SEC Nominee White Facing Conflict Questions at Senate Hearing
March 12, 2013
Mary Jo White, U.S. President Barack Obama’s choice to run the Securities and Exchange Commission, may be compelled to provide more information about her ties to large banks as senators press her today about how she would operate as Wall Street’s regulator.
Some Democrats on the Senate Banking Committee who will question White at a nomination hearing say their concerns probably don’t threaten her confirmation. White, 65, has said she would retire from New York-based Debevoise & Plimpton LLP, where she has served as a lawyer defending Wall Street, if she’s confirmed by the Senate.
“She has to make it clear that she’s going to be scrupulous about avoiding any potential conflict of interest that would affect her participation in rule-making,” Senator Jack Reed, a Rhode Island Democrat, said in an interview. “I think she will do that.”
White, who was the Manhattan-based U.S Attorney from 1993 to 2002, has had numerous meetings with senators in recent weeks as she faces skepticism about her ties to Wall Street. In her prepared Senate testimony, released yesterday, White doesn’t address the issue. She previously pledged to abstain for one year from any SEC matter that involves Debevoise or its clients.
Senator Sherrod Brown, an Ohio Democrat, said last week he wasn’t ready to support White for the post.
“I’ve got concerns about conflicts of interest,” Brown said in an interview. “I have concerns about her ties to a law firm that have not been cut. I don’t understand that.”
Retirement Payments
White has said Debevoise would pay her a lump-sum retirement payment within 60 days of her starting at the SEC. The payment would replace her monthly retirement payments for four years. She is eligible for lifetime monthly payments from Debevoise of about $42,500, according to her financial disclosure statement.
Other Democrats, including Senator Mark Warner of Virginia, said in interviews that they are inclined to support White. So far, she has impressed the banking panel’s Democratic chairman, Senator Tim Johnson of South Dakota.
“She has a superb resume and Chairman Johnson was impressed with her in-depth knowledge of the issues and her commitment to taking a balanced approach at the SEC,” Sean Oblack, Johnson’s spokesman, said in an e-mail.
White’s testimony dwells on market regulation, a topic that hasn’t been a large part of her career as a litigator. She singled out high-frequency and algorithmic trading as strategies that demand further evaluation from the SEC.
Investor Impact
“There must be a sense of urgency to addressing these issues to understand their impact on investors and the quality of our markets so that the appropriate regulatory responses can be made,” White wrote.
White said her first priority would be completing rules required by the Dodd-Frank Act of 2010 and last year’s Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act. The SEC should consistently consider the economic costs and benefits of new rules “from the outset,” she wrote.








