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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWall Street Dodges Financial Reform Again
The Dodd-Frank financial reform act, the law designed to clean up the abuses that led to the financial crisis, celebrates its third birthday this month. But only about a third of the rules required by the legislation have been finalized so far, and even those are not going into effect as scheduled. This week provided a perfect example of why that is: The Federal Reserve granted Goldman Sachs a two-year extension to implement a key Dodd-Frank rule that would require banks to move risky trading into separate affiliates that are not backed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). Several other of the nation's biggest banks won the same exemption last month.
There is a provision in the Dodd-Frank law that allows banks to request a two-year transition period, if complying with the rule will damage the wider financial system. But banks were already given three years to phase in compliance with the rule. "If the regulators hadn't let them waste [that] three-year period then they could have been prepared to execute [the rule] in a way that was less disruptive," says Marcus Stanley, policy director at the financial reform advocacy group Americans for Financial Reform. "It's like saying I need an extension on my homework because it would be disruptive for me to to have do it all the night before," he adds. "This is just a generalized excuse for postponing action."
"The procrastination of both regulators and the banks on this portion of Dodd-Frank has been pretty amazing," Stanley told Bloomberg Businessweek in January.
This particular Dodd-Frank rule is also under assault by Wall Street's allies in Congress. A bill that would exempt a large number of derivatives trades from the so-called pushout rule sailed through the House financial services committee in May. It could come to the House floor for a vote as soon as next week.
There is a provision in the Dodd-Frank law that allows banks to request a two-year transition period, if complying with the rule will damage the wider financial system. But banks were already given three years to phase in compliance with the rule. "If the regulators hadn't let them waste [that] three-year period then they could have been prepared to execute [the rule] in a way that was less disruptive," says Marcus Stanley, policy director at the financial reform advocacy group Americans for Financial Reform. "It's like saying I need an extension on my homework because it would be disruptive for me to to have do it all the night before," he adds. "This is just a generalized excuse for postponing action."
"The procrastination of both regulators and the banks on this portion of Dodd-Frank has been pretty amazing," Stanley told Bloomberg Businessweek in January.
This particular Dodd-Frank rule is also under assault by Wall Street's allies in Congress. A bill that would exempt a large number of derivatives trades from the so-called pushout rule sailed through the House financial services committee in May. It could come to the House floor for a vote as soon as next week.
http://www.motherjones.com/mojo/2013/07/goldman-sachs-dodd-frank-wall-street
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Wall Street Dodges Financial Reform Again (Original Post)
octoberlib
Jul 2013
OP
djean111
(14,255 posts)1. As if they are in danger of ever getting hit by financial reform.......
xchrom
(108,903 posts)2. du rec.