Exclusive: Wall Street lawyer Jay Clayton
emerges as Trump’s top SEC choice
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[January 04, 2017]
By Svea Herbst-Bayliss and Steve Holland
BOSTON/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Wall Street
lawyer Jay Clayton, who has worked on high-profile initial public
offerings such as Alibaba Group, is a leading candidate to head the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission in the Trump administration, two
sources familiar with the matter said on Tuesday.
Clayton is a partner at Sullivan & Cromwell who specializes in public
and private mergers and offerings, an area that requires expertise on
complex securities regulations and corporate governance.
Clayton was not available to comment.
He met with President-elect Donald Trump on Dec. 22 and appears to have
overtaken a former U.S. Attorney, Debra Wong Yang, whose name had been
floated as a top candidate in early December.
Yang declined to comment.
Clayton's name surfaced relatively recently and he is one of a handful
of other top contenders. Besides Yang, other names mentioned include
former SEC commissioner Paul Atkins, lawyer Ralph Ferrara, and at least
one candidate who used to work at a prominent Wall Street hedge fund,
but whose name could not be learned.
Activist investor Carl Icahn, who has been tapped by Republican Trump to
play a bigger role in his administration, has been interviewing many of
the of the potential SEC candidates.
During the height of the 2008 financial crisis, Clayton worked on major
deals involving big banks, including Barclays Capital's acquisition of
Lehman Brothers' assets, the sale of Bear Stearns to JP Morgan Chase,
and the U.S. Treasury Department's capital investment in Goldman Sachs,
according to his law firm's web site.
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A general exterior view of the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) headquarters in Washington, June 24, 2011.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
The position of SEC chair will be very important to Wall Street
investors and executives at Fortune 500 companies at a time when
Trump has promised to roll back regulation in a variety of areas.
Current SEC Chair Mary Jo White is slated to depart at the end of
the Obama administration. Trump is to be sworn in as president on
Jan. 20.
Under White, a former federal prosecutor, the SEC's focus on
enforcement increased. While some of the cases have involved big
firms, the SEC has also sought to crack down on relatively minor
violations, in the hopes it will deter bigger problems down the
road.
Some investors have said they would like to see the chair be an
expert not only in enforcement matters, but have a greater
understanding of markets and trading issues as U.S. firms face
greater competition for global capital.
(with additional reporting by Sarah N. Lynch in Washington; editing
by Linda Stern and Grant McCool)
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