Fundsters and others in asset management have gained a new voice in Washington, D.C.
| Dalia Osman Blass U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Director of the Division of Investment Management | |
The Securities and Exchange Commission (
SEC) has created its own
Asset Management Advisory Committee, SEC chairman
Jay Clayton confirmed yesterday afternoon.
Dalia Blass, director of the SEC's division of investment management,
hinted back in the spring that the agency might be creating such a committee.
Clayton describes asset management "a critical component of our markets" and states that he wants the committee to help the SEC's asset management efforts meet "the needs of retail investors and market participants."
Indeed, of the initial 23 members of the committee, many are fundsters or other industry players, including:
Michelle McCarthy Beck, chief risk officer at
TIAA Financial Solutions; former T. Rowe Price vice chairman
Ed Bernard (who chairs the new committee):
Jane Carten, president and PM at
Saturna Capital;
Scot Draeger, president-elect and wealth management director at
R.M. Davis;
Mike Durbin, president of
Fidelity Institutional;
Gilbert Garcia, managing partner of
Garcia Hamilton & Associates;
Neesha Hathi, executive vice president and chief digital officer at
Charles Schwab;
Adeel Jivraj, partner at
Ernst & Young;
Ryan Ludt, principal and global head of ETF capital markets and broker/index relations at
Vanguard;
Susan McGee, former president of U.S. Global Investors;
Jeffrey Ptak, head of global manager research at
Morningstar Research Services;
Aye Soe, managing director and global head of product management at
S&P Dow Jones Indices;
Ross Stevens, founder and CEO of
Stone Ridge Asset Management;
Rama Subramaniam, head of systematic asset management at
GTS;
John Suydam, chief legal officer at
Apollo Global Management; and
Mark Tibergien, CEO of advisor solutions at
BNY Mellon's Pershing. Academics and large institutional investors are also represented.
Paul Schott Stevens, president and CEO of the Investment Company Institute (
ICI, a mutual fund industry trade group),
lauds Clayton for launching the committee and for picking Bernard to chair it. (Bernard once served as chair of ICI.)
The committee officially starts on November 1 and will serve an initial, renewable, two-year term. 
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