. Bush.

Cox Record

Under Cox, the SEC ceded some of its authority to the Fed after the central bank responded to Bear Stearns Cos.’ near collapse last year by inserting its own examiners into Wall Street securities firms.

Former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, Geithner’s predecessor, urged Congress in a March 2008 “blueprint” for overhauling financial rules to give the Fed broader powers to oversee risk in the system.

Opponents of giving the Fed more authority, such as former SEC chief Levitt, have said the central bank’s focus on keeping the financial system solvent may trump efforts to punish companies for violating securities laws. Levitt is a board member of Bloomberg LP, the parent company of Bloomberg News.

The SEC’s reputation took a hit last week when U.S. Senator Charles Grassley, an Iowa Republican, released a report saying two of its enforcement attorneys face an insider-trading investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Trades Questioned

The report, written by the SEC inspector general’s office, faulted the SEC for inadequately monitoring trades by the employees and said one of them sold shares in companies after co-workers opened probes into the firms. Both employees, who are enforcement attorneys in the SEC division that investigates securities fraud, denied any wrongdoing.

While the agency has been battered recently, it still has powerful supporters, including a number of Democrats on the Senate Banking Committee who aren’t likely to support having an agency they oversee cut back.

In addition, public pension funds that hold $872 billion of assets urged lawmakers this month to protect the SEC’s turf in any legislation overhauling financial regulation.

The California Public Employees’ Retirement System, the New York retirement fund and 12 other pension funds wrote letters to Frank and Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd, arguing that the SEC “must maintain robust regulatory and enforcement authority” over securities trading, brokers, money managers, corporate disclosures and accounting rules.

To contact the reporters on this story: Robert Schmidt in Washington at rschmidt5@bloomberg.net; Jesse Westbrook in Washington at jwestbrook1@bloomberg.net."

Monday, April 27, 2009

to mortgage originators who made complex loans to those who could not afford them

TO BE NOTED: From the NY Times:


April 27, 2009, 4:28 pm

How Not to Regulate

If you don’t want a job done, hire someone who thinks the job should not be done.

That sounds perverse, but it is exactly what happened at the Securities and Exchange Commission in the later years of the Bush administration.

I’m not sure that applies to Chris Cox, the Bush administration’s final chairman. But he came in with a mandate to achieve consensus with the other Republican members of the commission, after his predecessor, Bill Donaldson, had worked with the Democratic members to overcome ideological opposition from at least one of the Republican members.

To get that consensus, Mr. Cox agreed to throw up a series of procedural hurdles in the way of the enforcement staff investigating and settling cases. Some former enforcement directors thought Linda Thomsen, the enforcement director Mr. Cox inherited, should have quit in protest. Had she done so, the result might have been an enforcement director who did not believe in enforcement. So she stayed, and took much of the blame.

Mary Schapiro, the new chairwoman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, has removed those hurdles, and put in a new enforcement director who we can assume actually thinks the job he has been hired to do is worth doing.

In a speech today to the Society of American Business Editors and Writers conference in Denver, Ms. Schapiro named some causes of the financial crisis. I have emphasized the two parts that I found most interesting.

How we got to where we are today is a question that many will debate for years to come. But it is clear to me that the responsibility lies with many:

• from the institutions that cobbled together and aggressively sold risky financial instruments
• to ratings agencies that allowed the integrity of ratings to take a back seat to their business interests
• to mortgage originators who made complex loans to those who could not afford them
• to regulators that didn’t fully embrace the need for regulation or didn’t appreciate the significant risks building throughout the entire system
• or, in the case of the S.E.C., simply didn’t hew faithfully to the mission of investor protection — whether because of a lack of resources or because of philosophy

Ms. Schapiro has not had time to prove that her S.E.C. will restore the agency’s reputation. But it is refreshing to have an S.E.C. run by someone who thinks regulation is a good idea."


Speech by SEC Chairman:
Address to the Society of American Business Editors and Writers

by

Chairman Mary L. Schapiro

U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission

SABEW Annual Conference 2009
Denver, Colorado
April 27, 2009

Thank you. And, thank you to Diana (Henriques) for that very kind introduction.

It's an honor to be here with you today because in so many ways we share the same goal. We all strive to achieve an "informed citizenry."

Through your reporting and writing, you help to make Americans smarter and wiser — not just about business in general, but about the financial markets in particular.

And, that actually makes our job at the Securities and Exchange Commission easier.

For me — and for the SEC — it is all about investors. The more high-quality, honest information investors have, we believe the better off they are.

Since becoming Chairman a few short months ago, my focus has been revitalizing the one agency whose primary responsibility is to protect investors.

The Birth of the Investors' Advocate:

As many of you know, the SEC grew out of a tumultuous time in our nation's financial history. Following the Great Crash of 1929, Congress passed two significant pieces of legislation whose goals were clear — protect investors and restore investor confidence.

It was 75 years ago this very day that the House Committee reported out the bill that created our agency.

That Committee report — from April 27, 1934 — references the words of President Roosevelt himself.

At the time, the President was concerned with what he called naked speculation — or investments with significant risk. He said such "speculation has been made far too alluring and far too easy for those who could and for those who could not afford to gamble."

And he talked about his concern that workers were risking their pay checks or meager savings on transactions that they barely understood — or in his words investments "with whose true value they were wholly unfamiliar."

That is why President Roosevelt urged passage of the legislation — legislation he said was "for the protection of investors, for the safeguarding of values, and, so far as it may be possible, for the elimination of unnecessary, unwise, and destructive speculation."

A few weeks later the Exchange Act of 1934 passed. And, the SEC was born.

It wasn't long before one of the early Chairmen, declared the agency the "investors' advocate." And, for 75 years, the agency has largely been known by that moniker. But not unfailingly, and that is part of what I want to talk to you about today.

Now, More than Ever:

It is perhaps stating the obvious to note that given the current state of our economy, the value of our pensions and 401k's, our aging demographic and the complexity of financial transactions, that there has never been a time when investors have needed a strong advocate more than they do today. They understandably lack confidence in the markets as vehicles to support their financial security.

The SEC must play a central role in restoring that confidence for a simple reason: Until investors believe that they are not powerless pawns in the financial markets, until they believe in the basic integrity of financial markets, they will put their money in mattresses rather mutual funds — in bread boxes rather than bonds. And, that only serves to further undermine our economy.

As all of you in this room understand, investments fuel our economic growth. They help the factory down the road hire more workers. They make it possible for a recent college graduate to start up a small business. They enable manufacturers to innovate. And, they allow municipalities to build roads, bridges and hospitals.

How we got to where we are today is a question that many will debate for years to come. But, it is clear to me that the responsibility lies with many:

  • from the institutions that cobbled together and aggressively sold risky financial instruments
  • to ratings agencies that allowed the integrity of ratings to take a back seat to their business interests
  • to mortgage originators who made complex loans to those who could not afford them
  • to regulators that didn't fully embrace the need for regulation or didn't appreciate the significant risks building throughout the entire system
  • or, in the case of the SEC, simply didn't hew faithfully to the mission of investor protection — whether because of a lack of resources or because of philosophy

Reforming the Landscape:

As a result, there is significant debate about regulatory reform — not about whether it should happen, but about what form it will take. You might say the train has left the station, but no one quite knows for sure where it will come to stop.

Whatever form it takes, I support the view that there is a need for system-wide consideration of risks to the financial system and to create mechanisms to reduce and avert such systemic risks.

But, at the same time, I believe that any reform must not — and cannot — compromise the quality of our capital markets or the protection of investors.

If we cannot show investors that we are looking out for their interests as much as the interests of the financial institutions — then we will have little success in restoring confidence.

Investors need to see that we are going after those who engage in wrongdoing. They need to see that we are forcing companies to be truthful and transparent in their reporting. They need to see that we are limiting risk in areas where substantial risk is not what they're buying. And, they need to see that we're rooting out fraud.

In short, they need an agency that's there for them — and primarily them. They need an independent agency that exists not just to protect Wall Street, but to protect Main Street.

By offering that to investors, we can help to restore confidence.

The SEC — Independent and Experienced:

When Congress created the SEC they understood not only that this new agency would be protecting investors, but that it would be advocating for individuals who were disparate in their views and not cohesive in force.

So, Congress ensured we were an independent regulator — one that could champion those who otherwise did not have a voice. A regulator that was not afraid to take on the most powerful interests in the land.

Our job is to promote efficiency, competition and fairness around each and every dollar invested.

  • We do this by regulating the exchanges and clearing agencies that make our markets work.
  • We do this by helping to reduce transaction times to a nanosecond — and by reducing the costs of trades to just pennies.
  • We do this by fostering information that is accurate, meaningful, and timely through thousands of disclosure reviews each year.
  • We do this through rules that make mutual and money market funds — which hold over $9 trillion of assets — operate for the benefit of investors and only investors.
  • We do this by overseeing 5500 broker-dealers and over 11,000 investment advisers.
  • And we do this through vigorous enforcement of the law.

Glancing Back, But Moving Forward:

All this is not to imply that every one of our 75 years has been stellar. Or that we've done all that has been expected of us. No, the past year, in particular, has certainly proven that not to be the case.

In real ways, the SEC has not been where investors most needed it, addressing their most pressing issues, responding to the changing world, in a way that should epitomize a world class regulator.

But that doesn't mean we should let ourselves continue to be defined by what we fail to do, rather than by what we can do. We owe it to the American public to do better. And, that is my commitment.

I spent six years at the SEC — as a Commissioner — in the late 80s and early 90s — under three great chairmen who understood the power of an SEC that keeps its eyes firmly on its mission of investor protection. An SEC with an agenda that puts investors first — not just through an aggressive enforcement program — though that is essential — but also through effective rulemaking, market structure changes and creative use of the bully pulpit — can be a powerful force for good in our financial society.

In the short time I've been Chairman, I have begun the efforts to revitalize the agency. I've looked at things we can do differently. And, I have let it be known far and wide that things must change. But I am fortunate in discovering — with just three months on the job — that there is a deep current of enthusiasm and commitment to public service on the part of the staff — ready to be tapped. We are a small agency, but there is no reason why we can't reclaim our position in the pantheon of federal regulators, as one of the toughest.

Enforcement:

In the area of enforcement, I have brought on a new director with more than a decade's experience as a federal prosecutor.

He understands my desire to bring meaningful cases that have the greatest impact and send a strong message. He understands that it is essential to speed up investigations so that cases are brought when they will have the greatest deterrent effect — meaning, right away.

He understands my insistence on removing the stove-piped approach that inhibits information sharing and prevents one office from knowing what another office has already learned. And, he is considering structural changes so that our limited resources are used smarter and more efficiently.

We are both committed to working in partnership with the criminal authorities, state regulators and the Special Inspector General for TARP to leverage the resources of all of the enforcement authorities.

In addition, I have streamlined our enforcement procedures by no longer requiring full Commission approval to launch an investigation. And, I've eliminated the need for full Commission approval before negotiating a settlement with a corporate defendant.

Before these directives, enforcement attorneys will tell you that they worried about red lights at every turn — now they see green.

Additionally, I brought on a consulting firm to assess and revamp the way we handle the nearly 1 million tips and complaints we get each year. Because we do not have unlimited resources we cannot pursue every lead — we get about 2,000 every day. But we can do a better job ensuring that each tip lands on the right desk and that the person reviewing it has the necessary skills.

Further, we are looking at improving our training programs and hiring new skill sets — from financial analysis to experts in complex trading strategies. It's all an effort to keep pace with the fraudsters and the ever-changing financial concoctions of the day.

For me, the progress cannot be fast enough.

When I review the pipeline of cases I see how much we are confronting.

  • We have approximately 150 active hedge fund investigations, some of which include possible Ponzi schemes, misappropriations, and performance smoothing.
  • We have about two dozen active municipal securities investigations possibly involving offering frauds; arbitrage-driven fraud; public corruption; and price transparency.
  • And, we have more than 50 current investigations involving Credit Default Swaps, Collateralized Debt Obligations and other derivatives-related investments.

… and that's just a small slice.

Policies/Rules:

Enforcement has been the most visible program at the SEC in recent history. But the financial crisis teaches us that there are policy and regulatory gaps that the SEC must also address.

Again, if investors are to have confidence in the ratings assigned to securities, that corporate boards are working on behalf of stockholders, that investment advisers are not running Ponzi schemes, that money market funds won't break the buck, then the SEC needs to be pushing forward a real agenda of reform.

Let me just highlight a few of these:

Money Market Funds:

Nearly $4 trillion are invested in money market funds. When the Reserve Fund broke the buck last fall, it called into question the stability of all funds and has led us to ask how we can bolster the resilience of these funds that have become so important to our economy and to investors.

This June, we will propose enhancements to the rules governing the credit quality, maturity and liquidity provisions that currently apply to money market funds. In addition, we are reviewing whether more fundamental changes are needed to protect investors from runs on the funds, including floating rate net asset values.

Custody:

In response to major investment scams — such as Madoff — and a rash of Ponzi schemes, we will be considering two proposals as part of a package of initiatives designed to better assure the safekeeping of investor assets.

In short order, the Commission will consider a proposal to strengthen the controls applicable to investment advisers with custody of client funds and securities. I anticipate that this proposal will include a consideration of "surprise" examinations by a certified public accountant, and a requirement that investment advisers undergo third-party compliance audits.

Also, as part of this package, I have asked the staff to draft a Commission requirement that a senior officer from broker-dealers and investment advisers with custody certify that controls are in place to protect investor assets.

Proxy:

Finally, the Commission will be considering a proposal next month to remove the barriers that make it costly and difficult for a company's owners to nominate directors. I believe such proxy access is in no small measure about making boards more accountable for the risks undertaken by the companies they manage.

We want to ensure that any procedural requirements for access are rational, and not a means to thwart effective investor participation, yet we want to act expeditiously to resolve these longstanding issues.

In addition to these we are looking at expanding the pay-to-play rules, better disclosure regarding municipal securities; regulating hedge funds and seeking whistleblower authority. These are of course just a few of the many proposals we are considering in the interest of investors.

While much has changed since I was last a Commissioner at the SEC, what hasn't changed is the commitment I see on the faces of every employee. We all were drawn to the SEC because we believe we can make a difference — in the lives of investors and in the strength of America's capital markets and economy.

The economic situation has impacted most every American. And it has profoundly affected the confidence of investors. They deserve to know that the SEC is working to restore that confidence and protect their interests. And I pledge to them that is my mission.

Thank you.


http://www.sec.gov/news/speech/2009/spch042709mls.htm

A regulator that is not afraid to take on the most powerful interests in the land.

TO BE NOTED: From footnoted.org:

April 27, 2009 at 1:09 pm by Michelle Leder

Live blogging Mary Schapiro speech at SABEW

mary schapiroMary Schapiro just started speaking to the Society of American Business Editors and Writers convention in Denver. I’ll be posting highlights here:

12:54: Final question on what SEC is doing to make sure that those thousands of complaints are winding up on the right desk and how that’s being coordinated with regional offices. Says she asked the staff to give her a catalog of where tips come in from. They come in about 40 different ways and no master database to track them (really????). No ability to mine the data and see that there’s a complaint in Boston, in Miami. Says she hired a contractor to build system. Last year SEC got 750,000 tips and will never be able to follow up on all. Need to be able to connect the dots to be more effective. Going to ask Congress for Whistle Blower authority. “If we can reward people who bring us well-thought through cases where we can prosecute the case and get a fine” like IRS and others, will help us separate the wheat from the chaff. Only available now for insider trading and hasn’t been very successful. “My goal is to ensure that we don’t miss the next Bernie Madoff.”

12:48: Jon Weil at Bloomberg asks a toughie on why no major enforcement on accounting fraud. “Whether accounting fraud or other types of issues, we need to be able to back it up.” Says she has authorized a number of investigations over the past 3 months into accounting fraud. Where that will lead us, I’m not sure.” Weil continues to press her that committments aside, how do people know that there will be a major accounting fraud case? Schapiro says she knows she has to prove this and that it is a high priority.

12:46: A question close to my heart: what will SEC do to make disclosures easier for investors so that they aren’t buried in footnotes? “We have great disclosure as a result of SOX for audit committee, but not on other committees. Need to have that for comp committee and other committees. Do a better job at linking executive comp to risk. “Take a complete look at risk disclosure and whether information is getting to investors in the best possible way. My guess is that we’ll have lots ot work on.”

12:44: Question on real losses of Madoff and how the SEC will make investors whole. Says that SIPA will have enough money, but subject to limits. Says she doesn’t have a number on Madoff losses.

12:40: Was asked a question on BofA and Merrill’s disclosure on executive bonuses. She declined to respond directly, but said that disclosure is the lifeblood of our financial markets. Won’t comment on any specific inquiries of investigations.

Lost my connection — thanks Westin Hotels — and two updates as a result. Q&A is continuing.

12:30: Does not believe in a super-regulator. “Regulatory arbitrage is a problem and we need to do something about that.” Not in favor of voluntary regulation either. “Our markets are not homogeneous like Britain.”

12:26: We would love to predict the next problem. But it’s an elusive goal. We need to build up our risk assessment in how the SEC is doing. “We’re all on same side of the table and need to be able to work together in a much more cohesive way than we have in the past 8 years.” SEC is responsible for 35,0000 regulated entities, including 12,000 public companies. “We as an agency have a lot of work to do to connect the dots more effectively.”

12:21: Q&A about to begin. I just asked question about today’s story in WSJ on CEOs using Twitter and other tools to communicate with investors. Schapiro says that SEC “favors greater and broader disclosure but that it hasn’t come to a resolution on the new technology.”

12:19: Talks about surprise investigations and proxy access. Says that proxy access “in no small measure is way to deliver better accountability”. Considering many proposals all in the interest of investors.

12:16: We get about 2,000 tips a day, so can’t pursue them all. Trying to keep pace with the fraudsters and the ever-changing concoctions. Says 150 active hedge fund investigations. More than 50 investigations involving CDS “and this is just a very small slice of the program.”

12:15: Says that things must change (at SEC). There’s a deep current of enthusiasm ready to be tapped. We’re a small agency but there’s no reason why we can’t be the toughest.

12:13: In real ways the SEC has not been where investors have needed them to be in a way that should epitomize a world class regulator. But we shouldn’t continue to be defined by what we didn’t do.

12:10: Schapiro says investors need to see that we are forcing companies to be truthful in financial reporting. They need to see an independent agency that’s not just there to protect Wall Street, but Main Street. A regulator that is not afraid to take on the most powerful interests in the land.

Noon: Says that House Committee created SEC 75 years ago today and quotes Roosevelt on the mission of the SEC. “Never been a time when investors have needed as strong of an advocate as they have today. Until investors believe in basic integrity of financial markets, they will put their money in mattresses instead of mutual funds which further undermines our economy.”

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Other cases that resulted in big settlements involved allegations of conflicts of interest and suspicions of a Ponzi scheme

TO BE NOTED: From the NY Times:

"Last year, the Securities and Exchange Commission faced criticism that it had been lax in its duties as a financial enforcer. This year, under its new chairwoman, Mary L. Schapiro, it appears to be working to change that impression. It is picking up the pace of financial settlements.
Skip to next paragraph
The New York Times

In the first quarter of 2009, the S.E.C. reached 182 new financial settlements, according to NERA Economic Consulting. That compares with 157 in the year-ago period and 123 in the previous quarter.

The largest S.E.C. settlement, for $200 million, involved UBS, accused of facilitating tax evasion. The second largest, for $177 million, involved Halliburton and a former unit, KBR, which were accused of bribing foreign officials. (The companies also settled with the Justice Department in these cases.)

Other cases that resulted in big settlements involved allegations of conflicts of interest and suspicions of a Ponzi scheme. PHYLLIS KORKKI

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

no empirical evidence to support the belief that short-sellers are to blame for much of anything

From Floyd Norris:

"
Nail the Shorts?

The S.E.C. is putting out for comment a bunch of possible short-selling restrictions today. There are several variations on two ideas. First is an uptick rule, like one we used to have, that bars short-selling at a price lower than the last different price. Second is some type of circuit breaker, such as barring further short sales of a particular stock on a day that stock has fallen 10 percent.

I assume the commission will eventually adopt something. The pressure from Congress, and the public, is great.

And I suspect that the eventual impact of what they adopt will be modest, at best.

Listening to the five commissioners speak was refreshing, in contrast to the unlamented S.E.C. during the chairmanship of Christopher Cox. Last fall, the S.E.C. introduced panic measure after panic measure to halt or reduce short-selling. There was little effort to carefully consider whether there was any evidence to support the measures, which seemed to change every hour or two. Then they had to be tweaked as unanticipated consequences piled up.

This time, all five commissioners, led by Chairwoman Mary Schapiro, seemed to understand that there is no empirical evidence to support the belief that short-sellers are to blame for much of anything, even if there is public outrage. Whatever rule is adopted will be chosen after everyone has a chance to comment and point out unintended consequences.

It sounds as if panic is receding at the commission."

Me:

“This time, all five commissioners, led by Chairwoman Mary Schapiro, seemed to understand that there is no empirical evidence to support the belief that short-sellers are to blame for much of anything, even if there is public outrage.”

I’m not for these rules, but I have to admit that we have some rules and regulations just to get citizens to buy into our system. Right now, I guess, we’re having a hard time getting people to buy in. Hence, rules without any proven purpose. Before, we had rules without any proven enforcement.

— Don the libertarian Democrat"