The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Trump nominates Wall Street lawyer Clayton as SEC chairman

- By Marcy Gordon

WASHINGTON >> President-elect Donald Trump on Wednesday chose a Wall Street attorney with experience in corporate mergers and public stock launches as his nominee to head the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Trump announced his nomination of Jay Clayton, a partner in the law firm Sullivan and Cromwell, as chairman of the independen­t agency that oversees Wall Street and the financial markets. If confirmed by the Senate, his responsibi­lities will include enforcing the scores of rules already written by the agency under the 2010 law that reshaped financial regulation after the 2008-09 crisis.

The law, known as Dodd-Frank, has long been scorned by Republican­s and is high on Trump’s target list.

Clayton has worked on many of the securities deals that the SEC regulates and has represente­d Wall Street powerhouse­s including Goldman Sachs and Barclays.

He is the latest Trump choice with Wall Street connection­s. His nominee for Treasury secretary, Steven Mnuchin, is a former Goldman executive. Trump also has tapped Gary Cohn, until recently Goldman’s president, to be his top economic adviser, and billionair­e investor Wilbur Ross to head the Commerce Department.

Clayton would succeed Mary Jo White, a former federal prosecutor who also had worked as a corporate attorney before being named SEC chair by President Barack Obama.

Clayton played a legal role in a raft of major deals. Some of the biggest came in the panicky days of 2008: He represente­d Goldman in billionair­e Warren Buffett’s $5 billion investment in the Wall Street bank, and the teetering Bear Stearns in its rescue sale to JPMorgan Chase. He worked on a multitude of deals bringing companies public, notably the 2014 U.S. stock market debut of Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba — the biggest IPO ever.

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