While Gary Parr, the vice chairman of Lazard, called the Dodd-Frank financial overhaul law âbroadly the right approach,â several industry figures still think one of its biggest problems is clarity.
âYou havenât really lived until youâve got different regulators telling you to do different things,â said Sallie Krawcheck, the business leader at the womenâs network 85 Broads, adding âwhen you point out to them that theyâre telling you to do different things, they just shrug their shoulders and tell youâ to figure the regulations out.
Ms. Krawcheck and Mr. Parr spoke during a panel discussion of Dodd-Frank at DealBookâs Opportunities for Tomorrow Conference on Tuesday. Other panelists included Ruth Porat, the executive vice president and chief financial officer of Morgan Stanley; Neil Barofsky, a partner at Jenner & Block; and Robert Wolf, the founder and chief executive of the advisory firm 32 Advisors.
Another issue for Wall Street is public perception. Despite increased regulation, many Americans still have a negative view of the big banks and other large financial institutions. Ms. Krawcheck referred to the âgreedy bankersâ who many on Main Street blame for the collapse of the financial system in 2008.
But Dodd-Frank has led to some positive change, according to a number of speakers at Tuesdayâs conference.
âOne of the important elements of Dodd-Frank was derivative reform,â Ms. Porat said, referring to a part of the law intended to make derivative trading less opaque.
While Ms. Porat praised the increased standardization, however, she did question whether the move just shifted the risk to clearing houses, which have been tasked with improving transparency for such transactions.