Employers can see your Stack Overflow reputation, but they're not necessarily looking at it.
We do show your rep score on the employer view of your Developer Story, if you choose to display it. That is, if you add your rep to your Story in the Story editor, and then apply for a job using your Story or declare yourself as "Actively Looking" or "Passively Looking" (so you can be found by recruiters searching our database for candidates), then employers can see your rep.
However, I get the impression from people on our Customer Success team (who, unlike me, actually talk to our customers every day) that most employers don't put too much stock in a candidate's rep. My esteemed colleague Amy says
No one ever asks me about it. If they're in the top percentage for [a given tag], that's another story. If they see in the results that someone is in the top % for a technology they're searching, that's really interesting/exciting to them.
In other words recruiters tend to be less interested in reputation and more interested in your experience with a particular technology, along with your work history, open source contributions, etc. (Of course, that varies from person to person.) That said, in training conversations with recruiters, we do try to discourage them from taking top percentiles too seriously: there are plenty of skilled developers who aren't highly ranked, simply because they don't have the spare time to put in the hundreds of hours it takes to achieve a high rep.
I'd love to give you hard stats, but we haven't run a formal employer survey and sadly we don't have data on which part of the page a recruiter's eyes are looking at. We are working on that technology though, and I'm excited to announce that all new customers will be required to undergo compulsory brain-implant surgery starting in 2018.