Unstructured Finance

PIMCO and BlackRock go strolling down K Street

By Jennifer Ablan and Matthew Goldstein

Wall Street may hate financial regulatory reform, but lobbyists certainly love it—especially ones working on behalf of giant asset managers PIMCO and BlackRock, which control a total of nearly $5 trillion in assets.

Last year, PIMCO and BlackRock both upped their lobbying expenditures in a big way.

The not-for-profit group OpenSecrets.org reports that Bill Gross’s Pacific Investment Management Company spent $450,000 on lobbyists last year, up from $120,000 in 2010. BlackRock’s spending on lobbyists rose to $2.5 million in 2011, up from $1.45 million in the prior year.

A BlackRock spokeswoman says the increased spending is a reflection that the firm has “more regulatory issues to deal with.” PIMCO didn’t respond to a request for comment.

The asset managers are ramping up their spending on lobbying at a time federal regulators are considering whether to treat the firms as “systemically important financial institutions,” something that could subject both to more oversight going forward. BlackRock, with more than $3.5 trillion in assets under management, has written several letters to regulators arguing that it doesn’t pose a threat to the financial system since it isn’t making leveraged bets with customer money.

The curious Mr. Kotz and the SEC

By Matthew Goldstein

If we’ve learned nothing from the financial crisis, it’s that we need smart regulators to be minding the store. And we need someone to make sure the regulators are up to that job and not shirking their responsibilities.

So it was a breath of fresh air when David Kotz assumed the role of inspector general of the Securities and Exchange Commission in 2007.

Kotz attacked the job with a welcome aggressiveness and his exhaustive 477-report on the Madoff mess shed some much needed sunshine on the SEC’s fumbling and bumbling of the investigation into the world’s biggest Ponzi scheme. The report prodded regulators to speed up the creation of a new multi-million dollar database for handling tips and complaints from informants–a big failing of the SEC in Madoff.

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