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[WSJ]Draft Details New Rules for Markets

本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛Draft Details New Rules for Markets
By DAMIAN PALETTA

WASHINGTON -- The Obama administration will propose on Wednesday sweeping changes to the way the U.S. government oversees financial markets and will push Congress to grant new powers to the Federal Reserve to oversee the economy, according to a near final draft of the plan viewed by the Wall Street Journal.

The 85-page proposal is part of an effort by the Obama administration to redraw the rules that govern finance in an attempt to restore confidence in U.S. and global markets. Obama administration officials want the rules to be tough enough to correct some of the damage caused by the financial crisis last year but not so restrictive that they stifle innovation. The paper says the administration has stopped short of calling for all changes that could be seen as "desirable" and pushed only for those they see as "essential" to reform.

"We must act now to restore confidence in the integrity of our financial system," the draft of the administration proposal says. "The lasting economic damage to ordinary families and businesses is a constant reminder of the urgent need to act to reform our financial regulatory system and put our economy on track to a sustainable recovery."

President Barack Obama's plan will touch almost every corner of financial markets, from tougher consumer-protection policies to stricter rules over exotic financial products, such as credit derivatives. The plan would bring many of the products and companies that previously operated outside of the banking system under federal scrutiny.

The administration's proposal would give the government the power to take over and wind down a large financial company, a power that government officials lacked last year when the financial crisis was intensifying. It would also give the central bank more powers over the payments and settlements systems in U.S. financial markets to prevent a breakdown that officials fear could destabilize the economy.

The plan would abolish the Office of Thrift Supervision and create a new national regulator for financial institutions, aimed at making it harder for companies to shop between supervisors.

One new detail is that any large, interconnected company that the government wants to take over and break up could be pushed into government seizure by the Treasury Department, if certain conditions are met. Once taken over, the companies would typically be run by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., but the proposal gives the government discretion to change the way this might work. The Treasury has said these powers were necessary, but the details of how they would work were unveiled for the first time in this proposal.

The Obama administration will propose on Wednesday sweeping changes to the way the U.S. government oversees financial markets and will push Congress to grant new powers to the Federal Reserve to oversee the economy.
Hedge funds and other private pools of capital would have to register with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Thousands of financial institutions would be required to hold more capital in reserve to protect against unexpected losses, and companies would also have to retain a portion of the credit risk for loans they have packaged into securities.

The Fed emerges from the plan with the power to oversee from top to bottom almost any financial company in the country, including the firms' foreign affiliates. It would also hand the central bank another victory by allowing it to oversee any commercial company that owns a banking charter known as an industrial loan company.

To soothe lawmakers unhappy with the Fed's growing power, the proposal also recommends capping it in some ways. The administration proposes the creation of a consumer-protection agency, which would have the ability to write rules related to mortgages, credit cards and other consumer products, takes away powers previously held by the central bank.

In addition, the plan would require the Fed to receive approval from the Treasury Department before it took dramatic action to stabilize the economy, which it did several times last year after it cited "unusual and exigent" circumstances.

Write to Damian Paletta at damian.paletta@wsj.com更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
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  • U.S. to unveil regulatory reform plan June 17: source
    本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛U.S. to unveil regulatory reform plan June 17: source
    Wed Jun 3, 2009 7:34pm EDT


    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Obama administration plans to unveil on June 17 its sweeping plan to overhaul financial regulation, according to a source familiar with thinking at the U.S. Treasury Department.

    The proposal will serve as a framework for lawmakers as they embark on the thorny task of restructuring how banks, hedge funds, derivatives, and other financial firms and securities are policed.

    Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner will testify on June 18 before the House Financial Services Committee on the proposal, the source said, speaking anonymously because the administration has not formally announced the dates.

    A Treasury spokeswoman did not immediately provide a comment.

    Administration officials and lawmakers have said they are aiming to have broad legislation passed by the end of the year. The two groups have been meeting over the past few weeks to hash out an outline of the proposal, which will likely put the Federal Reserve in charge of monitoring systemic risk and will give the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp new powers to unwind large, troubled financial institutions.

    The exact structure of the plan has been fluid, with Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke telling a congressional committee on Wednesday that "the exact structure of the arrangements, I think, remains to be discussed" when asked about the Fed's future role.

    A particularly difficult problem is how to rationalize the four bank regulators -- an issue fraught with turf battles both among the agencies and congressional committees.

    The Treasury source, and another source familiar with the Treasury's thinking, said the administration will not propose to merge the bank regulation responsibilities into one super bank regulator. Rather, it will likely propose to merge the Office of Thrift Supervision, which mostly regulates mortgage lenders, and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), which regulates many of the nation's largest banks.

    The OCC would be the on-site inspector of a broader array of banks, ending on-site visits from the Fed and the FDIC. The Fed as systemic risk regulator, and the FDIC, as guardian of the deposit insurance fund, would have to rely on OCC data.

    "There's no reason why we need three agencies conducting separate, duplicative on-site exams," the source said.

    The Fed could also lose some of its consumer protection responsibilities, which would move to a new agency that would supervise financial products, such as credit cards, mortgage-related products and insurance.

    But the Fed could gain supervisory powers over broker dealers (currently a securities regulator function), hedge funds, private equity and derivatives, in the central bank's new capacity as systemic risk regulator.

    The new consumer protection entity would not include investor protection - which currently falls under the Securities and Exchange Commission's purview, one of the sources said.

    The investor protection and market integrity role would likely be housed in an agency that would be produced from a merger of the SEC and Commodity Futures Trading Commission, sources have said.

    The new investor protection agency would oversee all investment products.

    An advisory committee would then back up the Fed in monitoring systemic risk across all financial products and institutions. This would be similar to the President's Working Group on Financial Markets, which is chaired by the Treasury secretary and composed of the chairmen of agencies like the SEC, the Fed and the CFTC.

    (Reporting by Karey Wutkowski and Rachelle Younglai; Editing by Tim Dobbyn)更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
    • [WSJ]Draft Details New Rules for Markets
      本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛Draft Details New Rules for Markets
      By DAMIAN PALETTA

      WASHINGTON -- The Obama administration will propose on Wednesday sweeping changes to the way the U.S. government oversees financial markets and will push Congress to grant new powers to the Federal Reserve to oversee the economy, according to a near final draft of the plan viewed by the Wall Street Journal.

      The 85-page proposal is part of an effort by the Obama administration to redraw the rules that govern finance in an attempt to restore confidence in U.S. and global markets. Obama administration officials want the rules to be tough enough to correct some of the damage caused by the financial crisis last year but not so restrictive that they stifle innovation. The paper says the administration has stopped short of calling for all changes that could be seen as "desirable" and pushed only for those they see as "essential" to reform.

      "We must act now to restore confidence in the integrity of our financial system," the draft of the administration proposal says. "The lasting economic damage to ordinary families and businesses is a constant reminder of the urgent need to act to reform our financial regulatory system and put our economy on track to a sustainable recovery."

      President Barack Obama's plan will touch almost every corner of financial markets, from tougher consumer-protection policies to stricter rules over exotic financial products, such as credit derivatives. The plan would bring many of the products and companies that previously operated outside of the banking system under federal scrutiny.

      The administration's proposal would give the government the power to take over and wind down a large financial company, a power that government officials lacked last year when the financial crisis was intensifying. It would also give the central bank more powers over the payments and settlements systems in U.S. financial markets to prevent a breakdown that officials fear could destabilize the economy.

      The plan would abolish the Office of Thrift Supervision and create a new national regulator for financial institutions, aimed at making it harder for companies to shop between supervisors.

      One new detail is that any large, interconnected company that the government wants to take over and break up could be pushed into government seizure by the Treasury Department, if certain conditions are met. Once taken over, the companies would typically be run by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., but the proposal gives the government discretion to change the way this might work. The Treasury has said these powers were necessary, but the details of how they would work were unveiled for the first time in this proposal.

      The Obama administration will propose on Wednesday sweeping changes to the way the U.S. government oversees financial markets and will push Congress to grant new powers to the Federal Reserve to oversee the economy.
      Hedge funds and other private pools of capital would have to register with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Thousands of financial institutions would be required to hold more capital in reserve to protect against unexpected losses, and companies would also have to retain a portion of the credit risk for loans they have packaged into securities.

      The Fed emerges from the plan with the power to oversee from top to bottom almost any financial company in the country, including the firms' foreign affiliates. It would also hand the central bank another victory by allowing it to oversee any commercial company that owns a banking charter known as an industrial loan company.

      To soothe lawmakers unhappy with the Fed's growing power, the proposal also recommends capping it in some ways. The administration proposes the creation of a consumer-protection agency, which would have the ability to write rules related to mortgages, credit cards and other consumer products, takes away powers previously held by the central bank.

      In addition, the plan would require the Fed to receive approval from the Treasury Department before it took dramatic action to stabilize the economy, which it did several times last year after it cited "unusual and exigent" circumstances.

      Write to Damian Paletta at damian.paletta@wsj.com更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
      • Besides tons of regulatory jobs will be created, it looks like FED's role is gonna be reduced and more power goes to Treasury.