Sweeping financial legislation proposed

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aIYoey051ty4&pos=1

Bloomberg

Dodd Bill Empowers Regulators to Limit Size of Financial Firms

March 15 (Bloomberg) -- Senator Christopher Dodd unveiled legislation that empowers regulators to break up large financial firms, ban proprietary trading, and oversee hedge funds and derivatives, aiming to enact the most sweeping rules overhaul since the 1930s.

Dodd would let the Federal Reserve force firms to divest holdings if they pose a “grave threat” to the economy, make hedge funds overseeing more than $100 million register with regulators and require central clearing for derivatives, according to a summary released today.

“Companies simply shouldn’t be that big or that complex,” Dodd, a Connecticut Democrat who leads the Senate Banking Committee, said at a Washington news conference. “And we will discourage that through the new capital requirements and other strong supervisory protections.”

Dodd’s bill, released 18 months after the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., attempts to implement President Barack Obama’s call for financial reform. Skeptics said it’s a watered-down version of Dodd’s earlier bill that gives Obama’s proposed consumer protection agency too little independence and gives the Fed too big a role after the central bank failed to adequately regulate Wall Street before the credit crisis.

“We’re making up solutions for problems that don’t exist to avoid the challenges that we don’t want to address,” Peter Morici, an economist at the University of Maryland in College Park, said in an interview. “This proposal doesn’t solve problems on derivatives, on too-big-to-fail or anything else that led to the crisis.”

Council of Regulators

Dodd’s plan creates a nine-member council of regulators led by the Treasury secretary to identify and respond to risks in the financial system. Large bank holding companies that received funds from the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program, including Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley, won’t be able to avoid Fed supervision by getting rid of their banks.

The bill would give shareholders of publicly traded companies a non-binding vote on executive pay, grant investors more power to nominate board members and allow pay to be recouped if it was based on inaccurate financial information.

It also includes a version of the Obama’s so-called Volcker Rule to restrict proprietary trading, and involvement with hedge funds and private equity funds, according to the summary.

‘Last Resort’

The Fed, with a two-thirds vote by the proposed Financial Stability Oversight Council, would be able to require companies to divest holdings “only as a last resort,” the summary said.

The council can make recommendations to the Fed to impose “strict” rules for capital, leverage, liquidity and risk management to make it difficult for firms to grow so big and complex that they endanger the financial system. It could require the Fed to regulate non-bank financial firms that threaten financial stability, ensuring that “the next AIG would be regulated” by the Fed, the summary said.

It gives the Securities and Exchange Commission and Commodity Futures Trading Commission authority to regulate over- the-counter derivatives and requires those agencies to approve contracts before clearinghouses can clear them.

Dodd’s plan also requires hedge funds to register with the SEC as investment advisers and provide information about their trades and portfolios to assess systemic risk.

Consumer Protection

The proposal creates a consumer protection agency at the Fed to police firms for lending abuses. The bureau will be led by a director appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate. It would have its own budget, write rules for banks and non-banks, and examine and enforce rules for banks and credit unions with at least $10 billion in assets.

The proposal aims at strengthening Wall Street oversight after a credit crisis stemming from the collapse of the U.S. subprime mortgage market led to the failures of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and Bear Stearns Cos. and $182.3 billion in bailouts for American International Group Inc.

Obama released a statement today saying he “will fight against efforts to weaken” the legislation.

“I will oppose any loopholes that could harm consumers or investors, or that allow institutions to avoid oversight that is important to financial stability,” the president said.

Dodd’s plan is a revision of a November draft that he withdrew amid Republican opposition. That draft called for creating an independent consumer agency and a single bank regulator formed by merging the oversight powers of the Fed, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Office of Thrift Supervision.

The new measure eliminates the OTS, while reducing the Fed’s bank oversight powers by shrinking the number of holding companies under its watch and shifting authority over state banks to the FDIC. The Fed will regulate bank and thrift holding companies with more than $50 billion in assets, while the FDIC would regulate state banks and thrifts of all sizes and holding companies of state banks with less than $50 billion in assets.

The problem that I have is that it's all integrated into the Fed, who will only enforce what will benefit its Wall Street board members.
 
get ready for the biggest shake up ever on WallStreet if this thing passes.

Obamanation has the sheepole on their side...

American's want to see blood run in the streets, coming from these Investment Firms, Banks etc.

They may just get that...as 10,000 of thousands will be laid off in the industry if this passes.
 
I almost fell off my chair laughing with the quote about these companies should never be this large or complex! What a joke, he of GIANT government. All the crap he has helped screw up and add to the complexity of government, and largely for his own benefit. Perhaps the pot calling the kettle black.
I agree this stuff should have been traded on regulated exchanges like the CME, but making more regulators to oversee the old regulators and the financial industry? Come on, someone pinch me and wake me up from this nightmare. Weren't the supposed regulators sleeping on the job last time, and somehow because they have a new group of them made up most likely of alot of the old group plus new federal employees, it is going to better?
I guess if I'm going to take the stupid Series 7 I better do it now before I have to memorize a million new regulations.
 
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