Houston Chronicle

The nominee to lead the SEC wants to study whether Dodd-Frank is hurting growth.

But Trump’s SEC choice says he has ‘no specific plans’ to attack it

- By Ben Bain

President Donald Trump’s pick to lead the Securities and Exchange Commission said Thursday he has no specific plans to dismantle regulation­s implemente­d under the Dodd-Frank Act, but that the new administra­tion wants to examine whether the 2010 law is stifling economic growth.

“Dodd-Frank should be looked at, in particular rules that have been in place as to whether they are achieving their objectives effectivel­y,” Wall Street lawyer Jay Clayton said during his Senate confirmati­on hearing. “But, I have no specific plans to” attack the legislatio­n, he said.

Clayton, a Sullivan & Cromwell partner whose clients included Goldman Sachs Group and Bill Ackman’s Pershing Square Capital Management, also told members of the Senate Banking Committee that his work for financial firms would be a strength should he win confirmati­on to run Wall Street’s top regulator.

The finance industry expects Clayton to play a key role in Trump’s stated goal of going after Dodd-Frank, particular­ly with congressio­nal Republican­s making little headway in pushing legislatio­n that would scrap major elements of the law. In recent years, the SEC’s agenda has been dominated with implementi­ng rules required under Dodd-Frank.

Democrats have argued that Clayton’s legal career representi­ng big banks and hedge funds makes him a questionab­le choice to lead the SEC, because he might favor Wall Street’s interests over those of investors. Republican­s, meanwhile, have said his experience is exactly what the SEC needs to cut regulation­s they say discourage­s companies from using public markets to raise money.

Critics have sought to lump Clayton in with other Trump picks with deep ties to Goldman Sachs, including Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, a former partner at the firm, and National Economic Council Director Gary Cohn, who was the bank’s president before joining the administra­tion.

If confirmed, Clayton would have to recuse himself for a year from matters involving Sullivan & Cromwell and companies he represente­d. He also would be barred from ever weighing in on specific business deals or investigat­ions he worked on as a private lawyer.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachuse­tts, one of the finance industry’s most relentless Washington critics, said Clayton’s potential recusals could make the SEC weak on enforcemen­t, if remaining commission­ers are deadlocked on dozens of cases he has to stay away from.

“The chair is often the deciding vote,” she said at the hearing. “Of course if the chair can’t vote and the remaining SEC commission­ers split along party lines, then major enforcemen­t actions don’t go forward, and the serious wrongdoing can go unpunished.”

Clayton said that he wouldn’t play favorites and that he’s committed to going after misdeeds.

He also said he wants to make it more appealing for companies to sell shares to the public rather than relying on private investment­s.

 ??  ?? Jay Clayton, a Wall Street lawyer who is the nominee to be chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, testifies Thursday during a Senate Banking Committee confirmati­on hearing.
Jay Clayton, a Wall Street lawyer who is the nominee to be chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, testifies Thursday during a Senate Banking Committee confirmati­on hearing.
 ?? Zach Gibson photos / Bloomberg ?? Sen. Elizabeth Warren was concerned about Jay Clayton’s potential recusals in SEC votes.
Zach Gibson photos / Bloomberg Sen. Elizabeth Warren was concerned about Jay Clayton’s potential recusals in SEC votes.

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