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Insurance Industry Poised To Tear Loophole In Wall Street Reform

First Posted: 06/22/10 01:58 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 05:50 PM ET

Harkin

The insurance industry is poised to rip a gaping loophole in financial reform's investor protections, working to insert a provision in the conference committee report that was passed by neither the House nor the Senate.

The measure would exempt securities products created by insurance companies from regulation, leaving the job instead to state insurance commissioners. Insurance companies do a lucrative business in selling annuities that guarantee a return to investors but limit the upside and often come with exorbitant commissions and high surrender fees that make access to the money difficult in times of financial need.

The insertion is being pushed by Sen. Tom Harkin of Iowa, a state with a heavily-concentrated insurance industry. His House ally is Rep. Greg Meeks (D-N.Y.), who often represents corporate interests despite having a heavy trade union presence in his district.

Because of the structure of the conference committee, a Democrat needs to win only one more Democrat and the Republican bloc in order to win support for an amendment. That dynamic makes weakening the bill easier than strengthening it, even though few Republicans are expected to vote for the final bill.

Two members of the conference committee, Sens. Blanche Lincoln (D-Ark.) and Pat Leahy (D-Vt.), fellow members of the Agriculture Committee that Harkin long chaired, are cosponsors of his legislation and therefore likely to support it in conference committee.

Harkin attempted to insert the provision into the Senate bill as an amendment but was blocked by Sen. Daniel Akaka (D-Hawaii).

"It appears that he has the votes to at least get this included in the Senate offer," said Barbara Roper, who handles investor protection issues for the Consumer Federation of America. "Meeks, the Harkin counterpart, is on the conference committee and by all accounts is rallying the troops."

The conference committee may take up the issue as early as Tuesday. The remaining question is whether Meeks will be able to win over his House colleagues.

The last-minute insertion of the provision is particularly galling, said Roper, because it hasn't been approved by either chamber and has been the subject of little congressional deliberation.

"Beyond the substance, which is really horrible, the idea that a handful of members of Congress are going to decide this issue with no legislative hearing and no answer to the basic questions... that's just an appalling violation of the integrity of the legislative process," she said.

The insurance loophole is just one in a series of victories by the financial industry over investors. The conferees have already agreed to exempt companies under $75 million from Sarbanes-Oxley audit requirements. Another investor priority, self-funding for the Securities and Exchange Commission, is teetering, and a fourth priority -- that brokers be bound by a fiduciary duty to act in their clients' best interests -- is also under heavy assault. Investors are also losing ground when it comes to proxy access, the ability of shareholders to weigh in on the governance of a corporation they own.

"There is a real question at this point as to whether this investor protection title will do more to weaken investor protections than it will to strengthen them," said Roper.

UPDATE: Harkin, in an interview with HuffPost, says that he thinks he has the votes on the Senate side but isn't sure about the House conferees. He expects the measure to be debated Tuesday afternoon but must chair a committee hearing, so will only be able to vote by proxy. He also defends his provision against consumer-advocate and investor-protection critiques.

"Well they're wrong, they're just wrong," Harkin says of the consumer advocates. "And I've been a big consumer advocate all my life, but they're wrong. I mean, it's like somehow they have this belief that if only the SEC has jurisdiction, everything will be fine. Well, tell me about Bernie Madoff, huh? I mean, that was SEC jurisdiction. You know, look: Were there abuses in the past? I have already said, yes. But the National Association of Insurance Commissioners took care of that. They came out with new guidelines; states have signed up for it. I mean, this is an insurance policy. So I pointed out that during the recent downturn not one person with one of these annuities lost any of their money. Not one. Tell me about people that had securities. Now, what happened to them? So what's wrong with this picture? Now, again, were there abuses? Were people sold these policies that shouldn't've [been]? Yes. That's been fixed, that's been changed. It's almost like the consumer groups are saying it's just like it was 20 years ago, and that's just not the case. I suppose some people just believe that if we just give everything to the SEC everything will be fine, but I just don't believe that. I believe that state insurance commissioners, given the right tools and the right regulatory framework, which they have now, are very capable."

Ryan Grim is the author of This Is Your Country On Drugs: The Secret History of Getting High in America

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The insurance industry is poised to rip a gaping loophole in financial reform's investor protections, working to insert a provision in the conference committee report that was passed by neither the Ho...
The insurance industry is poised to rip a gaping loophole in financial reform's investor protections, working to insert a provision in the conference committee report that was passed by neither the Ho...
 
 
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
wethepeople3884 05:15 PM on 06/22/2010
This is quite confusing - so are the insurance regulators the people who have always regulated these or did they have no regulation previously? And would the SEC be just another level of regulation or would it only be one or the other? I like harkin but that doesnt mean I trust him 100 percent depending on the amount he gets in his campaign froom insurance.

What is preposterous to me as it is  Read More...
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skyeagle
R.I.N.O.
03:31 PM on 06/24/2010
Ever notice how these Congressman are for you when they campaign but seem to side with lobbyists and moneyed interests when they are in office?
Califishing
I work smart
11:29 AM on 06/24/2010
The consumer protection is to read what you sign. If you don't understand the contract have an Attorney review it. If an Attorney is not affordable don't sign it. as a last resort pay cash..
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hollybork
07:46 AM on 06/24/2010
Do you ever get the feeling it is Us against It?
We the people against the corporation, that is.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
evalela
02:28 PM on 06/23/2010
You do this just remember America is watching and were fed up!!!!!!
12:13 PM on 06/23/2010
of course, the bankster have sucked all the money out of main street using derivatives "insured" with Swaps. Swap markets are larger than the rest of the stock market. The reason the trillions of dollars given to the Bankster has not gotten to main street, is because it's all tied up in the Bankster derivative casinos games.

Outlaw all derivatives, and all Swaps,

force investmnet back to Main Street.

The world has done it before and the economies have always improved.
SoCalGrandma
Question consumption.
11:41 AM on 06/23/2010
Newest oxymoron: Consumer protection.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Snippert
And heeeere come the pretzels!
11:36 AM on 06/23/2010
This isn't corruption, this is pragmatism. The insurance product in question is not an investment product, and therefore should not be regulated by the SEC. Insurance companies currently sell equity indexed annuities, and have for years. It really isn't necessary for the SEC to regulate them, they are already regulated by insurance commissioners.

This isn't a big deal, people.
01:03 PM on 06/23/2010
This is a federal problem since federal tax money bailed out these gamblers. Your suggestion is the same old loophole to let state insurance commissioners regulate what is a federal problem.

If the Glass-Steagall Act was in place these insurance companies would not be scamming people with these high commission annunities and such. They would be selling insurance like they should. And banks would be protecting peoples money, instead of gambling with it.

Our House and Senate is bought out. It just is not worth voting in this country any longer!
09:52 AM on 06/25/2010
Thankyou, thankyou, thankyou........For recongnizing what caused this problem.

By the looks of it, not to many people either don't know that, or just are to blind and don't want to know.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gypsy508
10:39 AM on 06/23/2010
Why is anyone surprised? This is the party that drove Ralph Nader out.
09:59 AM on 06/23/2010
Total DISASTER...

... Democrats will get booted out this November, not because the are too liberal or any such nonsense, but that they are just corrupt as the Republicans, but at least the GOP is out front about what a bunch of whores they are to corporate interests.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
denbeath
10:19 AM on 06/23/2010
Corporate Democrats MUST be booted out this November. Those who are not representing the American People have not right nor business holding office. Are we paying their hefty salaries and phenomenal benefits to assist Big Corporations, Insurance Industry, Energy Industry, Big Pharma etc. etc. to get richer at our expense? Wake Up America!!!!! Kick their asses OUT!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hollybork
07:55 AM on 06/24/2010
Good post. "Corporate Democrats" !! Fanned.

Now the Supreme Court would have you believe that the Corporation is really a "person" for purposes of the Constitution. It is a person, and it has civil rights, free speech, the right to campaign for its choice of candidates, etc.

Anyway, it (the corporation) has gained the vote, in a backhanded way. It buys votes from people already -----in------ Congress! It goes for the Gusto. Forget fixing elections. It fixes the Congress. Way to go, corporate goal efficiency experts. Way to go, lobbyists and sycophants. IT is winning.
10:03 AM on 06/25/2010
Oh, it is just nothing but an excuse now isn't it!

While you are at it boot out the Republi-cons considering they are the one's who caused the problem. They repeal of the 1932 Glass-Steagall Act back in 1998.

Mr. Barton wasted an apology....The Republi-cons admitted to it behind closed doors of their Republican Committee hearing....Mr. Barton, admitted to the fact he was sent to congress not to represent the people, only the Corporations.

They only difference between Mr. Barton and the rest of the congress including Republi-cons, was that he told the truth.

It's pretty sad when you have Politicians apologizing to Corporations for the problems they caused.

America, By The Corporation For The Corporations......
SoCalGrandma
Question consumption.
09:36 AM on 06/23/2010
If and when a consumer protection bill gets to the Oval Office for the President's signature and it contains this gigantic loophole for insurance companies, I think Obama should veto it. Then let the House and Senate override his veto. And that wonderful auto industry we bailed out. Remember them? So they're exempt, too. Sheesh.
09:26 AM on 06/23/2010
The auto industry wants to be exempt from financial reform, the insurance industry wants to be exempt from financial reform, the home mortgage industry will be next. What if congress passes a fiancial reform bill that exempts everybody? What would it be called? The only people that will be affected is McDonald's because their toys make kids fat. Message to parents: DON'T LET YOUR KIDS EAT THE TOYS!!!
09:22 AM on 06/23/2010
The Insurance Industry in America is a Gangster opperation. How can you change the diapers on the Insurance Industry if the government has it's own diapers full?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hollybork
05:06 PM on 06/24/2010
I concur with your sentiments, if not with the specific way you worded them.

No, not all insurance companies nor all their products are crooked. Carriers aren't uniformly gangsters; banks are not all gangsters and all oil companies are not BP. People need insurance.

The derivative market became AIG's focus. Its an insurance company, and it went astray. The derivative market and AIG et al took liberties with excessive risk, not covering their exposure. AIG's recklessness almost brought down the federal reserve and the world's banks.

Lesson learned: derivatives need to be traded on an exchange, and be subject to tracking. AIG is one company that should have been put through bankruptcy and had its assets stripped away along with its executive office holders, shareholders and sycophant Board of Directors.

Derivatives need to be regulated so there is adequate risk underwriting and adequate reserves for losses. Otherwise, outlaw derivatives.

For profit health insurance is born of a flawed assumption: medical care is a privilege for which you should pay any amount a for profit entity says to save you or your family member's life, if you have the bad luck to get sick. This is not consistent with the right to life, liberty and property. Individual citizens cannot negotiate with corporate machines.

Lastly, the health insurance industry is neither regulated nor kept from engaging in monopolistic or price fixing tactics. They in many instances are protected from lawsuits when their coverage denials lead to premature or preventable death. That's bad.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
1man1voicenovote
live simply so others may simply live
09:08 AM on 06/23/2010
We are over-run. Drop everything you got on this sector!

Platoon
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
1man1voicenovote
live simply so others may simply live
09:02 AM on 06/23/2010
Does the mafia run EVERYTHING?!
09:14 AM on 06/23/2010
It sure looks like it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
johnb123
All I ask..just be reasonable....do things my way
09:26 AM on 06/23/2010
Not really. At least with the Mafia, when you pay for protection, you get protection. You don't even get that with these incumbents.
peowlemeow
Democrat,non-military,undereducated,overworked
09:01 AM on 06/23/2010
State by state insurance is already a scam.Insurance should be federal and not regulated state by state.All these senators with pet industries reaming people from other states is a lame way to do business.They all think they're clever but they just come across like schemers and bagmen.
Bundled risk contributed to the recession and the reason no one lost money is they were bailed out.