T Rowe Price
Revision as of 17:08, 30 December 2009 by DaveCJohnson (talk | contribs) (SW: created stub, conforms to Lehman template, added one story)
This article is a stub. You can help by expanding it. |
{{#Badges:RealEconomyProject}}
Contents
Financial crisis and bailout
Role in the financial crisis
![]() |
The Real Economy Project needs your help filling this section out. Here's how. |
Bailouts
![]() |
The Real Economy Project needs your help filling this section out. Here's how. |
Political influence
Campaign contributions
![]() |
The Real Economy Project needs your help filling this section out. Here's how. |
Lobbying
Lobbying on financial reform
After the Bernie Madoff scandal SEC chair Mary Schapiro originally proposed stepped-up enforcement, including requiring 10,000 money managers to undergo surprise inspections to make sure they were acting according to regulations. However, following lobbying by T Rowe Price and other firms the SEC settled on approving a rule requiring only about 1,600 U.S. fund managers to submit to unannounced audits, 83 percent fewer than originally proposed.[1]
Revolving door influence
![]() |
The Real Economy Project needs your help filling this section out. Here's how. |
Ties to financial regulators
![]() |
The Real Economy Project needs your help filling this section out. Here's how. |
Profits, bonuses and market value
![]() |
The Real Economy Project needs your help filling this section out. Here's how. |
Key officers and personnel
![]() |
The Real Economy Project needs your help filling this section out. Here's how. |
Contact
![]() |
The Real Economy Project needs your help filling this section out. Here's how. |
References
- ↑ Wall Street Waits as SEC Fails to Bring Madoff-Inspired Reforms, Bloomberg News, December 30, 2009