srslyp wrote:Thanks. Is it possible to do it on the west coast? I saw that the SEC has a regional office in Los Angeles. I would like to work out there (my family is out there plus the climate). So would working in a big firm in LA lend itself to working in the SEC office there or do they just hire from DC and NYC and then bring their attorneys out to LA?
If so, I guess I'm not dead set on the SEC. I just like the idea of litigating in that field (financial instruments), and litigating for a good reason (protecting investors, keeping banks from getting out of hand) rather than simply to serve the interests of a large corporate client. Basically, I want financial instruments and large companies but on the side of the good guy, if that makes sense.
Another route to it other than SEC?
TL;DR: Hiring for the SEC, along with the other financial regulatory agencies, directly out of law school is not likely and is very competitive. And it's even more difficult in regional offices (limited hiring spaces, lower budget, don't have training structure; have plenty of experienced applicants). A lot of the hiring of entry-level attorneys is done through the Honors program which means you need to look at DC.
Long-form:
Poster above is correct: hiring at the SEC, like other BigGov is very limited, typically to Honors programs and a few select, competitive students from top law schools, and then hiring transfers/refugees from BigLaw/high-end boutiques in banking/securities/regulatory work.
For law students, I know some regional offices have internships/externships, etc., but the lion's share of the hiring is done in D.C., followed by NYC. It sounds like your interests are not limited just to securities regulation (which would also include FINRA and SIPC), but you may also be interested in bank/credit union/financial institution regulation/compliance/enforcement (FDIC, OCC, FRB, NCUA, and Treasury/FinCEN). Getting an internship at a regional office like LA is still unlikely, but may be attainable if you have great grades and make connections with attorneys within the agency and there is a hiring need.
As I mentioned, post-grad hiring done through the Honors program typically involves rotations between Headquarters (DC) and regional offices where you get exposure to different divisions within the agency. So that would be one possible/plausible route to get back to LA, assuming you get an Honors attorney spot. Another thing to consider is targeting the state regulatory agencies--because you get the experience the federal agency wants, it tends to be less competitive, and you may often work or coordinate certain cases with the FedGov attorneys--but hiring opportunities may be more rare (for CA corporations and financial institutions, it's the Division of Business Oversight:
http://www.dbo.ca.gov/).
If you're going to pursue the SEC, read this
http://www.sec.gov/jobs/interns-divisionssnapshot.pdf and
http://www.sec.gov/jobs/shlpfaq.htm#q4 and
http://www.sec.gov/jobs/jobs_students_honors.shtml if you haven't already.
For convenience, and because OP and others may be interested
which SEC divisions are located where, here is some relevant info about the intern slots across the country (not for full-time hiring), but as you'll notice, most of these intern positions are at Headquarters (DC):
Division of Corporation Finance (Headquarters only)
---The number of interns the Division hires varies but typically is about ten to twelve 2L and 3L law students.
Division of Economic and Risk Analysis (Headquarters only)
---Typically, RSFI hires 12 students, composed of law students and both college and graduate students in Washington, particularly students with backgrounds in economics and/or quantitative research disciplines like engineering.
Division of Enforcement (All locations)
---Typically, Enforcement hires about 35 law students in Washington and large numbers of law students in the regional offices as well.
---Enforcement also hires about 5 college students with accounting experience in Washington and some regional offices.
Division of Investment Management (Headquarters and the New York Regional Office)
---Typically, Investment Management hires about 8 students (7 law students and 1 undergraduate) in Washington.
Division of Trading and Markets (Headquarters only)
---The Division of Trading and Markets employs approximately 8 law and business student interns in Washington, DC.
Office of Financial Management (Headquarters only)
---Typically, OFM hires 3 college or graduate students in Washington.
Office of Compliance Inspections and Examinations (All locations)
---Typically, OCIE hires about 7 law students, 1 college student and 1 graduate student in Washington. In addition, regional offices hire students to support the examination staff.
Office of the General Counsel (Headquarters only)
---Typically, the Office of the General Counsel hires 5 law students and 1 college students in Washington, DC.
Office of the Inspector General (Headquarters only)
---Typically, the Office of the Inspector General hires about 3 law students and 1 undergraduate or graduate student.
Office of International Affairs (Headquarters only)
---Typically, OIA hires about 6 law students and 2 college students in Washington
Office of Equal Employment Opportunity (Headquarters only)
---Typically, EEO hires 1 law student in Washington.
Office of Minority and Women Inclusion (Headquarters only)
---Typically, OMWI hires 1 law student in Washington
Office of the Chief Accountant
---OCA may hire law students, graduate students, and accounting students to work as interns at the Washington, DC headquarters. Interns will be assigned to the Accounting/International Group, the Professional Practice Group, or the Chief Counsel’s Office
Other SEC divisions that don't have information for law interns or only hire college interns are:
Office of Credit Ratings (Headquarters and the New York Regional Office)
Office of Acquisitions (Headquarters only)
Office of the Ethics Counsel (Headquarters only)
Office of Public Affairs (Headquarters only)
Office of Information Technology (Headquarters only)
Regional Offices include:
Atlanta Regional Office
Boston Regional Office
Chicago Regional Office
Denver Regional Office
Fort Worth Regional Office
Los Angeles Regional Office
Miami Regional Office
New York Regional Office
Philadelphia Regional Office
Salt Lake Regional Office
San Francisco Regional Office
*Edited to add something I forgot