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March 26, 2009
tg-72
Treasury Outlines Framework For Regulatory Reform
Provides new Rules of the Road, focuses first on containing systemic
risk
The crisis of the past 18 months has exposed critical gaps and weaknesses
in our financial regulatory system. As risks built up, internal risk management
systems, rating agencies and regulators simply did not understand or address
critical behaviors until they had already resulted in catastrophic losses.
These failures have caused a dramatic loss of confidence in our financial
institutions and have contributed to severe recession. Our financial system
failed to serve its historical purpose of helping families finance homes
and college educations for their children or of providing affordable capital
for entrepreneurs and innovators enabling them to turn new ideas into
jobs and growth that raise our living standards. The President's comprehensive
regulatory reform is aimed at reforming and modernizing our financial regulatory
system for the 21st century, providing stronger tools to prevent and manage
future crises, and rebuilding confidence in the basic integrity of our financial
system for sophisticated investors and working families with 401(k)s
alike.
As Secretary Geithner stated in his testimony today, "To address these failures
will require comprehensive reform -- not modest repairs at the margin, but
new rules of the road. The new rules must be simpler and more effectively
enforced and produce a more stable system, that protects consumers and investors,
that rewards innovation and that is able to adapt and evolve with changes
in the financial market."
Four Broad Components of Comprehensive Regulatory
Reform:
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Addressing Systemic
Risk: This crisis
and the cases of firms like Lehman Brothers and AIG has made
clear that certain large, interconnected firms and markets need to be under
a more consistent and more conservative regulatory regime. It is not enough
to address the potential insolvency of individual institutions we
must also ensure the stability of the system itself.
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Protecting Consumers and
Investors: It is crucial that when households make
choices to invest their savings we have clear rules of the road that prevent
manipulation and abuse. While outright fraud like that perpetrated by Bernie
Madoff is already illegal, these cases highlight the need to strengthen
enforcement and improve transparency for all investors. Lax regulation also
left too many households exposed to deception and abuse when taking out home
mortgage loans
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Eliminating Gaps in Our Regulatory
Structure: Our regulatory structure must assign
clear authority, resources, and accountability for each of its key
functions. We must not let turf wars or concerns about the shape of
organizational charts prevent us from establishing a substantive system of
regulation that meets the needs of the American people.
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Fostering International
Coordination: To keep pace with increasingly
global markets, we must ensure that international rules for financial regulation
are consistent with the high standards we will be implementing in the United
States. Additionally, we will launch a new, three-pronged initiative
to address prudential supervision, tax havens, and money laundering issues
in weakly-regulated jurisdictions.
Today A Focus on One of the Four Components of Regulatory
Reform: Systemic Risk: In the coming weeks, Secretary Geithner will
present detailed frameworks for each of these areas. Today, his testimony
focused on systemic risk both because financial stability is critical
to economic recovery and growth, and because systemic risk is expected to
be a primary focus for discussions at the G20 Leaders' Meeting in London
on April 2.
Addressing The First Component
of Regulatory Reform: Systemic Risk
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A Single Independent Regulator With Responsibility Over Systemically
Important Firms and Critical Payment and Settlement Systems
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Higher Standards on Capital and Risk Management for Systemically
Important Firms
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Registration of All Hedge Fund Advisers With Assets Under Management
Above a Moderate Threshold
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A Comprehensive Framework of Oversight, Protections and Disclosure
for the OTC Derivatives Market
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New Requirements for Money Market Funds to Reduce the Risk of Rapid
Withdrawals
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I. A Single Independent Regulator with
responsibility over Systemically Important Firms and Critical Payment and
Settlement Systems: While we strengthen
prudential oversight for all firms, we must also create higher standards
for all systemically important financial firms regardless of whether
they own a depository institution to account for the risk that the
distress or failure of such a firm could impose on the financial system and
the economy. We will work with Congress to enact legislation that defines
the characteristics of covered firms; sets objectives and principles for
their oversight; and assigns responsibility for regulating these firms.
1) Defining a Systemically Important Firm:In
identifying systemically important firms, we believe that the characteristics
should include:
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the financial system's interdependence with the firm;
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the firm's size, leverage (including off-balance sheet exposures), and degree
of reliance on short-term funding;
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the firm's importance as a source of credit for households, businesses, and
governments and as a source of liquidity for the financial system.
2) Focusing On What Companies Do, Not the Form They
Take:These institutions would not be limited to banks or bank holding
companies, but could include any financial institution that was deemed to
be systemically important in accordance with legislative requirements. These
provisions will focus on what companies do and their potential for systemic
risk and no longer on the form they take to determine who will
regulate them.
3) Clarifying Regulatory Authority Over Payment and Settlement
Activities:Federal authority for payment and settlement systems
is incomplete and fragmented. Weaknesses in key funding and risk transfer
markets, notably over-night and short term lending markets and OTC derivatives,
increased uncertainty as major institutions such as Bear Stearns neared failure.
This created a pathway for large financial institutions to spread financial
distress between institutions and across borders.
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While some progress was made in the markets for CDS and other OTC derivatives
under Secretary Geithner's leadership at the New York Fed, regulators have
been forced to rely heavily on moral suasion to encourage market participants
to strengthen these markets.
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We need to clarify and expand authority over these systems and activities,
giving a single entity the ability to supervise, examine, and set prudential
requirements for these critical parts of our financial
system.
II. Higher Standards on Capital and Risk Management for
Systemically Important Firms:
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Setting More Robust Capital Requirements:Capital requirements
for these firms must be more conservative than for other institutions and
be sufficiently robust to be effective in a wider range of deeply adverse
economic scenarios than is typically required.
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Imposing Stricter Liquidity, Counterparty and Credit Risk Management
Requirements:Supervisors will also need to impose liquidity,
counterparty, and credit risk management requirements that are more stringent
than for other financial firms. For instance, supervisors should
apply more demanding liquidity constraints; and require that these firms
are able to aggregate counter-party risk exposures on an enterprise-wide
basis within a matter of hours.
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Creating Prompt-Corrective Action Regime: The regulator of
these entities will also need a prompt-corrective action regime that would
allow the regulator to force protective actions as regulatory capital levels
decline, similar to the powers of the FDIC with respect to its covered agencies.
III. Requiring All Hedge Funds Above A Certain
Size to Register: U.S. law generally does not require hedge
funds or other private pools of capital to register with a federal financial
regulator, although some funds that trade commodity derivatives must register
with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and many funds register voluntarily
with the Securities and Exchange Commission. As a result, there are
no reliable, comprehensive data available to assess whether such funds
individually or collectively pose a threat to financial stability.
The Madoff episode is just one more reminder that, in order to protect investors,
we must close gaps and weaknesses in the regulation and enforcement of
broker-dealers, investment advisors and the funds they manage.
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Requiring Registration of All Hedge Funds: All advisers to
hedge funds (and other private pools of capital, including private equity
funds and venture capital funds) whose assets under management exceed a certain
threshold should be required to register with the SEC.
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Mandating Investor and Counterparty Disclosure: All such
funds advised by an SEC-registered investment adviser should be subject to
investor and counterparty disclosure requirements and regulatory reporting
requirements.
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Providing Information Necessary to Assess Threats to Financial
Stability:The regulatory reporting requirements for such funds should
require reporting, on a confidential basis, information necessary to assess
whether the fund or fund family is so large or highly leveraged that it poses
a threat to financial stability.
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Sharing Reports With Systemic Risk Regulator:The SEC should
share the reports that it receives from the funds with the systemic risk
regulator, which would then determine whether any hedge funds could pose
a systemic threat and should be subjected to the prudential standards outlined
above.
IV. A Comprehensive Framework of Oversight, Protection and
Disclosure for the OTC Derivatives Market:The current financial
crisis has been amplified by excessive risk-taking by certain insurance companies
and poor counterparty credit risk management by many banks trading Credit
Default Swaps on asset-backed securities. Neither counterparties to
these trades nor regulators identified the risk that these complex products
could threaten to bring down a company of the size and scope of AIG or the
stability of the entire financial system, in part because these markets lacked
transparency.
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Regulating Credit Default Swaps and Over-the-Counter Derivatives for
the First Time:In our proposed regulatory framework, the government
will regulate the markets for credit default swaps and over-the-counter
derivatives for the first time.
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Instituting a Strong Regulatory and Supervisory Regime:We
will subject all dealers in OTC derivative markets to a strong regulatory
and supervisory regime as systemically important firms.
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Clearing All Contracts Through Designated Central
Counterparties:We will force all standardized OTC derivative contracts
to be cleared through appropriately designed central counterparties (CCPs)
and encourage greater use of exchange traded instruments. These CCPs
will be subject to comprehensive settlement systems supervision and oversight,
consistent with the authority outlined above.
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Requiring Non-Standardized Derivatives to Be Subject to Robust
Standards: We will require that all non-standardized derivatives
contracts report to trade repositories and be subject to robust standards
for documentation and confirmation of trades; netting; collateral and margin
practices; and close-out practices.
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Making Aggregate Data on Trading Volumes and Positions
Available:Central counter-parties and trade repositories will be
required to make aggregate data on trading volumes and positions available
to the public and make individual counterparty trade and position data available
on a confidential basis to appropriate federal regulators.
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Applying Robust Eligibility Requirements to All Market
Participants:Finally, we will apply robust eligibility requirements
and, where appropriate, standards of care; and will require that they meet
recordkeeping and reporting requirements.
V. New Requirements for Money Market Funds to Reduce the Risk
of Rapid Withdrawals: In the wake of Lehman Brothers'
bankruptcy, we learned that even one of the most stable and least risky
investment vehicles money market mutual funds was not safe
from the failure of a systemically important institution. These funds
are subject to strict regulation by the SEC and are billed as having a stable
asset value a dollar invested will always return the same amount.
But when a major prime MMF "broke the buck," the event sparked a run on the
entire prime MMF industry. The run resulted in severe liquidity pressures,
not only on prime MMFs but also on financial and non-financial companies
that relied significantly on MMFs for funding. In response, we commit
to:
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Strengthening the Regulatory Framework Around Money Market
Funds:We believe that the SEC should strengthen the regulatory framework
around MMFs in order to reduce the credit and liquidity risk profile of
individual MMFs and to make the MMF industry as a whole less susceptible
to runs.
VI. A Stronger Resolution Authority to Protect
Against the Failure of Complex Institutions: We must create
a resolution regime that provides authority to avoid the disorderly liquidation
of any nonbank financial firm whose failure would have serious adverse effects
on the financial system or the U.S. economy. This authority should
include:
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Covering Financial Institutions That May Pose Systemic
Risks:We must cover financial institutions that have the potential
to pose systemic risks to our economy but that are not currently subject
to the resolution authority of the FDIC. This would include bank and thrift
holding companies and holding companies that control broker-dealers, insurance
companies, and futures commission merchants, or any other financial firm
that could pose substantial risk to our economy. This resolution authority
would be undertaken through the following process:
i. A Triggering Determination:Before any of the emergency
measures specified could be taken, the Secretary, upon the positive
recommendations of both the Federal Reserve Board and the FDIC and in
consultation with the President, would have to make a triggering determination
that (1) the financial institution in question is in danger of becoming
insolvent; (2) its insolvency would have serious adverse effects on economic
conditions or financial stability in the United States; and (3) taking emergency
action as provided for in the law would avoid or mitigate those adverse
effects.
ii. Choice Between Financial Assistance or
Conservatorship/Receivership:The Secretary and the FDIC would decide
whether to provide financial assistance to the institution or to put it into
conservatorship/receivership. This decision will be informed by the
recommendations of the Federal Reserve Board and the appropriate federal
regulatory agency (if different from the FDIC).
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Options for Financial Assistance: The U.S. government would
be permitted to utilize a number of different forms of financial assistance
in order to stabilize the institution in question. These include making loans
to the financial institution in question, purchasing its obligations or assets,
assuming or guaranteeing its liabilities, and purchasing an equity interest
in the institution.
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Options for Conservatorship/Receivership:Depending on the
circumstances, the FDIC and the Treasury would place the firm into
conservatorship with the aim of returning it to private hands or a receivership
that would manage the process of winding down the firm. The trustee of the
conservatorship or receivership would have broad powers, including to sell
or transfer the assets or liabilities of the institution in question, to
renegotiate or repudiate the institution's contracts (including with its
employees), and to deal with a derivatives book. A conservator would also
have the power to restructure the institution by, for example, replacing
its board of directors and its senior officers. None of these actions would
be subject to the approval of the institution's creditors or other
stakeholders.
iii. Taking Advantage of FDIC/FHFA Models:This authority
is modeled on the resolution authority that the FDIC has under current law
with respect to banks and that the Federal Housing Finance Agency has with
regard to the GSEs. Here, conservatorships or receiverships aim to
minimize the impact of the potential failure of the financial institution
on the financial system and consumers as a whole, rather than simply addressing
the rights of the institution's creditors as in bankruptcy.
2) Requiring Covered Institutions to Fund the Resolution
Authority: The proposed legislation would create an appropriate
mechanism to fund the limited exercise of these resolution authorities. This
could take the form of a mandatory appropriation to the FDIC out of the general
fund of the Treasury and/or through a scheme of assessments, ex ante or ex
post, on the financial institutions covered by the legislation. The government
would also receive repayment from the redemption of any loans made to the
financial institution in question, and from the ultimate sale of any equity
interest taken by the government in the institution. The Deposit Insurance
Fund will not be used to fund such assistance. |
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