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U.S. Regulators: Progress Being Made On Global Financial Rules

Global Regulations

MARCY GORDON   06/16/11 08:02 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — Federal regulators said Thursday they are collaborating with other nations on rules intended to prevent another global financial crisis.

The topic was raised at a congressional hearing looking into whether last year's financial overhaul could drive business overseas and hurt the U.S. economy.

House Republicans are trying to weaken or kill the law before regulators finish writing rules opposed by the banking and financial community. Regulators, meanwhile, have said they will miss next month's deadline to complete some of the rules a year after President Barack Obama signed the law.

Federal Reserve Gov. Daniel Tarullo, Treasury Department official Lael Brainard and other regulators told a House panel they have made progress in coming up with new capital requirements for banks together with officials overseas.

On the House floor Thursday, lawmakers voted to adopt legislation that would delay by more than a year new rules for reporting trades in derivatives, the complex financial instruments blamed for helping precipitate the 2008 financial crisis. The amendment to the bill funding the Agriculture Department and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission would require the CFTC to first have other rules in place to help it collect derivatives market data. The bill also would slash by 44 percent the Obama administration's funding request for the CFTC for the budget year starting Oct. 1, to $172 million.

The value of derivatives depends on the future price of some other investment. They have ballooned into a $600 trillion market. Regulators say they pose a threat to the stability of the financial system.

Wall Street executives, appearing later before the House Financial Services Committee, maintained that the stricter financial rules could crimp U.S. firms, hurt the economy and cost jobs.

"The regulatory pendulum clearly has now begun to swing to a point that risks hobbling our financial system and our economic growth," Barry Zubrow, the chief risk officer of JPMorgan Chase & Co., told the panel.

Brainard, the Treasury undersecretary for international affairs, said officials have been working "tirelessly" to create a level playing field of financial regulation across the U.S., Europe, Asia and other business centers.

"There are some who would argue that the United States is moving too fast, that we should wait to see what other countries implement," Brainard testified. "I do not agree. I would argue that by moving first and leading from a position of strength, we are elevating the world's standards to ours."

Rep. Spencer Bachus, R-Ala., the committee's chairman, warned that a coming "tsunami" of regulations could "push capital, industry and jobs right out of the country."

Democratic lawmakers defended the overhaul but some voiced concern about specific rules being considered, such as the stricter capital requirements for financial institutions deemed by regulators to pose a potential threat to the system.

John Walsh, the acting comptroller of the currency whose Treasury Department agency oversees national banks, said he was concerned that if the capital requirements were "taken too far, we may limit the availability of credit that is needed for economic growth."

Walsh has disagreed with other federal regulators on how stringent the new capital requirements should be.

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WASHINGTON — Federal regulators said Thursday they are collaborating with other nations on rules intended to prevent another global financial crisis. The topic was raised at a congressional hea...
WASHINGTON — Federal regulators said Thursday they are collaborating with other nations on rules intended to prevent another global financial crisis. The topic was raised at a congressional hea...
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04:42 PM on 06/17/2011
As long as our system is built on confidence and those in charge wield it like a sword, we won't make enough progress. Threatening confidence using fear tactics, in order to get laws passed continues to this day and will most likely continue until the whole system is brought down and rebuilt. Any attempt to salvage the current system will only delay the inevitable. More of the same.
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Renlim
09:26 PM on 06/17/2011
If the system is brought down how shall we respond to those who brought down the Wall Street banking system and the American Economy??
OH... I HAVE A IDEA...Remember King Louis and Marie Antoinette of France;;;Now that might work!
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AlsoSarah
Medicare for all
02:44 PM on 06/17/2011
"The regulatory pendulum clearly has now begun to swing to a point that risks hobbling our financial system and our economic growth," Barry Zubrow, the chief risk officer of JPMorgan Chase & Co., told the panel.

The Banks have spoken
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Renlim
03:07 PM on 06/17/2011
Yea the Banks have spoken and say bow down you peasants too your God! the Golden Calf that we have fashion!
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AlsoSarah
Medicare for all
02:43 PM on 06/17/2011
"House Republicans are trying to weaken or kill the law before regulators finish writing rules opposed by the banking and financial community. Regulators, meanwhile, have said they will miss next month's deadline to complete some of the rules a year after President Barack Obama signed the law."

Apparently the Banks feel there more to bleed out of us.
12:09 PM on 06/17/2011
It is time the Feds start convicting individuals like Lloyd Craig Blankfein, Ken Lewis and all the others involved in the near fatal collapse of the world economy. They must be put in jail. Martha Stewart went to jail for, by comparison, a laughable offense. They made an example of her..... It's NOW time to once again set examples!!
11:43 AM on 06/17/2011
See, banks will create rules that protect their interests globally but if workers unite like this it's attacked.
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Renlim
11:08 AM on 06/17/2011
Give the Corporate Heads a Ultimatum;;;they move their companies aboard,,and they are no longer a US citizen and must pack and leave the country and not return,,overtime this may create a new renaissance of entrepreneurship in the US. Better to start from scratch them be pulled over the cliff.
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Renlim
10:52 AM on 06/17/2011
Let the Corporations go overseas and put a Embargo on all their items coming into the United States that they produce and reject them and their employee's Travel Entry into the US after leaving; and freeze all funds in the US before leave till a governmental audit is done too see if any amounts are owed to the US.. Or be blackmailed and let them dig deeper into the control of the US economic system.
Better to have some temporary economic pains and clean house and get the regulatory system back in balance & order.
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Neets101
watch this space for important updates
07:04 AM on 06/17/2011
Has Asia's debt trap been set yet?

Harvested?

I don't see much in the way of global reform until that market gets tapped... but maybe it already has been...

/C. Montgomery Burns approves...
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PhilipTaylor
Legalized Bribery is an Oxymoron - must END
05:47 AM on 06/17/2011
BANKSTER CENTRALIZED CONTROL UNDER Bank of International Settlements (BIS) in Switzerland - It Controls:

FED
IMF
W0RLD BANK

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8F4IGwuKdUQ&NR=1

CENTRALIZING POWER has been THEIR GOAL for Hundreds of Years!
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loki
Better to die fighting, than live on knees
11:22 PM on 06/16/2011
http://www.worldoffshorebanks.com/

here is where the ivy greed and rich hide from the tax man.
oilfield
small manufacturing business owner
11:09 PM on 06/16/2011
regulators never seem to get their job done right....in the financial sector or other bureaucratic snafus they invent. kind of like shovel ready jobs with the permitting process being the slowdown.
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EdCorner
fiat iustitia, et pereat mundus
10:15 PM on 06/16/2011
"Global financial rules" - meaning, the next step is to totally bankrupt the world
09:57 PM on 06/16/2011
This is one of those events that brings out the 2nd amendment
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kamact
Market Observer
09:51 PM on 06/16/2011
The GOP are truly state-sponsors for TBTF banksters,...So 98% of Americans should not vote for GOP candidates in 2012,...as it clearly is not in their economic interests
04:50 PM on 06/17/2011
The Dems are in bed too. Not all of them, but most. The financial elite have a stranglehold on the world governements. Do what they say, or they ensure the world market colapses and anarchy ensues.

Our leaders are then left deciding whether to hold onto their values and risk destablization by not giving into the elite, or selling out. It's pretty clear that most of governemt has sold out.
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structurequity
structurequity not oppression
09:32 PM on 06/16/2011
The Dance of the Wall Street Fairies is in full regalia... Elected, appointed and paid shills all for the corporate weal are shedding tears over the regulators draconian plans to reign them in.
I say lasso those makers of nothing but money from nothing and let our people have their say...