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Thanks to the overhaul rules that have been put in place, that possibility is less likely, but "I wouldn't be saying the truth if I said that the problem is gone. It is not gone," Bernanke said. Bernanke and Lew pointed to new "tools" regulators have gained under the rules that reduce the possibility of big financial firms toppling and requiring federal bailouts. They include the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.'s authority to step in to dismantle large failing firms. Lew said that speeding up writing rules for the overhaul law has been a high priority for him since becoming Treasury secretary in February. He heads the Financial Stability Oversight Council, a group of top regulators charged with monitoring risks to the financial system. "An awful lot of work has been done. An awful lot of work remains," Lew said. He noted that in recent weeks the bank regulators increased the capital all large banks must hold as a cushion against risk and moved toward making eight of the largest U.S. banks meet a stricter measure of financial health. The "core elements" of the overhaul law will be largely in place by the end of the year, Lew said. He said it was especially important for regulators to finalize the so-called Volcker Rule, which would prohibit banks from trading for their own profit. The latest version of the rule, named after former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, includes an exemption for banks to make such trades when they are used to "hedge," or offset, other risks the bank is taking. Adoption of the rule has been delayed largely because of the banks' objections.
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