Wall Street crackdown, consumer guards, on the way

http://www.detnews.com/article/20100715/BIZ/7150445

Jim Kuhnhenn / Associated Press
Washington -- Congress on Thursday passed the stiffest restrictions on
banks and Wall Street since the Great Depression, clamping down on
lending practices and expanding consumer protections to prevent a
repeat of the 2008 meltdown that knocked the economy to its knees.

A year in the making and 22 months after the collapse of Lehman
Brothers triggered a worldwide panic in credit and other markets, the
bill cleared its final hurdle with a 60-39 Senate vote and goes to the
White House for President Barack Obama's signature.

The law will give the government new powers to break up companies that
threaten the economy, create a new agency to guard consumers in their
financial transactions and shine a light into shadow financial markets
that escaped the oversight of regulators.

Large, failing financial institutions would be liquidated and the
costs assessed on their surviving peers. The Federal Reserve is
getting new powers while falling under greater congressional scrutiny.

>From storefront payday lenders to the biggest banking and investment
houses on Wall Street, few players in the financial world are immune
to the bill's reach. Consumer and investor transactions, whether
simple debit card swipes or the most complex securities trades, face
new safeguards or restrictions.

"When this earthquake hit, there wasn't nearly enough oversight,
transparency or accountability to shield us from the fallout," Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid said. "This law will strengthen all three."

Republicans said it is a vast federal overreach that will drive
financial-sector jobs overseas.

At a thud-inducing 2,300 pages, the legislation doesn't offer a quick
remedy, however. Rather, it lays down prescriptions for regulators to
act. In many cases, the real impact won't be felt for years.

The Senate's final passage of the bill, two weeks after the House
approved it, is a welcome achievement for a president and
congressional Democrats, both increasingly unpopular with voters four
months from midterm elections that threaten to put Republicans in
charge of Congress. Only three Republicans voted for it -- Maine Sens.
Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins, and Massachusetts Sen. Scott Brown.
Democratic Sen. Russ Feingold of Wisconsin, who has said the bill is
not tough enough, voted with most Republicans against it.

The law has been a priority for Obama, ranking just behind his health
car overhaul enacted in March. In its final form, the package hews
closely to the plan unwrapped a year ago by the White House and in
some ways is even tougher. White House spokesman Robert Gibbs promptly
cast the vote in political terms for a highly competitive midterm
election.

"This will be a vote that Democrats will talk about through November
as a way of highlighting the choice that people will get to make in
2010," he said.

The political benefits, however, stand to be overshadowed by lingering
high unemployment. And Republicans were betting that public antipathy
toward big government and worries over jobs would trump their anger at
Wall Street.

"We're going to be driving jobs and business overseas with this
massive piece of legislation," said Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga.

Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala., who worked with Dodd on certain aspects
of the bill, denounced it as a "legislative monster."

Named after Connecticut Sen. Christopher Dodd and Massachusetts Rep.
Barney Frank, the Democratic committee chairmen who steered it to
passage, the legislation ends a trend to ease regulations that peaked
in 1999 with the elimination of Depression-era walls separating
commercial banking from riskier investment banking.

And though it calls for the biggest changes in generations, it does
not approach the scope of the New Deal banking rules enacted under
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. That era saw the creation of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., to protect consumer deposits, and the
Securities and Exchange Commission to oversee the markets.

The Dodd-Frank bill's major creation is a Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau. The agency will have power to write and enforce new
regulations covering lending and other consumer transactions.

Lenders face new restrictions on the type of mortgages they write and
could not be rewarded for steering borrowers to higher cost loans.
Borrowers also will have to provide evidence that they can repay their
loans, thus halting the no-document loans that had flooded the
markets.

The vote Thursday capped a year of partisan struggles and cross-party
courtship. Any remaining uncertainty about the bill's fate vanished
earlier this week when it became clear three Republican senators would
vote for it, thus assuring 60 votes to overcome procedural obstacles.

Industry lobbyists fought against a number of restrictions in the
bill, ultimately winning some concessions. In the end, the final bill
was tougher than they wanted but not as restrictive as they feared.

"Core elements of the bill will contribute to a stronger, more secure
financial system," Steve Bartlett, president of the Financial Services
Roundtable, a banking group, said in a speech Thursday. "Some items in
the legislation we did not support and we expressed our views
accordingly. Nevertheless, we are committed to making those items work
as well as possible."

The American Bankers Association was not as conciliatory.

"The result will be over 5,000 pages of new regulations on traditional
banks and years of uncertainty as to what the massive new rules will
mean," said Edward Yingling, president and CEO of the group.

Republican opponents also criticized the bill for not addressing
mortgage financing giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, whose
questionable lending helped start a collapse in the housing market.

Some supporters of the bill also voiced reservations, claiming the
bill did not give regulators specific direction on how to implement
and enforce new rules.

"Congress largely has decided instead to punt decisions to the
regulators, saddling them with a mountain of rule-makings and
studies," said Sen. Ted Kaufman, D-Del. ( Kaufman on the Bill Press
radio show said that five Wall Street firms "are" 60 % of GDP; did I
miss hear him - CB)

For all its ambition and reach, the legislation is dotted with exceptions.

Community banks won't have to be examined by the new consumer bureau
and would get a break on higher insurance premiums. Despite calls to
end proprietary trading by large banks, the law will let them put up
to 3 percent of their capital in hedge funds or private equity funds.
Auto dealers won't be covered by the rules of the consumer bureau.

"It is not a perfect bill, I will be the first to admit that," Dodd
said. "It will take the next economic crisis, as certainly it will
come, to determine whether or not the provisions of this bill will
actually provide this generation or the next generation of regulators
with the tools necessary to minimize the effects of that crisis."



>From The Detroit News:
http://www.detnews.com/article/20100715/BIZ/7150445#ixzz0u9HobWFi
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