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"You can't fire the chairman of the Federal Reserve," said Kanjorski, who thinks the role of risk regulator should be given to the Treasury Department. Michael Feroli, an economist at JPMorgan Economics, agreed: "The more the Fed leadership has to deal with, the less time it has to focus on any single issue." The Fed had no official comment on the administration's proposals as laid out Monday by Geithner and Summers. Many analysts agree that a potent regulator is needed to make sure institutions don't take the kinds of risks that last year ended up imperiling the banking system. When American International Group stood on the brink of collapse last year, for example, the Fed had to rescue it for fear AIG's failure would devastate the economy. AIG's undoing was an unregulated unit that made disastrous bets on mortgage-backed securities and mismanaged credit default swaps
-- a form of insurance against bond defaults. With a systemwide risk regulator, the idea is that such problems could be spotted beforehand. Safety nets
-- like stiff capital requirements to protect against future losses -- would be imposed. It's unclear whether the Fed would have to hire additional banking examiners or other specialists to carry out its supercop duties. And it's not known how much other agencies would share information about companies or products. Partly out of fear of concentrating too much policing power in the Fed, a council of regulators would work with the Fed to supervise "too-big-to-fail companies." Sheila Bair, head of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., and Mary Schapiro, chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission, favor this idea. Even if the Fed's powers were expanded, history suggests it might be impossible to spot the next financial bubble
-- whether in housing, the stock market or elsewhere -- before it forms. "A strong systemic risk regulator is important," said Terry Connelly, dean of Golden Gate University's Ageno School of Business in San Francisco. "But you probably won't catch everything."
[Associated
Press;
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