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Just Whom Does Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz Represent?
By: Tyler Durden   Tuesday, June 30, 2009 12:15 PM
Symbols: BAC, BSC, JPM, KMI, UBS, WB

We urge the SEC to encourage a voluntary initiative among lenders of securities pursuant to which the lenders would agree for 90 days not to lend securities of any financial services firms or banks.
  • The SEC’s Investment Management Division should also examine whether there is a potential conflict of interest for a mutual fund or a pension fund to lend securities to a short seller when the results of the short seller’s trading may adversely affect the NAV of the mutual fund or the value of the pension fund’s portfolio.
Just how much of this proposal did the SEC adopt? Judging by their favorable response to virtually all initiatives, it would seem feasible that the SEC also likely adopted a stock lending ban covertly. Now keep in mind, all these recommendations occurred only after the Lehman collapse: one can only imagine what happened in the days of early March when the market was set to go to 0. A massive securities lending ban would explain not only the phenomenal outperformance of high beta (most shorted) stocks, but also the rumors about the Fed's involvement with State Street, the biggest securities lender in the US, if not the world.

Maybe this has all the makings of another one of those proactive FOIA-type queries: which is sad, because if the regulators were truly transparent with their intentions and actions they would have informed the investing public if it really was the case that borrow on a plethora of stocks is impossible to find, instead of having to find this out the hard way through your personal broker/dealer.

So going back to the original question: just who is Wachtell Lipton representing, and more specifically, just who are the undersigned Ed Herlihy and Theodore Levine.

It is no surprise to Wall Street regulars that Mr. Herlihy, in the pantheon of M&A lawyers, has represented numerous companies, but notable are some of the most allegedly conflicted transactions over the past year, including: representing BofA in its acquisition of Merrill (odd that he has not been summoned to Congress yet), Wells Fargo's acquisition of Wachovia, JPM's acquisition of Bear Stearns, GS/AIG/Carlyle/Riverstone in acquiring Kinder Morgan, and Apollo/TPG in acquiring Harrah's. One can see how Mr. Herlihy would be incentivized (monetarily or reputationally) to maintain the financial system status quo and scapegoat that traditional evil doer, the short seller/CDS trader.

As for Ted Levine, the lobby interests become all too apparent as well: after working at the SEC for 13 years, he became a General Counsel at UBS, which over the past year has been constantly on the cusp of operational viability.

It would be safe to say that between their extensive Wall Street interests, the two layers represent anything but a fair and unbiased perspective on the real troubles that ail Wall Street. As for the latter, which just 3 months ago was in cardiac arrest, why not have an old SEC lackey convey the big firms' displeasure to the SEC and other "regulators" via their most trusted and best compensated conduit, while in the meantime making shorting impossible. And after all, who really reads boring legal memos these days... aside from other special interest groups at the SEC of course.

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