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Regulatory efforts in the Senate were moving at a slower pace. Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd, after introducing a draft piece of legislation before Thanksgiving that was panned by Republicans, has asked Democrats and Republicans on his committee to split up into issue-based groups to work out compromises. While Dodd, a Connecticut Democrat, initially aimed to have the legislation clear his committee this month, that could slip into next year. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner was scheduled to testify before the Senate Agriculture Committee on Wednesday on proposals to regulate derivatives. The issue is difficult because the administration has asked for banks and hedge funds to trade these previously unregulated instruments on regulated exchanges. A coalition of companies that use derivatives to hedge risk
-- not speculate -- have argued for exemptions. Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., who is taking the lead on derivatives on the Senate banking panel, said he doesn't believe in spelling out a series of exceptions in the legislation. He said regulators
-- the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission
-- should decide who is exempt. "The concern is that if you start carving things out legislatively, then you'll find that the exceptions swallow the rules," he said. ___ On the Net: House Financial Services Committee:
http://financialservices.house.gov/
[Associated
Press;
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