Administration unveils financial system overhaul
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER, AP Economics Writer Martin Crutsinger, Ap Economics 
Writer 
 
WASHINGTON – The Obama administration on
 Thursday unveiled a sweeping overhaul of the 
financial system designed to impose greater
 regulation on major players like hedge funds.
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner told lawmakers 
that the changes are needed to fix the flaws exposed by
 the current financial crisis, the worst to hit the country
 in seven decades.
The goal is to repair a system that has proven
 "too unstable and fragile," he said.
"Over the past 18 months, we have faced the most
 severe global financial crisis in generations," Geithner 
said in testimony to the House Financial Services Committee. 
"To address this will require comprehensive reform. Not 
modest repairs at the margin, but new rules of the game."
The administration's proposal, which will require congressional 
approval, would represent a major expansion of federal 
authority over the financial system. It would impose tougher 
standards on financial institutions judged to be so big that their
 failure would represent a risk to the entire system.
It also would extend federal regulations for the first time to
 all trading in financial derivatives, exotic financial instruments
 such as credit default swaps that were blamed for much of the
 damage in the meltdown.
The administration also wants larger hedge funds to be required 
to register with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
In addition, the administration proposed the creation of a systemic
 risk regulator to monitor the biggest institutions. Geithner did not 
designate where such authority should reside, but the administration
 is expected to support awarding this power to the Federal Reserve.
The plan also includes a measure that Geithner and Fed Chairman 
Ben Bernanke discussed before the committee on Tuesday to give the 
administration expanded powers to take over major nonbank financial
 institutions, such as insurance companies and hedge funds that were 
teetering on the brink of collapse.
That power was aimed at preventing a repeat of the problems surrounding
 insurance giant American International Group Inc., which sparked a furor
 last week when it was revealed the company had distributed $165 million 
in bonuses to employees of its financial products group. The unit specialized 
in trading credit default swaps, the instruments that drove the company to 
near-collapse last fall.
"Let me be clear," Geithner told the committee. "The days when a major 
insurance company could bet the house on credit default swaps with no 
one watching and no credible backing to protect the company or taxpayers must 
end."
The administration, pushing for quick action on its reform agenda, sent 
Congress a 61-page bill dealing with the expanded powers to seize control 
of nonbank institutions late Wednesday.
The House committee, chaired by Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., has
 indicated it could move on the measure as early as next week.
However, it was unclear how fast the rest of the financial reform agenda
 might move through Congress. Geithner on Thursday provided only a
 broad outline of the other proposals. Many thorny details will need to 
be worked out.
Administration officials promised that the remaining issues would be 
hammered out in consultation with Congress with the goal of getting 
legislation approved as quickly as possible.
The administration wants hedge funds and other private pools of capital,
 including private equity funds and venture capital funds, to be required 
to register with the SEC if their assets exceed a certain size. The 
threshold amount has yet to be determined.
The proposal on credit default swaps and other derivatives would require
 the markets on which they are traded to be regulated for the first time,
 and for the buying and selling of these instruments to be conducted in 
ways that will foster greater oversight.
Credit default swaps, which trade in a $60 trillion global market 
without government oversight, are contracts to insure against the 
default of financial instruments like bonds and corporate debt. They
 played a prominent role in the credit crisis that brought the downfall
 of investment banking giant Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. last fall 
and nearly unraveled AIG, forcing the government to provide more than 
$180 billion in support. 
Hedge funds, vast pools of capital holding an estimated $1.5 trillion in 
assets, operate mostly outside of government supervision. As the market 
crisis deepened last fall, hedge fund selling was widely cited as one of the 
reasons for increased volatility that pounded stocks and bonds. Hedge 
funds also suffered huge losses last year, notably from investments in 
securities tied to subprime mortgages. 
The outline of the regulatory reform was unveiled a week before President
 Barack Obama is scheduled to meet for discussions among the Group 
of 20 major industrialized and developing countries in London to assess
 what needs to be done to deal with the global financial crisis. 
While the administration is pushing other nations to follow the U.S. lead
 in putting together sizable economic stimulus programs to jump-start 
global growth, many in Europe are resisting those calls and arguing that 
the U.S. needs to do more to toughen financial regulations. They believe 
the current troubles can be traced to lax regulation in the U.S. over such 
key areas as hedge funds and credit default swaps. 
Requiring hedge funds to register would open their books to inspection 
by regulators. The SEC sought that authority several years ago but was
 stymied by a federal appeals court in 2006. 
Hedge funds have grown explosively in recent years while operating 
secretively. They have lured an increasing number of ordinary investors,
 pension funds and university endowments — meaning millions of people
 now unwittingly invest in hedge funds indirectly.

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