Gregory Karawan
General Counsel at GENWORTH FINANCIAL, INC.
Net worth: 2 M $ as of 30/03/2024
Profile
Gregory S.
Karawan has held multiple positions throughout his career.
Currently, he is the Director at Securities Investor Protection Corp.
since 2012 and the Executive Vice President & General Counsel at Genworth Financial, Inc. since 2008.
In terms of education, he completed his undergraduate degree at State University of New York at Binghamton and his graduate degree at Fordham University School of Law.
Known holdings in public companies
Company | Date | Number of shares | Valuation | Valuation date |
---|---|---|---|---|
24/03/2024 | 262,885 ( 0.06% ) | 2 M $ | 30/03/2024 |
Gregory Karawan active positions
Companies | Position | Start |
---|---|---|
GENWORTH FINANCIAL, INC. | General Counsel | 30/12/2021 |
Securities Investor Protection Corp.
Securities Investor Protection Corp. Insurance Brokers/ServicesFinance The Securities Investor Protection Corporation either acts as trustee or works with an independent court-appointed trustee in a missing asset case to recover funds. The statute that created SIPC provides that customers of a failed brokerage firm receive all non-negotiable securities that are already registered in their names or in the process of being registered. Recovered funds are used to replenish SIPC's reserve in the event that the reserve is tapped in the early stages of a liquidation proceeding. | Director/Board Member | 21/06/2012 |
Training of Gregory Karawan
State University of New York at Binghamton | Undergraduate Degree |
Fordham University School of Law | Graduate Degree |
Experiences
Positions held
Connections
1st degree connections
1st degree companies
Male
Female
Members of the board
Executives
Linked companies
Listed companies | 1 |
---|---|
GENWORTH FINANCIAL, INC. | Finance |
Private companies | 1 |
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Securities Investor Protection Corp.
Securities Investor Protection Corp. Insurance Brokers/ServicesFinance The Securities Investor Protection Corporation either acts as trustee or works with an independent court-appointed trustee in a missing asset case to recover funds. The statute that created SIPC provides that customers of a failed brokerage firm receive all non-negotiable securities that are already registered in their names or in the process of being registered. Recovered funds are used to replenish SIPC's reserve in the event that the reserve is tapped in the early stages of a liquidation proceeding. | Finance |
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