MercoPress, en Español

Montevideo, May 9th 2024 - 02:04 UTC

 

 

Woman to the rescue of “failed” US financial watchdog

Thursday, December 18th 2008 - 20:00 UTC
Full article
Mary Schapiro has been named SEC by elected Pte. Obama Mary Schapiro has been named SEC by elected Pte. Obama

Mary Schapiro has been named the next head of the US financial watchdog Securities and Exchange Commission. President-elect Barack Obama officially nominated her as the first permanent chairwoman of the regulator.

The watchdog faces growing criticism for its failure to protect investors, particularly over its role in the alleged 50 billion fraud by Bernard Madoff. A former SEC commissioner, Ms Schapiro is currently head of the Financial Services Regulatory Authority. She previously was chairwoman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and served for six years as an SEC commissioner under Presidents Ronald Reagan, George H W Bush and Bill Clinton. Ms Schapiro is well-respected in Washington circles as a regulator and is considered an effective, if somewhat low-key, administrator. Barbara Roper, of the Consumer Federation of America said that Ms Schapiro would bring "significant administrative experience" to the job. That would be useful "given that we're looking at what is essentially a broken agency", she said. The SEC has been buffeted by criticism for failing to detect signs that major Wall Street banks were in trouble before the financial crisis erupted and for possibly lax oversight and enforcement in other areas. As the scandal involving disgraced money manager Bernard Madoff stunned Wall Street, revelations have surfaced that staff at the SEC repeatedly failed over the course of a decade to fully investigate credible allegations against Mr Madoff. SEC chairman Christopher Cox said on Tuesday he was "gravely concerned" by the breakdown in oversight and ordered the agency's inspector general to investigate what went wrong. Senator Charles Schumer, a member of the Senate's banking committee said Ms Schapiro was "the kind of strong and experienced regulator that we very much need in these times". "I believe her nomination could be approved quickly and without controversy in the Senate," he added

Categories: Politics, United States.

Top Comments

Disclaimer & comment rules

Commenting for this story is now closed.
If you have a Facebook account, become a fan and comment on our Facebook Page!