TPMDC
Volcker

Barack Obama

Obama Administration Walks Volcker Rule Tightrope


President Barack Obama

The Obama administration will likely tighten rules to prevent federally insured banks from speculating with their money after financial giant JP Morgan lost billions of dollars -- and continues to hemorrhage -- on a risky bet intended to pad the firm's profits.

The acknowledgment by a senior administration official Monday threatens to reopen a protracted fight between Wall Street allies and the White House over imposing new rules on big financial companies in the wake of the 2008 crisis.

The administration hasn't specified any particular steps it would like regulators to take to shore up the so-called Volcker Rule -- a bid perhaps to avoid an ugly public fight with powerful interests in an election year. But inaction -- or a too-tepid response to JP Morgan's losses -- will hurt President Obama with key allies, who want to use the debacle to further rein in Wall Street.

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Topics: Barack Obama, Carl Levin, Chamber of Commerce, Jeff Merkley , Tom Donohue, Volcker, Volcker Rule, White House

Financial Reform

Obama Administration Sided With Scott Brown On Wall Street Bill Loophole


President Obama and State Sen. Scott Brown (R-MA)

As the final Wall Street negotiations came to a close last week, the Obama administration quietly sided with Sen. Scott Brown (R-MA) against most Democrats in support of a loophole in one of the key provisions of the financial reform bill.

Several Democratic Hill aides tell TPMDC that the Treasury Department, which wielded tremendous influence over the shape of the legislation, changed its position on the Volcker rule during the final deliberations, endorsing an exemption that will allow banks to invest in outside hedge funds.

"Treasury's official position went from opposed to [the loophole] to supportive," one aide says. "They may have [even] overshot Brown's desires by a bit."

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Topics: Barney Frank, Carl Levin, Chris Dodd, Financial Reform, Jeff Merkley , Paul Volcker, Scott Brown, Treasury, Volcker, Volcker Rule, Wall Street, White House

Blanche Lincoln

Dems Fight Each Other Over Major Wall Street Reform Measures


Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) and Senator Blanche Lincoln (D-AR)

They're close to a deal, they're not close to a deal, they're talking, they're not talking.

The final Wall Street reform negotiations have been beset by delays as key members hash out compromises on the two outstanding (and deeply consequential) aspects of financial regulatory reform.

First there's the so-called Volcker rule. Then there's the question of derivative regulations. The more difficult fight is over the latter, so let's deal with it first.

House Democrats with close ties to big banks have threatened to bolt from the whole bill over proposed new derivatives rules in the Senate bill. If passed they would require major financial firms to dissociate from their derivative trading desks. Certain New Democrats and members of the New York delegation wants that particular measure scrapped. That sounds complicated, but the basic idea is to forbid federally insured firms from taking the sorts of risky gambles that could cause them to collapse.

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Topics: Blanche Lincoln, Bob Corker, Democrats, Derivatives , Nancy Pelosi, New Democrats, Paul Volcker, Volcker, Volcker Rule, Wall Street

Wall Street

Wall Street's Big Day: House And Senate Weigh Gutting Key Financial Reform Proposals


Sen. Chris Dodd (D-CT) and Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA)

Today is a pivotal day for Wall Street. Billions of dollars and a tremendous amount of risky trading are on the line in what are perhaps the final hours of negotiations over financial reform.

House and Senate conferees will soon determine whether two of the most important pieces of the legislation are as robust as reformers say they need to be, or whether big banks and other industries prevail in their push for loopholes, carve outs, and other exemptions.

Yesterday, House participants in the conference committee laid down an offer--a package of proposed tweaks--to the far-reaching section of the Senate bill dealing with derivative regulations. They seek a host of goodies for end-users (businesses and industries that trade in derivatives to hedge their risk) who want to be exempt from new transparency rules. But they don't propose any changes to the most controversial part of the bill: a provision, authored by Sen. Blanche Lincoln (D-AR) that would require mega-financial firms to break off their derivatives trading desks, and house them in affiliated businesses, where they won't be federally insured against failure.

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Topics: Blanche Lincoln, Carl Levin, Derivatives , Financial Reform, Jeff Merkley , Paul Volcker, Scott Brown, Volcker, Volcker Rule, Wall Street

Financial Reform

Scott Brown Winning Fight For Loophole In Volcker Rule


Sen. Scott Brown (R-MA)

In the battle between Scott Brown and Russ Feingold over financial reform, Scott Brown appears to be winning.

Senate staffers tonight are hammering out the shape of the so-called Volcker rule, which would limit insured financial firms' ability to take speculative bets with their capital, or prohibit it altogether.

Brown for weeks has been seeking a carveout in the legislation--originally authored by Sens. Carl Levin (D-MI) and Jeff Merkley (D-OR)--that would allow banks to invest a portion of their profits in hedge and private equity funds. And as the 60th vote for financial reform, his demands carry a lot of weight. Enter Feingold, who opposed financial reform from the left. After discussions with, and public pressure from, pro-reform groups, Feingold has toyed with the idea of changing his vote from 'no' to 'yes', becoming the new 60th vote and robbing Brown of his leverage--if the Volcker rule survived loophole free.

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Topics: Add category, Financial Reform, Russ Feingold, Scott Brown, Volcker, Volcker Rule, Wall Street

Wall Street

Levin Presses Dems To Buck Big Bank Push For Wall Street Reform Loophole


Sen. Carl Levin (D-MI)

In a last-ditch effort to block Wall Street lobbyists from securing another major loophole in financial reform legislation, one of the authors of the so-called Volcker rule is publicly and privately pressuring top negotiators to buck the banks and keep the proposed new rules as strict as possible. He's also casting doubt on those who say the bill won't pass if they don't do as the bankers say.

"There's people [on the conference committee] who favor it," Sen. Carl Levin (D-MI) told TPMDC yesterday evening in a brief interview. "I hope they're not going to accept it."

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Topics: Carl Levin, Financial Reform, Jeff Merkley , Paul Volcker, Scott Brown, Volcker, Volcker Rule, Wall Street

Russ Feingold

Wall Street Reform Backers Seek Feingold's Support


Russ Feingold

Progressive backers of financial reform are pushing Sen. Russ Feingold (D-WI) to reconsider his protest vote against imposing tougher rules on Wall Street.

Feingold opposed the Senate's regulatory reform bill because in his view, by lacking provisions that explicitly limit the size of major financial institutions, it didn't go far enough. But with House and Senate negotiators now ironing out the differences between their two bills, progressives see an opportunity to strengthen the final legislation...if only Feingold considers changing his vote.

Americans for Financial Reform and the Progressive Change Campaign Committee are separately pushing Feingold to reconsider his vote provided two key provisions, strengthening the bill survives. PCCC members are petitioning Feingold to say that he'll vote yes, if and only if tough derivatives regulations remain in the legislation, and negotiators add a strong version of the so-called Volcker rule to the bill.

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Topics: Financial Reform, PCCC, Russ Feingold, Scott Brown, Volcker, Volcker Rule

Blanche Lincoln

Down To The Wire: Democratic Leaders Scramble To Keep Financial Reform From Unraveling


Sen. Chris Dodd (D-CT)

What had been a fairly non-contentious debate over Wall Street reform legislation nearly came off the rails on Tuesday after Republicans--tacitly backed (or at least unimpeded) by top Democrats--used Senate rules to block votes on far-reaching, consumer-friendly amendments, portending a potential progressive revolt.

This afternoon at 2 pm, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid will attempt to bring debate on the financial reform bill to a close, though it remains unclear whether he has the 60 votes he'll need to prevail.

A big reason for that? A number of Democrats--most vocally, Sen. Byron Dorgan (D-ND)--have threatened to vote against ending debate until their flagship amendments get a vote on the floor. But Republicans are standing in the way, saying they'll filibuster those amendments, subjecting each to a 60 vote requirement, and, more importantly, several days' worth of delay. Faced with a choice between picking a fight with Republicans over those amendments and simply moving ahead with the bill, Democratic leadership has, for now, chosen the latter.

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Topics: Blanche Lincoln, Byron Dorgan, Carl Levin, Chris Dodd, Chuck Grassley, Democrats, Derivatives , Filibuster, Financial Reform, George Voinovich, Harry Reid, Jeff Merkley , Maria Cantwell, Olympia Snowe, Republicans, Susan Collins, Volcker, Volcker Rule