Friday, February 20, 2009

Regulation Monday

The regulators are back in the top of the news this morning, with two prominent articles in the NY Times Business pages. SEC chief Mary Schapiro has used her first month to move aggressively toward reversing major decisions by prior chief Cox, and to strengthen the enforcement program which has been blasted for missing several huge frauds. Cox had a policy which required enforcement lawyers to obtain consent of commissioners before moving to resolve major cases. With the commission largely made up of opponents of government regulation, the residual effect was to discourage cases and reduce penalties. Schapiro is under the gun to restore crdibility to the agency, as Congress prepares legislation which may overhaul the entire securities regulatory structure. Schapiro is moving quickly to adopt rules to minimize conflict of interest at credit-rating agencies, as well as looking at new restrictions on short selling. Schapiro's moves will be made more challenging by news of the latest collateral damage from the Cox era, as the Agency faces scrutiny for its handling of allegations of insider-trading by former Lehman executives. Sen. Grassley wants answers...

  • Bank stress testing will be in the spotlight this week as the Obama administration scrutinizes the financial condition of the 20 biggest banks to assess their fitness to weather a worse downturn than expected. The U.S. said that banks would have access to capital necessary to keep them afloat. Read the joint statement from Treasury, FDIC, OCC, OTS and Federal Reserve here.
  • More news on "Creeping Nationalization" as the Obama administration may take another step in that direction if it converts the government's preferred shares in Citigroup into common equity to help the stumbling giant withstand losses. Paul Krugman says just do it, but Gerald O'Driscoll says to beware.
  • Phil Gramm, often pointed to as the architect of deregulation weighs in on Gramm-Leach-Bliley and what it all meant.
  • From Bloomberg, word that the US and Europe are discussing joint regulation of the $28T credit default swap market.
  • US regulators are being forced to sell real-estate loans of failed banks at a discount to lure buyers spooked by the likelihood of increased loan losses.
  • A major CDO is bankrupt.
  • Sen. Dodd tells Al Hunt short-term bank nationalization is a possibility.
  • Sovereign CDS is being used to speculate on currency strength.

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