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The contracts that Geithner carved out account for about $30 trillion of the $600 trillion global market for over-the-counter derivatives, Treasury said. The new, tougher rules will apply to currency swaps, options and other contracts used for similar purposes. Multinational corporations such as Cargill and 3M argued for the exemption. They said the new rules would have raised their costs, thereby limiting their ability to grow and create jobs. Advocates of tighter regulation say closer oversight is needed at each stage of the process
-- before, during and after a trade. They say the exemptions will make some types of trades harder to oversee. Michael Greenberger, a former official with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which is responsible for policing much of the derivatives market, disputed Treasury's main defense of the exemption
-- that the contracts expire so fast that they don't pose serious risks to the financial system. "Within the next 60 months, there will be a systemic break in this market, said Greenberger, now a law professor at the University of Maryland. The decision technically is a proposal. Treasury will accept public comments for 30 days before finalizing the exemption.
[Associated
Press;
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