Bush names a toothless watchdog head of the SEC:
quote.bloomberg.com
05/07 16:30 White House to Name Lawyer Harvey Pitt as SEC Chair (Update3) By Neil Roland
Washington, May 7 (Bloomberg) -- Harvey L. Pitt, a Washington lawyer who has represented Merrill Lynch & Co., the New York Stock Exchange and international accounting firms, is President George W. Bush's choice to head the Securities and Exchange Commission.
The Bush administration may announce Pitt's nomination as early as this week, a White House official said.
Pitt, a Republican, would succeed Democrat Arthur Levitt if his nomination is approved by the U.S. Senate. Republican Commissioner Laura Unger has been filling in as acting chairman since February during a search that considered candidates from Wall Street, private industry and law.
``The Bush administration has not shown any tendency to be strong regulators, but I think they might be surprised by Harvey,'' said former SEC Chairman Harold M. Williams, who was Pitt's boss during former President Jimmy Carter's administration. ``He's likely to be a conscientious enforcer, based on his deep understanding of securities laws.''
Pitt, 56, declined to comment. He was the SEC's general counsel during the late 1970s and since has become one of the top U.S. securities lawyers. While representing securities firms and accountants, he has opposed some of Levitt's causes on opening information to investors and dealing with auditors' potential conflicts.
`Pushing the Envelope?'
``Who does corporate America and individuals call on when they get into trouble with the SEC?'' former SEC enforcement director William McLucas said of Pitt. ``He's one of the leading, if not the leading, guy to get those calls.''
Pitt, whose nomination is all but assured, would be the first one-time SEC insider tapped for the top post of the federal watchdog agency since Manuel Cohen in the 1960s.
Besides vigorous enforcement of current laws, Pitt is ``not likely to share Arthur Levitt's interest in pushing the envelope on policies aimed at individual investors,'' said Columbia University law professor John Coffee.
Pitt has been a critic of the SEC's Regulation Fair Disclosure, which forbids selective disclosure of company news. While it was still a proposal, he said any rule ``could create a serious problem for public companies that may be made afraid to talk to analysts at all.''
Regulation FD, which requires companies to make market- sensitive information available to all investors at the same time, went into effect last October. It was championed by Levitt and opposed by Unger.
Criticized Proposal
Pitt, while representing large U.S. accounting firms, also criticized an SEC proposal that sought to avoid conflicts of interest among auditors whose firms also provide consulting services.
``Performance of non-audit services can improve the audit function,'' he wrote in June 1998. The SEC proposal, pushed by Levitt, was approved by the commission last November.
Pitt, while in private practice, also supported the 1995 Securities Litigation Reform Act, which sought to curb securities class-action lawsuits against companies whose stock had fallen.
His selection was reported earlier today by the Wall Street Journal.
Pitt, a partner with the Fried Frank Harris Shriver & Jacobson law firm, was the SEC's general counsel from 1975 to 1978. He worked at the federal agency for 10 years.
He since has represented a range of high-profile clients, including financier Ivan Boesky, Lloyd's of London, and Microstrategy Inc. Chairman Michael Saylor.
Campaign Contributions
In the 2000 elections, Pitt contributed $14,000 to Republican candidates, including $1,000 to George W. Bush and $2,000 to Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch of Utah, according to the Center for Responsive Politics, a nonpartisan group that tracks contributions.
Pitt would head what will soon be a Republican majority at the five-member commission. Unger's term expires next month, and Bush has a vacant Republican slot to be filled.
``He's not capable of being a low-profile chairman, based on his personality, his ability, and his energy,'' Coffee said. The SEC chairman will have to work closely with Senate Banking Committee Chairman Phil Gramm, a Texas Republican who takes an active interest in SEC policy.
``Harvey's a consensus builder,'' said former federal judge Stanley Sporkin, who hired Pitt as his own lawyer when the judge was challenged by the German government on a Holocaust-related case. ``He'll listen to Gramm, though I've never known anyone to push him around.''
A Gramm spokeswoman declined comment.
Pitt is co-chairman of an American Bar Association fraud task force and a member of the National Association of Securities Dealers' legal advisory board.
He is co-author of a seven-volume treatise called ``The Law of Financial Services,'' and has taught at the University of Pennsylvania Law School, Georgetown University Law Center and George Washington University Law School.
Pitt graduated from Brooklyn College and received his law degree from St. John's University Law School.
Since retiring as SEC chairman, Levitt has become a director of Bloomberg LP, the parent company of Bloomberg News. |