AIG Redux: Wall Street Presses Regulators To Repeal New Derivatives RulesZach Cater Campaign for Americas Future Guest Blog
It's been pretty well-documented that the ultimate fate of Wall Street reform will depend on a series of highly technical proceedings at federal regulatory agencies. If regulators adopt tough new rules, the financial overhaul could succeed well beyond the expectations of optimistic reformers. But there is a very real danger that banks will be able to roll regulators during these quiet and technical affairs, without any real public oversight. One of the most important areas to watch are the rules surrounding derivatives—the shadowy market that brought down AIG. The battle is already under way, and the bank lobby isn't pulling its punches.
Wall Street reform basically did two things unquestionably well. It created a new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to curb bank abuses, and it reined in the derivatives market, which is currently a hotbed for fraud, abuse and systemic risk. There are dozens of smaller-bore accomplishments in the Dodd-Frank bill, but derivatives and the CFPB are the two major wins.
Take a look at this 7-page letter from The American Bankers Association—the bank lobby—and this 10-page letter from the International Swaps and Derivatives Association (ISDA)—another Wall Street lobby group. See if you can spot where they regulators to completely erase the legislative progress on derivatives.
You probably can't-- unless you're a bank lobbyist, a finance lawyer or a nerdy blogger. And the bank lobby loves it that way, because there are only a few nerdy bloggers out there, even fewer financially literate mainstream reporters, and hundreds and hundreds of bank lobbyists. Here are the critical passages from page 6 of the ISDA letter, and page 4 of the ABA letter. I'll explain why it's so destructive below. ISDA:
Financial" risks are "commercial risks." The dictionary definition of "commercial" is "of, pertaining to, or characteristic of commerce." The term "commercial risk" should be defined against this background.
ABA:
It is very important for our members that the term "commercial risk" be interpreted broadly enough to include financial risk for depository institutions.
In the years leading up to the financial crash of 2008, banks could trade complex derivatives completely in the dark. If Goldman Sachs wanted to make a deal with AIG, all they had to do was make a phone call (or just as frequently, type out an AOL instant message). No government regulator looked at this trade, and nobody in the market evaluated whether either party could possibly make good on it. .............(more)
The complete piece is at:
http://www.banksterusa.org/content/aig-redux-wall-street-presses-regulators-repeal-new-derivatives-rules