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Veteran banker sees flaws in Spitzer reforms

Fri Jul 25, 2008 4:57pm EDT
 
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By Joseph A. Giannone

NEW YORK (Reuters) - George Ball, the former E.F. Hutton president, wants people to listen to his ideas for reforming the 2003 research reforms.

Ball, chairman of Houston investment bank Sanders Morris Harris (SMHG.O: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), has lately grown worried that sweeping analyst research reforms imposed by then-New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer and the Securities and Exchange Commission are doing more harm than intended.

The new rules, designed to make research more reliable by eliminating investment banking conflicts, are an obstacle to Wall Street firms and, by extension, have fueled an erosion in research coverage. Regulators, Ball told Reuters, need to amend the global research settlement.

"What happened five years ago was a little like a couple rushing to get married in Las Vegas," he said in a phone interview. "If you do something in haste, after a while you can see where some parts are unnecessary or just unwise."

As a top executive at Sanders Morris, a small investment bank specializing in energy companies, Ball says every day he sees the downside to the SEC's efforts to insulate analysts from the influence of investment bankers.

Ball joins a growing chorus of industry executives and politicians who complain that U.S. regulation is bad for business and drives listings to foreign markets.

This week Frank Quattrone, the star investment banker who fended off obstruction-of-justice charges for four years, at a Stanford University conference said "the Spitzer initiative" has made it tougher than necessary for start-ups to go public.

Small companies for years have complained that Wall Street, which under the reforms could not longer pay analysts with banking fees, responded by slashing research coverage.  Continued...

 


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