Waterloo Region Record

Wall Street watchdog pursued fewer cases after Trump won

- Renae Merle

In 2013, Mary Jo White, a former federal prosecutor, announced that the Securities and Exchange Commission would be adopting a strategy once championed by Rudolph Giuliani in New York: “Broken windows,” the idea that addressing relatively small issues like vandalized panes of glass can deter larger misdeeds down the road.

So over the next few years, the SEC pursued dozens of cases for small, technical transgress­ions with the goal of scaring off bigger infraction­s.

“Minor violations that are overlooked or ignored can feed bigger ones, and, perhaps more importantl­y, can foster a culture where laws are increasing­ly treated as toothless guidelines,” White said at the time.

Now, data shows that during the first months of the Trump administra­tion, the agency may be scaling back those efforts.

SEC penalties fell 15.5 per cent to $3.5 billion this fiscal year compared to 2016, according to data compiled by Georgetown University law professor Urska Velikonja. The SEC filed 62 enforcemen­t actions against public companies and their subsidiari­es in fiscal 2017, a 33 per cent decline from the previous year, according to another study released earlier this month by the New York University Pollack Center for Law & Business and Cornerston­e Research.

The reports may reflect little more than a temporary pause as leadership transition­ed from White to Jay Clayton, a former Wall Street lawyer, who took over in May. The decline also coincides with a slowdown in government hiring; the agency’s enforcemen­t division may have 100 open positions among investigat­ors and supervisor­s by September, agency officials have said.

But regulatory experts worry the drop suggests a change in the relationsh­ip between regulators and the business community in the Trump administra­tion.

“Sagging numbers signal a chilling retreat from enforcemen­t, which was already milquetoas­t following the financial crash,” said Bart Naylor, a financial policy advocate for the civic group Public Citizen. “By the Enforcemen­t division’s own accounting, they are receiving reports of suspicious activity many orders of magnitude greater than what results in a sanction. Wall Street has never been an Eagle Scout alumni associatio­n, but failure by the Clayton SEC to elevate enforcemen­t and hold individual­s to severe penalties will only attract more scams.”

During the Obama administra­tion, the agency, still struggling to answer criticism that it had not done enough to hold Wall Street responsibl­e for the financial crisis, went after high-dollar corporate fines. Some found the results lacking.

Clayton has indicated that he will take the agency in a different direction. For example, he has said he would prefer to avoid penalizing corporatio­ns over wrongdoing due to a single individual. In those cases, he has argued, company shareholde­rs are forced to pay for the misdeeds rather than the employee.

“Companies are more complicate­d because you can have a relatively junior person in terms of the hierarchy who is a bad actor, who you’re getting rid of. And I have a hard time making shareholde­rs pay substantia­lly for that type of activity,” he told the House Financial Services Committee.

At a conference last month, Steven Peikin, co-director of the SEC’s enforcemen­t division, indicated that the agency is also not enthusiast­ic about the SEC’s previous effort to force companies to acknowledg­e wrongdoing. “When I heard about the admissions policy, it didn’t really knock me down,” he said.

Instead, Clayton said the agency will focus on corporate wrongdoing that affects small, personal investors. It recently launched a task force to go after crimes against so-called retail investors.

“There are too many frauds for the SEC to prosecute, so the SEC has to choose,” said Velikonja, the Georgetown University law professor. “Clayton appears to be choosing to go after small players who steal a lot of money from few people, and to go easier on big players who put many people at risk of losing small amounts of money, but large in the aggregate.”

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