Posts Tagged ‘Christopher Dodd’

Geithner Gains New Powers With Financial Regulation Overhaul

Monday, August 9th, 2010

Treasury Secretary Geithner gains power with new financial overhaul law. With the passage of historic financial reform legislation, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner is being given the authority to reshape bank regulations, oversee financial markets and create a consumer protection agency.  Few Treasury secretaries will wield this much influence once President Obama signs the new financial overhaul legislation passed by Congress.

Geithner’s fingerprints are all over the effort to expand financial regulation.  The bill is extremely close to the initial draft he released last summer but also names him — as long as he remains Treasury secretary — as the head of a council of senior regulators.  The legislation also puts him at the head of the new consumer bureau until the Senate confirms a permanent director.  In other words, Geithner will mold the regulator over the next several months.  It also will be his responsibility to work out several issues left unresolved by the bill — for instance, which financial derivatives will be subject to the strict new trading rules and which risky activities big banks will have to spin off.

The legislation “will help restore the great strength of the American financial system, which — at its best — develops innovative ways to provide credit and capital, not just for our great global companies, but for the individual with an idea and a plan,” according to Geithner.  Efforts to win passage of the financial regulatory bill were driven primarily by the Treasury, proof that Geithner has significant autonomy within the administration.

Sen. Christopher J. Dodd (D-CT), who moved the financial overhaul package through the Senate, said it wasn’t his preference to put the Treasury secretary in charge of the new council.  He would prefer that a member of the Federal Reserve board fill that role.  At the same time, he said, having a member of the president’s Cabinet in charge could make the council “more politically responsive.  It gives you some accountability,” Dodd said.

Geithner Gains New Powers With Financial Regulation Overhaul

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

Treasury Secretary Geithner gains power with new financial overhaul law.  With the passage of historic financial reform legislation, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner is being given the authority to reshape bank regulations, oversee financial markets and create a consumer protection agency.  Few Treasury secretaries will wield this much influence once President Obama signs the new financial overhaul legislation passed by Congress.

Geithner’s fingerprints are all over the effort to expand financial regulation.  The bill is extremely close to the initial draft he released last summer but also names him — as long as he remains Treasury secretary — as the head of a council of senior regulators.  The legislation also puts him at the head of the new consumer bureau until the Senate confirms a permanent director.  In other words, Geithner will mold the regulator over the next several months.  It also will be his responsibility to work out several issues left unresolved by the bill — for instance, which financial derivatives will be subject to the strict new trading rules and which risky activities big banks will have to spin off.

The legislation “will help restore the great strength of the American financial system, which — at its best — develops innovative ways to provide credit and capital, not just for our great global companies, but for the individual with an idea and a plan,” according to Geithner.  Efforts to win passage of the financial regulatory bill were driven primarily by the Treasury, proof that Geithner has significant autonomy within the administration.

Sen. Christopher J. Dodd (D-CT), who moved the financial overhaul package through the Senate, said it wasn’t his preference to put the Treasury secretary in charge of the new council.  He would prefer that a member of the Federal Reserve board fill that role.  At the same time, he said, having a member of the president’s Cabinet in charge could make the council “more politically responsive.  It gives you some accountability,” Dodd said.

Senate, House Versions of Financial Reform Bill Headed to Reconciliation

Monday, June 7th, 2010

Senate passes financial reform legislation; the bill now must be reconciled with the House version.  Senator Christopher Dodd (D-CT) is enjoying a big victory in his last days in the Senate following passage of broad financial reform legislation designed to rein in the excesses that caused the financial meltdown.  First, the Senate and House versions of the bill must undergo reconciliation.  Under the new law, for example, homebuyers will have to provide proof of income when applying for a mortgage.  Additionally, a new consumer protection apparatus will monitor lenders who offer subprime loans and then raise interest rates to sky-high levels.

The legislation - which will bring openness to complex financial instruments such as derivatives - passed 59 - 31 and provides a way to liquidate financial institutions once viewed as too big to fail.  It also establishes a council of regulators who will monitor threats to the economy and specific restraints on the derivatives trading, which set off the toxic debts that froze the credit markets and prompted the Federal Reserve to make trillions of dollars of loans to banks on the brink of collapse.

The vote hands President Obama his second landmark legislative victory this year, following the March passage of his historic health-care bill. “Our goal is not to punish the banks,” he said hours before the final vote, “but to protect the larger economy and the American people from the kind of upheavals that we’ve seen in the past few years.”

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) summed up the legislation: “When this bill becomes law, the joyride on Wall Street will come to a screeching halt.”  The reconciled bill is expected to hit President Obama’s desk for his promised signature this summer.

Fed Governor: U.S. Faces “Significant Economic Challenges”

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

With unemployment “stubbornly” high and government deficits rising, Fed warns of upcoming dangers.  The United States still faces “significant economic challenges”, with unemployment at “stubbornly” high levels and businesses that are reluctant to spend as government deficits rise.  This is the opinion of Federal Reserve Governor Kevin Warsh, who said “Taking account of the broad range of economic and financial conditions, there is no wonder that the electorate in the United States and abroad is unnerved.”  Nevertheless, Warsh feels “much better about the state of the real economy” than he did at this time last year.

Speaking at a symposium hosted by the Shadow Open Market Committee, Warsh, a former Morgan Stanley banker, noted that “Unemployment remains high and stubbornly so.”  Fed policymakers “still have tough times ahead” as they work to prove that their long-term goals are not being compromised.  The Senate Banking committee, under the leadership of its Chairman Christopher Dodd (D-CT), has proposed a financial rules overhaul that would result in the most significant restructuring of Wall Street oversight since the 1930s.  The Senate bill would limit the Fed to supervising bank holding companies with assets in excess of $50 billion.  Smaller and mid-sized banks would be regulated by other agencies.

According to Warsh, the Fed must act with “consistency” to protect its credibility.  “The Federal Reserve must do its utmost to stay foursquare within its role as liquidity provider,” Warsh said.  “The Fed, as first responder, must strongly resist the temptation to be the ultimate rescuer.”  Warsh believes that even though securitization has become a dirty word, the financial vehicle ultimately will return to the market.

Are Banks Really Too Big To Fail?

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

Former IMF chief economist opines on whether banks are too big to fail and possible solutions.  Simon Johnson, a professor at M.I.T.’s Sloan School of Management and former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund, raises the question of “As we move closer to a Senate - and presumably national - debate on financial reform, the central technical and political question is:  What would prevent any bank or similar institute from being regarded - ultimately by the government - as so big that it would not be allowed to fail?

Writing in the New York Times, Johnson believes that there is sharp disagreement on what would be needed to end “too big to fail” - or, as he terms it, “T.B.T.F.”  From the viewpoint of Senator Christopher Dodd (D-CT), “creating a ‘resolution authority’ would, at a stroke, effectively remove the perception and the reality that some banks are too big to fail.  The basic idea here, as elaborated by Sheila Bair, the head of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) would expand the powers it currently has to ‘resolve’ - i.e., take over and liquidate in an orderly manner - banks with federally insured deposits; it could do this for any financial institution.”

The Republicans, on the other hand, believe that this approach would formalize the existence of T.B.T.F. banks.  They believe that the FDIC lacks the skill to wind down complex financial institutions as this job differs from closing small- and medium-sized banks to protect depositors.  The “counterproposal, which seems to also have the support or Senate Richard Shelby (R-AL), is that we should just allow big financial firms to fail outright, i.e., to run through the usual bankruptcy procedures.  At a rhetorical level, ‘let ‘em fail’ has some appeal.  But as a practical matter, it is a complete non-starter,” according to Johnson.

The third suggestion, proposed by Senator Ted Kaufman (D-DE), is quite simple.  “Break up these megabanks.  As even Alan Greenspan said in October 2009,” Johnson says, “‘If they’re too big to fail, they’re too big’.  There is no evidence for economies of scale or scope - or other social benefits - from banks with assets above $100 billion.  Yet our largest banks have balance sheets around $2 trillion.”

Johnson concludes:  “Making our largest banks smaller is not sufficient to ensure financial stability.  There are many other complementary measures that make sense - including higher capital requirements, more transparency for derivatives and generally more effective regulation.  But reducing the size of our largest banks is absolutely necessary if we are to reduce the odds of another major financial catastrophe.”

Financial Reform Legislation Faces Uphill Battle in the Senate

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010

The most sweeping financial reform legislation since the 1930s will be debated in a polarized Senate.  Senator Christopher Dodd (D-CT), chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, introduced revised legislation to regulate the nation’s financial system.  The plan would create a nine-member council, led by the Treasury secretary, to be on the alert for systemic risks, and direct the Federal Reserve to oversee the nation’s largest and most interconnected financial institutions.

The bill, which would be the most comprehensive change in financial rules since the Depression, would preserve much of the existing regulatory system, which has been criticized as being too disjointed.  Additionally, it would rely on a new mechanism for seizing and liquidating large financial companies on the verge of failure.  This would reduce, but not eliminate, the possibility of future bailouts.

The legislation incorporates a version of the Volcker Rule, a proposal from former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker that would make certain that legislators ban banks from investing in or owning hedge and private-equity funds.  Republicans and Wall Street strongly object to that idea.  Dodd’s legislation takes a fairly tough line with financial firms in general.  The proposed consumer protection agency would be given the authority to write and enforce rules for banks with more than $10 billion in assets.  The oversight also would apply to mortgage companies, credit card issues and other lenders - a move that Republicans oppose.

“Our regulatory structure, constructed in a piecemeal fashion over many decades, remains hopelessly inadequate,” Dodd, who is retiring from the Senate at the end of this term, said.  “There hasn’t been financial reform on the scale that I’m proposing this afternoon since the 1930s….  It is certainly time to act.”