Bryan Corbett is an attorney and American business executive who is the President and CEO of Managed Funds Association (MFA). He was previously a presidential appointee in the Bush administration and a private equity executive.
Corbett then served in the George W. Bush Administration from 2005–2008, first as Senior Advisor to Deputy Secretary Robert Kimmitt at the Treasury Department, then as a Special Assistant to the President for Economic Policy, and as a White House National Economic Council member.
In 2008 Corbett joined The Carlyle Group, a global investment firm, where he served as a partner advising on governmental and regulatory issues encompassing Carlyle acquisitions and portfolio companies. Corbett also served on the boards of several Carlyle portfolio companies, including One Carlyle, a global investment firm that manages over $380 billion in assets.
Corbett has publicly defended the utility of private credit investment options, arguing in a Bloomberg opinion piece against the claim that such funds pose risks to the financial system and instead provides stability to the economy.
Corbett has also been a vocal defender of short selling. In the aftermath of the 2023 United States banking crisis, Corbett responded to financial institutions pressuring the Biden Administration and SEC Chair Gary Gensler to "potentially issue a temporary ban – on short-selling strategies", arguing such a ban would be "regulatory malpractice".
In response to UK Treasury seeking feedback on the financial regulations, Corbett argued that current regulations with a "low disclosure threshold that publicly identifies who is shorting a specific company is harmful to markets" and "public disclosure of short positions should be provided in aggregate so an investor can better understand the full picture of a company’s valuation without having to wade through misleading signals".
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