NYSE chief attacks Aim
0 Comments Published by claudia January 31st, 2007 in SOX, Europe Tags: aim, corporate governance standards, davos switzerland, john thain, london stock exchange, lse, nasdaq, new york stock, new york stock exchange, nyse, sarbanes oxley, world economic forum.The head of the New York Stock Exchange has launched a blistering attack on the lack of regulation surrounding the London Stock Exchange’s junior Aim market.
John Thain, chief executive of the NYSE, criticised the junior market for its lack of corporate governance standards. Mr Thain, speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, said he felt Aim “did not have any standards at all and anyone could list”.
Although he believed it was beginning to change its approach, he added that London “had to be careful not to damage its reputation by allowing in companies that are not well run”.
He also said that he felt that neither the LSE’s Official List nor Aim had such a strict approach to corporate governance as his own NYSE or Nasdaq, which is currently trying to buy the LSE. Many in London do not want an American takeover because they fear overly-stringent regulations, such as Sarbanes-Oxley, may be forced to apply to UK-quoted companies.
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NYSE’s Thain: Business will come back
0 Comments Published by claudia January 29th, 2007 in SOX, Section 404, North America Tags: financial markets, john thain, lehman brothers, new york stock exchange, world economic forum.New York Stock Exchange CEO John Thain said New York would regain its footing against London, Hong Kong and other competitors in financial services once authorities act to scale back some of the more onerous provisions of the Sarbanes-Oxley law.
Speaking at a panel discussion on risks in financial markets Friday at the World Economic Forum, Thain dismissed a story in the Financial Times in which a senior Lehman Brothers official said New York can only hope to staunch the bleeding.
“The United States has a great history of overreacting and then coming back,” Thain said.
U.S. financial executives and politicians have touted this week a report by McKinsey & Co that concluded London, Japan and other parts of Asia as growing in influence and jobs, while New York is on the decline. New York for the first time saw London outpace New York in initial public offerings in 2006, data show, amid a long decline in New York’s share of global IPO revenues.
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China Banking Regulator: Sarbox Is Not A Problem
0 Comments Published by claudia January 25th, 2007 in SOX, Asia Tags: china banking regulatory commission, collapses, davos, liu, sarbanes oxley act, sarbox, world economic forum.China’s top banking regulator said Thursday that U.S. market regulations, including the increasingly-criticized Sarbanes-Oxley act, are the “right and correct response to the market.”
Tightened U.S. securities regulations in the wake of high-profile corporate collapses such as Enron should not be reversed, to stem the tide of global companies looking elsewhere to list their shares, said Liu Mingkang, chairman of the China Banking Regulatory Commission.
“To my American friends, I say ‘Don’t worry,’” Liu said at a lunch in Davos, where the World Economic Forum’s Annual Meeting is taking place.
The “quality of markets is of key importance - sooner or later,” Mingkang said.
China’s own market regulations are on course to catch up with the rest of the world’s best practices, he said.
Morningstar: DAVOS: China Banking Regulator: Sarbox Is Not A Problem
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