Displaying items by tag: doddfrank

(Washington)

One of the most contested parts of the 2010 Dodd-Frank legislation was the legal mandate the act gave to regulators to create pay caps for Wall Street. The industry has fought tooth and nail to block their imposition, successfully curbing any changes for nine years. The last major push to cap pay was in 2016, but nothing has happened since then. Now a consortium of regulators, including the Fed, FDIC, and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and Federal Reserve are coming together to create new rules. The most likely target are high ranking executives, but talks in the past have extended to rank and file employees.


FINSUM: Caps for top executives will be anathema to some, but restrictions for regular employees are a whole other issue that will cause a major uproar.

Published in Wealth Management
Thursday, 28 June 2018 09:35

An Argument for the Volcker Rule

(New York)

The Volcker Rule was one of the more divisive aspects of the Dodd-Frank legislation. The rule virtually outlawed proprietary trading, but arguably led to less liquidity, especially in fixed income markets. Now the rule has been partially pulled back, and there are is a view to gutting it entirely, but some warn about the dangers of doing so. According to the Financial Times, there are big risks to repealing the rule as it would arguably bring back the casino mindset that dominated big bank trading before the Crisis.


FINSUM: Banks are doing very well and the trading system has operated quite smoothly since the introduction of the Volcker Rule. We see no legitimate reason to overturn it.

Published in Eq: Large Cap
Thursday, 14 June 2018 09:15

The Deregulatory Bonanza Hasn’t Materialized

(New York)

Before President Trump got elected, and immediately after, there was a great deal of excitement that financial firms were going to experience a flourishing as the US cut back heavily on financial regulation. 500 days in that hope has failed to significantly materialize. While small and medium sized banks have benefitted, and the DOL’s fiduciary rule is gone (great for wealth management), large banks have not seen gains. For instance, the Fed has made stress tests for large banks more stringent.


FINSUM: Banks had the prop trading rules (Volcker rule) weakened recently, so that is positive, but otherwise there hasn’t been much change.

Published in Eq: Total Market
Tuesday, 12 June 2018 09:28

Why You Shouldn’t Say Goodbye to Dodd-Frank

(Washington)

A lot of financial industry participants have been hoping that the Trump administration might ultimately disassemble much of Dodd-Frank. Bits and pieces have been toned down so far, but the regulation remains mostly intact. Well, it seems like it is going to remain that way. SEC chief Jay Clayton just confirmed that while the SEC may seek to modify Dodd-Frank around the edges, there won’t be major changes. “I don’t think Dodd-Frank is changing a great deal, just to put a pin in it”, said Clayton.


FINSUM: Clearinghouses might see some changes, but otherwise Clayton seems fairly adamant that Dodd-Frank is staying put.

Published in Wealth Management

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