SEC chief appearing after Goldman deal

 

SEC chairman coming before Congress after financial overhaul, record Goldman settlement

                                                               

Marcy Gordon, AP Business Writer, On Tuesday July 20, 2010, 1:12 am

 

WASHINGTON (AP) — The head of the Securities and Exchange Commission is appearing before Congress days after the passage of sweeping financial regulation that gives the agency new powers and a landmark settlement of civil fraud charges with Goldman Sachs & Co.

 

SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro is telling House lawmakers at a hearing Tuesday that the agency has been revamping itself, strengthening enforcement efforts and taking measures to protect investors in the wake of the financial crisis and past agency failures.

 

“We have taken significant steps to make the SEC more vigilant, sharp and responsive, and to focus the agency squarely on its core mission of protecting investors, maintaining fair and orderly markets, and facilitating capital formation,” Schapiro says in testimony prepared for the hearing by a House Financial Services subcommittee. “We brought in new leaders across the agency. We streamlined our procedures. We worked to reform the ways we operate. We began modernizing our systems.”

 

It is Schapiro’s first public appearance since the $550 million settlement announced Thursday with finance powerhouse Goldman Sachs, the largest against a Wall Street firm in SEC history, over allegations that the firm misled buyers of mortgage-related investments. Lawmakers may question whether the settlement is a serious show of enforcement muscle by the SEC in the trail of the mortgage meltdown or just a blip for a firm that earned that much in about two weeks last year.

 

The $550 million Goldman is paying also represents nearly half the White House’s budget request of $1.2 billion for the SEC for the fiscal year starting Oct. 1.

 

And the overhaul package approved by Congress last week, which slaps the stiffest new curbs on U.S. banks and financial institutions since the Great Depression, adds new powers and responsibilities to the SEC’s plate. Among other things, the agency gains oversight of hedge funds and bolstered technological capacity.

 

Schapiro says in her written testimony that the coming months for the SEC will be dominated by rule-writing for the new legislation.

 

The SEC chief also is discussing the agency’s response to the May 6 “flash crash,” a panicked disruption that saw the Dow Jones industrials lose nearly 1,000 points in less than a half-hour. Under a new system of “circuit breakers” for individual stocks put in last month by the SEC, U.S. stock exchanges must briefly halt trading of major stocks that mark big swings. Trading of any Standard & Poor’s 500 index stock that rises or falls 10 percent or more in a five-minute span must be halted for an additional five minutes.

 

In addition, the SEC put forward proposed new rules spelling out when and at what prices stock trades deemed erroneous would be canceled.

 

 

 

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