It looks like the Obama administration is
tempering its ambitions for financial regulatory reform. It seems that the potential political brouhaha that would accompany a reduction in the number of agencies overseeing the financial markets would expend too much political capital. Instead, the administration will focus on securing broader powers for existing regulators to limit risk-taking. While the revamp of oversight will dramatically change the regulatory environment for finance, has the US missed an historic opportunity to completely overhaul the arcane regulatory framework of US finance? Possibly. It seemed as if the financial crisis presented lawmakers with a clear path to reworking the system. As time has passed and the global financial system has stabilized somewhat, the outcry for major structural change has become less loud. reform hawks will no doubt be disappointed by anything short of wholesale change to the system and will lament the loss of reform momentum.
The links:
- Te Obama administration wants Europeans to put their banks through much more rigorous public stress tests to ensure survival in a slipping economy.
- Deloitte & Touche released its 6th Global Risk Management Survey. The survey indicates that banks and other financial institutions continue to have significant opportunities to strengthen their risk management processes and tools.
- As plans for banks to leave TARP solidify, the WSJ wonders what to do about Citigroup.
- The 10 banks that got the green light to repay TARP include: Goldman Sachs, JPMorganChase, Morgan Stanley, American Express, Bank of New York Mellon, BB&T, Capital One, Northern Trust, State Street and US Bancorp.
- SIFMA Chief Executive Tim Ryan says that Wall Street accepts its share of responsibility for the crisis and intends to partner with the governments to overhaul the regulatory system.
- Morgan Stanley says there has been a fierce rally in leveraged loan CDO's.
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