Chris Salter
Partner
Chris Salter is a partner in O'Melveny's Washington, DC office. Chris' practice focuses primarily on advising financial institution clients, and specifically investment banks, broker-dealers, investment advisers, private equity funds, and hedge funds on compliance with the federal securities laws and regulations and on compliance with the rules of the self regulatory organizations (“SRO”), including the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (“FINRA”) (formerly the NASD Inc. and the New York Stock Exchange LLC).
Chris also is a Certified Public Accountant and previously worked at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) as an Attorney in the Division of Market Regulation, as an Audit Manager for the U.S. General Accounting Office, and as an Accountant for KPMG Peat Marwick where he obtained extensive accounting and financial regulatory experience.
Chris has extensive experience advising clients with respect to broker-dealer and investment adviser regulation. Chris routinely assists broker-dealers and investment advisers register with the SEC, and the states and become members of SROs. Chris routinely advises clients on their supervisory procedures and compliance policies and assists clients develop their policies and procedures. Chris has extensive experience with compliance reviews and audits as well as internal investigations. Chris also represents clients in enforcement actions before the SEC, SROs, the U.S. Attorney’s Offices and State Attorney General’s Offices.
Illustrative Professional Experience
- Represented a broker-dealer before the NASD, Inc. and the SEC in an enforcement action concerning numerous net capital and compliance related violations.
- Performed a compliance review of a large private equity and hedge fund firm.
- Advised a broker-dealer on the regulatory issues concerning receipt of a strategic investment from a large Japanese Bank and on a joint venture between the firms.
- Conducted regulatory due diligence on the sale of a broker-dealer.
- Assisted clients develop new products, such as cash sweep programs.
- Prepared Form ADV disclosures for investment adviser clients.
Professional Activities
Publications, "Short Selling and Naked Shorts in the Regulation SHO Environment," The Review of Securities & Commodities Regulation, (November 2007);
“SEC Update: Non-Purpose Stock Borrow Transactions, Order Handling Rule Proposals, and Marking Order Tickets,” Wall Street Lawyer, (March 2005);
"SEC Update: Investment Analysis Tools, Securities Intermediaries, and Consumer Credit Reports,” Wall Street Lawyer, (January 2005);
“SEC Releases Final Rule Requiring Hedge Fund Manager Registration,” Banking & Financial Services Policy Report, Volume 24, Number 1, (January 2005);
“SEC Update: CEO Certification, Ban on Road Show Participation, and Voting Client Proxies, “ Wall Street Lawyer, Volume 8, Number 6, (November 1, 2004);
“SEC Update: SEC Proposes Requiring Certain Hedge Fund Managers to Register,” Wall Street Lawyer, Volume 8, Number 4, (September 2004);
“SEC Update: 12b-1 Plans, Business Continuity Plans, and Sales of Variable Insurance Products,’ Wall Street Lawyer, Volume 8, Number 2, (July 2004);
“SEC Update: Investment Adviser Compliance and Supervisory Procedures; Past Specific Recommendations, “ Wall Street Lawyer, Volume 7, Number 12, (May 2004);
“SEC Update: Custody Rule Amendments and Balance Sheet and Trade-by-Trade Confirmation Delivery Exemptions,” Wall Street Lawyer, Volume 7, Number 5, (October 2003);
“SEC Update: CCO and CEO Certification, Instant Messaging, and Expense Sharing Agreements,” Wall Street Lawyer, Volume 7, Number 3, (August 2003);
“SEC Update: DTC Withdraws Rules, Breakpoints, and Collateral for Borrowed Securities,” Wall Street Lawyer, Volume 6, Number 11, (April 2003);
“SEC Update: Issuer Repurchases, Insider Trading Reports, Money Laundering, and Trade-Through Disclosure,” Wall Street Lawyer, Volume 6, Number 9, (February 2003);
“SEC Update: Bank Dealer Exemption, Broker-Dealer Financial Information, Supervisory Requirements, and Anti-Money Laundering Programs,” Wall Street Lawyer, Volume 6, Number 7, (December 2002);
“SEC Update: Custody of Client Funds, Investment Company Mergers, and White Paper on Resilience of Financial Systems,” Wall Street Lawyer, Volume 6, Number 5, (October 2002);
“SEC Update: Web-Based Order Handlers, Confirmation Rules, and Permissible Collateral,” Wall Street Lawyer, Volume 6, Number 3, (August 2002);
“Information Sharing Under the USA Patriot Act,” The Banking Law Journal, (July/August 2002);
“SEC Update: NASD Proposes Rules Requiring Business Continuity Plans,” Wall Street Lawyer, (June 2002);
“SEC Update: Options Markets, Security Futures and Real-Time Trade Matching,” Wall Street Lawyer, Volume 5, Number 12, (May 2002);
“SEC Update: Internet Fraud, Phony Web Sites, Pro Forma Disclosures, and a Nine-Point Plan,” WallStreetLawyer.com, Volume 5, Number 10, (March 2002);
“SEC Supports Competition and Innovation (but Not Spoofing or Pro Forma Information), and Possible Changes Ahead for ETFs,” WallStreetLawyer.com, Volume 5, Number 8, (January 2002);
“New Law Requires Updating Anti-Money Laundering Programs, “ New York Law Journal, (November 1, 2001);
“SEC Update: Margin Rules, Market Data, Online Fraud, and Best Execution,” WallStreetLawyer.com, Volume 5, Number 6, (November 2001);
“SEC Update: Unwanted Trades Not Fraudulent, GAO Findings and the ICI Challenges Calls for Additional Disclosure, “ WallStreetLawyer.com, Volume 5, Number 4, (September 2001);
“SEC Update: Looking at Online Brokers and Unregistered Broker-Dealers,” Wallstreetlawyer.com, Volume 4, Number 10, (March 2001);
“SEC Update: New Rules for Day-Trading Accounts and No Relief for an Online Transfer Agent,” WallStreetLawyer.com, (September 2000)
Member, Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association