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						U.S. banks gear up to 
						fight Dodd-Frank Act's Volcker rule 
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		 [January 04, 2017] 
		By Olivia Oran 
 (Reuters) -
		 
		Big 
		U.S. banks are set on getting Congress this year to loosen or eliminate 
		the Volcker rule against using depositors' funds for speculative bets on 
		the bank's own account, a test case of whether Wall Street can flex its 
		muscle in Washington again.
 
 In interviews over the past several weeks, half a dozen industry 
		lobbyists said they began meeting with legislative staff after the U.S. 
		election in November to discuss matters including a rollback of Volcker, 
		part of the Dodd-Frank financial reform that Congress enacted after the 
		financial crisis and bank bailouts.
 
 Lobbyists said they plan to present evidence to congressional leaders 
		that the Volcker rule is actually bad for companies, investors and the 
		U.S. economy.
 
 Big banks have been making such arguments for years, but the industry's 
		influence waned significantly in Washington after the financial crisis. 
		The Obama administration's regulators and enforcement agencies have been 
		tough on banks, while lawmakers from both parties have seized 
		opportunities to slam Wall Street to score political points.
 
 Banks now see opportunities to unravel reforms under President-Elect 
		Donald Trump's administration and the incoming Republican-led Congress, 
		which appear more business-friendly, lobbyists said.
 
		
		 
		While an outright repeal of the Volcker rule may not be possible, small 
		but meaningful changes tucked into other legislation would still be a 
		big win, they said.
 "I don't think there will be a big, ambitious rollback," said one 
		big-bank lobbyist who was not authorized to discuss strategy publicly. 
		"There will be four years of regulatory evolution."
 
 Proponents of the Volcker rule say lenders that benefit from government 
		support like deposit insurance should not be gambling with their balance 
		sheets. They also argue such proprietary bets worsened the crisis and 
		drove greedy, unethical behavior across Wall Street.
 
 Bankers intend to counter that proprietary trading had little to do with 
		the root causes of the crisis. They say Volcker is inherently flawed 
		because it can be challenging to tell whether a trader is speculating or 
		filling customer demand.
 
 As the industry begins a fresh lobbying push, watchdogs say they are 
		worried about big banks going back to a casino-like past.
 
 "Wall Street is salivating at their reversal of fortune,” said Dennis 
		Kelleher, CEO of Better Markets, which pushes for tighter financial 
		regulation. “If you get to keep profits and stick taxpayers with the 
		losses, why not?"
 
		
		 
			
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			A statue of George Washington stands across from the New York Stock 
			Exchange in Manhattan, New York City, U.S., December 21, 2016. 
			REUTERS/Andrew Kelly 
            
			 
Changing the rule through Congress would require 60 votes in the Senate, 
including support from at least eight Democrats. Lobbyists say they intend to 
court business-friendly Democrats like Joe Manchin in West Virginia, Heidi 
Heitkamp in North Dakota, Joe Donnelly in Indiana, Jon Tester in Montana, and 
possibly Angus King in Maine.
 However, Senators on the left like Elizabeth Warren in Massachusetts and Bernie 
Sanders in Vermont, loud and frequent critics of Wall Street, could pressure 
anyone who supports a law that helps big banks.
 
 “It's dangerous to consider any effort to modify or repeal Volcker in isolation 
of a larger package of banking reforms,” said Mark Chorazak, who specializes in 
financial regulation at law firm Simpson Thatcher & Bartlett LLP. “Even if there 
is strong support to amend, it may take a lot of time to play out.”
 
In 
particular, banks want to reverse language in the final Volcker rule that 
assumes all trades are proprietary unless banks can prove otherwise, lobbying 
sources said.
 Banks also want to clarify language that instructs them to hold only enough 
securities to satisfy "reasonably expected near-term demand" from customers.
 
 In making arguments to roll back the rule, bankers and lobbyists plan to avoid 
talk of industry profits. Instead, they intend to lean on the idea that Volcker 
is reducing market liquidity, thereby hurting companies, investors and the 
economy.
 
 As Tom Quaadman, executive vice president at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's 
Center for Capital Markets Competitiveness, put it in an interview, Volcker 
needs to change "so businesses can get started, grow, and create well-paying 
jobs."
 
 (Reporting by Olivia Oran in New York; Editing by Lauren Tara LaCapra and David 
Gregorio)
 
				 
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