Congressional watchdog expands probe of
lax Wall Street oversight
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[June 29, 2016]
By Jonathan Spicer
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A U.S. congressional
watchdog said on Tuesday it has formally added three agencies to its
investigation into whether government regulators are too soft on the
banks they are meant to police.
In March, Reuters exclusively reported that the Government
Accountability Office (GAO) was preparing a probe of the U.S.
Federal Reserve and other to-be-determined regulators, in response
to a request by Democratic U.S. Representatives Maxine Waters and Al
Green for it to look into "regulatory capture."
The review, requested last October, is the first by an outside
agency into the perception that financial regulators are "captured"
by and too deferential toward the bankers they supervise, so that
Wall Street benefits at the public's expense.
Lawrance Evans, director of the GAO's financial markets and
community investment division, said in an email on Tuesday that the
probe would include the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(FDIC), the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) and the
National Credit Union Administration (NCUA). The GAO will also look
back at work by the Office of Thrift Supervision, which merged with
the OCC in 2011, and regulates savings and loan institutions.
Evans said the investigation is technically separate from the probe
of the Fed, "but it is indeed part of the work we are doing in
response to the Waters/Green request."
The FDIC declined to comment. Representatives from the OCC and NCUA
were not immediately available to comment.
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A Wall Street sign is seen in Lower Manhattan in New York, January
20, 2016. REUTERS/Mike Segar
Perceptions of regulatory capture have dogged the U.S. central bank
and other regulators since they failed to head off the 2007-2009
financial crisis that sparked a global recession.
(Reporting by Jonathan Spicer; Editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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