Arthur Levitt

Arthur Levitt
Arthur Levitt Jr.was the twenty-fifth and longest-serving Chairman of the United States Securities and Exchange Commissionfrom 1993 to 2001. Widely hailed as a champion of the individual investor, he has been criticized for not pushing for tougher accounting rules. Since May 2001 he has been employed as a senior adviser at the Carlyle Group. Levitt previously served as a policy advisor to Goldman Sachs and is a Director of Bloomberg LP, parent of Bloomberg News...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionPublic Servant
Date of Birth3 February 1931
CountryUnited States of America
The SEC is launching more investigations into more big companies than ever before, ... The list of targets includes plenty of Fortune 500 players, including Bankers Trust, Cendant, Waste Management and W. R. Grace.
Sandy reacted to his times, and Chuck Prince is going to have to determine what his times are and how he should deal with that era.
Promoting the interaction of orders remains one of the most difficult, but crucially important, challenges we face concerning our national market system.
The tension between centrality, on the one hand, and competition, on the other, is probably the oldest of all market structure issues.
do whatever was possible to expedite the process.
I worry the best execution may be compromised by payment for order flow, internalization, and certain other practices that can present conflicts between the interests of brokers and their customers.
We have an opportunity today that we may not have again in our lifetime, to realize the vision for a true national market system,
The American economy is the eighth wonder of the world. The ninth is the economic ignorance of the American people.
From my own personal experience the best CEOs that I have ever known are the ones that don't care very much about the day-to-day fluctuations of their shares.
Fund directors should be on the front lines in defense of shareholder interest,
Richard is a multifaceted kind of guy. He can probably do anything he sets his mind to.
Now, we all understand that directors aren't required to guarantee that their fund has the lowest fees, ... But they are required to ask whether fund investors are getting their money's worth.
What must occur is a greater recognition by investors of their individual responsibility.
While private equity will remain technically private, its actions will become the public's concern.