Monday, November 9, 2009

SEC Chair Seeks Funding Plan That Doesn't Rely On Congress

By Fawn Johnson for DOW JONES NEWSWIRES, November 6, 2009

Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Mary Schapiro said Thursday that the SEC needs "sufficient, stable long-term funding" that doesn't rely on the congressional funding process.

"I think it is important that Congress address the issue of self funding, allowing the SEC to retain the regulatory fees it collects," Schapiro told a group of students at Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of Government.

According to the text of her speech, Schapiro said, "We have to have the resources to hire the people we need" and noted that the agency's staff size and technology investments are less than they were in 2005.

Sen. Charles Schumer (D, N.Y.) has introduced legislation that would allow the SEC to fund itself based on the fees collected from financial institutions, claiming it would boost the agency's resources. In 2007 the SEC was granted a budget of $880 million by Congress, but the SEC took in about $1.5 billion in fees collected from financial institutions.

Other independent agencies, such as the Federal Reserve and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., fund themselves from fees collected from the industries they oversee.

Critics of giving the SEC the same authority are likely to say that it could cause the agency to go unmonitored.

The SEC has faced harsh criticism for its years-long failure to detect wrongdoing of the convicted Ponzi-scheme operator Bernard Madoff.

Schapiro said the SEC is trying to get out from under the bad name it inherited from of the Madoff debacle. She said she wants the staff to learn from the past, and she sent the inspector general's report about the SEC's behavior to all employees and encouraged them to read it.

In September, Schapiro also created a new unit aimed at identifying market trends and new financial products and brought in law professor Henry Hu to run it.

The unit combines two existing groups, the agency's office of economic analysis and risk assessment division, and take on new responsibilities to look for trends in the market, conduct research and train staff.

Separately Thursday, the SEC announced that three financial hotshots would be joining that division. Schapiro said the new hires have "modern capital markets expertise," something badly needed at the SEC.

Richard Bookstaber will be the senior policy advisor to Hu. He served as the managing director in charge of firm-wide risk management at Salomon Brothers, director of risk management at Moore Capital Management, and Morgan Stanley's ( MS) first market risk manager.

Adam Glass and Bruce Kraus will each will serve as counsel to the director. Glass comes from Linklaters LLP, where he founded its Structured Finance and Derivatives Practice. Kraus comes from Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP, where he practiced corporate and securities law for more than 20 years.

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