SEC sets investor advisory committee

SEC sets investor advisory committee
The SEC has named its investor advisory committee but still needs to appoint chairman and vice chairman, and set meeting schedule
MAY 04, 2012
The Securities and Exchange Commission has formed a new investor advisory committee. The 21-member committee, mandated in the Dodd-Frank reform law, will advise the commission on a variety of regulatory issues and priorities, the SEC said in a statement. Dodd-Frank authorizes the committee to submit findings and recommendations to the agency. The committee has a broad mandate to consider most, if not all, aspects of the SEC's work, said committee member Steven Wallman, founder and chief executive of Foliofn Inc., who also was a member of the SEC from 1994 to 1997. His company serves both independent advisers through its custody unit, Folio Institutional, and individual investors with its online retail brokerage, Folio Investing. Because the new committee was formed under a statute, “its recommendations may be taken with more gravitas and heft than they might otherwise be,” Mr. Wallman said. Recommendations might include statutory changes, he added. The SEC has yet to set a meeting schedule for the committee. The agency will also have to appoint a chair and a vice chair, and is expected to set up subcommittees as well. Mr. Wallman said the group would have to deal with “significant divergences” between institutional and retail investors in terms of what issues are important. He didn't know if the committee would wade into the debate over fiduciary duty for advisers. One issue he highlighted was the growing use of target-date funds. Where policymakers “help cajole or suggest that people default [into] them, that becomes a really important issue to ensure we get it right,” Mr. Wallman said. High-frequency trading might be another issue, he said. “And the whole concept of regulation is something people debate today,” Mr. Wallman added. “How much [regulation] should be left to the market, how much specifically regulated [by rule] or more generally at the conceptual level?” he said. “Looking at this list of [committee members], some will have very differing views on it.” The other committee members are: Darcy Bradbury, director of external affairs, D.E. Shaw & Co. LP; J. Robert Brown, Jr., a law professor at the University of Denver; Joseph Dear, chief investment officer, the California Public Employees' Retirement System; Eugene Duffy, senior executive vice president, Paradigm Asset Management Co. LLC. Roger Ganser, chairman of BetterInvesting; James Glassman, executive director, George W. Bush Institute; Craig Goettsch, director of investor education and consumer outreach, Iowa Insurance Division; Joseph Grundfest, professor of law and business, Stanford Law School; Mellody Hobson, president of Ariel Investments LLC; Stephen Holmes, chief operating officer, InterWest Partners. Adam Kanzer, general counsel of Domini Social Investments; Roy Katzovicz, chief legal officer, Pershing Square Capital Management LP; Barbara Roper, director of investor protection, Consumer Federation of America; Kurt Schacht, managing director, the CFA Institute; Alan Schnitzer, chief legal officer, The Travelers Companies Inc. Jean Setzfand, director of financial security for AARP; Anne Sheehan, director of corporate governance, the California State Teachers' Retirement System; Damon Silvers, associate general counsel for the AFL-CIO; Mark Tresnowski, general counsel, Madison Dearborn Partners LLC; and Ann Yerger, executive director, Council of Institutional Investors. The new committee replaces an older investor advisory committee that was disbanded in the wake of the Dodd-Frank law.

Latest News

Edward Jones facing more race bias claims in new lawsuit
Edward Jones facing more race bias claims in new lawsuit

A private partnership, Edward Jones is a giant in the retail brokerage industry with more than 20,000 financial advisors.

Advisor moves: LPL recruitment momentum continues with $815M Northwestern Mutual team
Advisor moves: LPL recruitment momentum continues with $815M Northwestern Mutual team

Meanwhile, Raymond James and Tritonpoint Partners separately welcomed father-son teams, including a breakaway from UBS in Missouri.

SEC chief Atkins signals caution on prediction market ETFs amid broader rethink of novel fund structures
SEC chief Atkins signals caution on prediction market ETFs amid broader rethink of novel fund structures

Paul Atkins has asked staff to solicit public comment on novel ETFs, pausing the clock on as many as 24 filings linked to the booming event contracts market.

Private capital's $1 trillion bet on the American retirement account
Private capital's $1 trillion bet on the American retirement account

From 401(k)s to retail funds, Deloitte sees private equity and credit crossing into mainstream investing on two fronts at once.

Advisor moves: Wells Fargo Advisors pulls in $9.6b in fresh talent during first half of May
Advisor moves: Wells Fargo Advisors pulls in $9.6b in fresh talent during first half of May

Big-name defections from Morgan Stanley, UBS, and Merrill Lynch headline a busy two weeks of recruiting for the wirehouse.

SPONSORED Are hedge funds the missing ingredient?

Wellington explores how multi strategy hedge funds may enhance diversification

SPONSORED Beyond wealth management: Why the future of advice is becoming more human

As technical expertise becomes increasingly commoditized, advisors who can integrate strategy, relationships, and specialized expertise into a cohesive client experience will define the next era of wealth management