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Volcker Rule Tests New Systemic Risk Council

First Posted: 01/14/11 09:35 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:25 PM ET

Geithner
Treasury Secretary and Financial Stability Oversight Council chair Timothy Geithner

WASHINGTON (By Dave Clarke and Rachelle Younglai) - The new council of U.S. regulators will face a major test on Tuesday when it unveils recommendations on how to enforce one of the most recognizable if inscrutable aspects of the six-month-old Wall Street reform law: the Volcker rule.

The Financial Stability Oversight Council will hold its third meeting on January 18. For the first time, its members will have to say how they believe major aspects of the Dodd-Frank act should be implemented.

The council is expected to release a study recommending how to put into a practice a ban on banks trading with their own capital for profit in securities, derivatives and certain other financial instruments - the so-called Volcker rule, named for former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker.

Banks who hotly oppose the policy and supporters who contend it is key to preventing another meltdown in the financial markets are eagerly waiting to see how regulators want to define key aspects of the rule.

Supporters of the rule want regulators to send banks a signal that their lobbying has been for naught.

"We are looking for them to come out and make it clear to the industry that they didn't work the refs," said Dennis Kelleher of consumer group Better Markets.

The council is also expected to propose criteria that will be used to determine which nonbanks should be subject to additional scrutiny by the Fed and how a section of law concerning concentration limits should be implemented.

Insurers, mutual funds and hedge funds have been trying to convince the council that they do not pose a risk to the financial system and should therefore escape more regulation.

Under Dodd-Frank, the council must consider a series of factors including the institution's leverage and risk exposures in determining whether to label a nonbank "systemically important."

Regulators "can't just focus on the institution, they have to look at the relationships the institution has with other institutions," said Heather Slavkin, a policy adviser for the country's largest labor federation the AFL-CIO.

The criteria, if proposed, is not expected to provide much more detail than what is already outlined in Dodd-Frank, one source familiar with the regulators' plan said.

Later in 2011, the council will start designating institutions. One of the regulators, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp Chairman Sheila Bair, has proposed that the council start by labeling a small group of nonbanks that could threaten the financial system.

The council is chaired by Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and includes 10 voting members representing major regulators such as the Fed and the Securities and Exchange Commission.

VOLCKER SPURS SPINOFFS

The complexity and sweep of the Volcker Rule and other items on the agenda will challenge the regulators to prove they can avoid the type of turf fights that have divided them in the past and produce the single regulatory vision imagined by the law.

The council is required to release the study by January 21 but it could choose not to come out swinging and skimp on specifics. The details would then come nine months later when an actual rule is due.

The Volcker rule, which also bans banks from investing in or sponsoring hedge funds or private equity funds, has already had an impact. Bank of America, Morgan Stanley, and Goldman Sachs have backed out of or scaled back proprietary trading and private equity businesses in anticipation of its rollout.

J.P. Morgan Securities analysts said earlier this week that among global investment banks, Goldman Sachs likely has the most to lose from the Volcker Rule because many of its competitors, such as Swiss bank UBS AG, are oversees and not subject to the restriction.

Despite the moves made by banks to deal with the rule, regulators' work will still affect the financial industry in areas such as defining what trades that may look proprietary are permissible because they are being done to aid a client, a move known as market making.

Banks and their lobbyists have warned that too narrow a definition on market making and other permitted trades will restrict credit and ultimately hurt the economy.

"The market making is really where it gets complicated," said Karen Shaw-Petrou, managing partner at Federal Financial Analytics, a consulting firm.

Consumer groups and lawmakers that support the Volcker provision want regulators to be as specific as possible about what trades are permissible rather than rely on bank examiners to monitor trades on a daily basis using a "you know it when you see it approach" to proprietary trading.

(Additional reporting by Elinor Comlay in New York; Editing by David Gregorio)

Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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WASHINGTON (By Dave Clarke and Rachelle Younglai) - The new council of U.S. regulators will face a major test on Tuesday when it unveils recommendations on how to enforce one of the most recognizable...
WASHINGTON (By Dave Clarke and Rachelle Younglai) - The new council of U.S. regulators will face a major test on Tuesday when it unveils recommendations on how to enforce one of the most recognizable...
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11:54 PM on 01/16/2011
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/geithner-warns-of-future-bailouts-2011-01-13
Geithner warns of future government interventi­on - MarketWatc­h

"SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWat­ch) — Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner warned that the U.S. government may have to take control of major financial institutio­ns again if there’s a crisis as big as the last one, according to a report released Thursday by a group overseeing the Troubled Asset Relief Program.

“We may have to do exceptiona­l things again if we face a shock that large,” Geithner told the Office of the Special Inspector General for TARP in December.

[snip]

When Geithner said “exception­al things” he wasn’t referring to old-school bailouts like the ones that saved American Internatio­nal Group Inc. /quotes/co­mstock/13*­!aig/quote­s/nls/aig (AIG 54.00, -3.19, -5.58%) or Citigroup, according to Treasury officials.

Instead, Geithner was referring to the possible orderly wind down of a failing institutio­n under new powers given to regulators by last year’s Dodd-Frank bill.

The legislatio­n allows a Financial Stability Oversight Council to set general criteria to identify firms that should be exposed to heightened prudential standards from the Federal Reserve. This may include higher capital or liquidity requiremen­ts.

If an institutio­n still looks like it might fail, the legislatio­n gives the Federal Deposit Corp. the tools to wind down the firm in a way that regulators hope will avoid the broader impact of an unruly collapse..­."
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joebaggadonuts
Civilization: Evolutionary pathway of choice.
05:13 PM on 01/16/2011
Glad to see this reported here. At least someone is paying attention.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jaredbrain
04:35 AM on 01/16/2011
How can I expect the agency to have any teeth when Geithner doesn't even have eyebrows?
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PalaceOfWisdom
Obama signed away habeus corpus
02:31 PM on 01/14/2011
If you open another tab with a picture of Percy the guard from The Green Mile, then click back and forth between that and Timmy, it doesn't change.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
karen1p
12:27 PM on 01/14/2011
I heard a rumor that Geithner has said despite the Dodd-Frank legislation, he would bailout the banks again if need be......

.......we need to be calling for Geithner's resignation.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cassie reinara
11:34 AM on 01/14/2011
Why do they even bother using Volcker's name? They basically ignored all his common sense advice on how to reform the system. Oh I see, they want to lend some credibility to what they are doing. What a joke. Unfortunately, it's on us.
10:45 AM on 01/14/2011
Look at the regulatory bodies whose representatives are sitting on the council.

Every one of them is controlled by those supposedly regulated.

Talk about business as usual.

Talk about building more meaningless bureaucracy as usual.

Might as well call it Wall Street Security Council.
10:40 AM on 01/14/2011
Banks need to put their own shin in the game instead of off loading all risk to their customers.
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Valerio della Porta
Entrepreneur and Web Developer
10:59 AM on 01/14/2011
Banks don't have skin, it's all depositor's money and the capitalization is only there to safeguard the depositor's money. Banks are not supposed to engage in speculation and high risk activities; this was the folly of the repeal of Glass-Steagall.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kevin Atlanta
Active Citizen 54
10:22 AM on 01/14/2011
With Pay-Off-At-Par Geithner at the helm this "systemic risk" council is a freaking joke.  The regulatory teeth don't exist to stop the excesses and abuse that is endemic in the corrupt banking and investment system today.  Geithner's puppet masters won't allow any change from today's status quo and that's glaringly apparent from the lack of a Pecora Investigation and the failure to get the Consumer Financial Protection Agency up and running.
Geithner is a smarmy mouthed fraudster who feeds the greed of the Banksters's Control Fraud and his Wall Street embezzler butt buddies.