U.S. financial council
reimagined as boon, not bane, for Wall Street
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[May 24, 2017]
By Pete Schroeder and Lisa Lambert
WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - The Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC), which
brings together all U.S. financial watchdogs, used to be the scourge of
Wall Street but under Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin it can serve to
ease its regulatory burdens.
President Donald Trump has pledged to roll back legislation he believes
stymies economic growth, but opposition in the U.S. Senate makes it hard
for Mnuchin to tear up existing rules.
However, he can make it easier for banks to trade, invest and return
capital to shareholders by changing how the laws are interpreted and
enforced. Created by the 2010 Dodd-Frank reform to better identify
emerging threats to the financial system, the council offers Mnuchin as
its chairman a forum to hammer out a consensus about how rules are
applied.
"FSOC's ability to prod regulators to do something they aren't otherwise
doing can be incredibly powerful," said Dennis Kelleher, president and
CEO of the Wall Street reform group Better Markets.
Using FSOC as a vehicle to promote deregulation is a volte-face for the
council, which under President Barack Obama was a byword for tough
financial oversight.
Mnuchin has already used a recent gathering of the council to kickstart
an examination of the Volcker rule, which prevents banks from making
speculative bets with their own capital.
"He has that forum, and it's clear that he's starting to use it," said
Ian Katz, financial policy analyst at research firm Capital Alpha.
Mnuchin has said he supports the Volcker rule in principle, but would
seek its clarification.
That in itself can serve to lighten the regulatory burden by reworking
the definition of "proprietary trading," or holding banks to a less
rigorous standard in terms of proving compliance with it. The five
agencies in charge of implementing the rule are all represented on FSOC,
providing Mnuchin with a forum to hammer out a common interpretation.
Wall Street has criticized the rule as unworkable, arguing it was
impossible for banks to determine when a trade is purely for profit as
opposed to creating market liquidity.
A spokeswoman for Treasury declined to comment but pointed to Mnuchin's
interview with the Financial Times last month in which he said: “I
intend to use FSOC as a very important tool as part of the
administration’s policies.”
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Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin addresses Chamber of Commerce
"Invest in America!" summit in Washington U.S., May 18, 2017.
REUTERS/Mary F. Calvert
COMMON INTERPRETATIONS
Mnuchin can also have the Council take another look at rules requiring banks to
retain some risk when they securitize loans or get bank regulators to revisit
existing capital rules that the industry has long insisted are too restrictive,
banking lobbyists say.
The significance of FSOC’s focus will grow once Trump has appointed new heads of
the individual agencies. His picks are already in place at the helm of the
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission, and he is expected to name new bosses for other key bank regulators
later this year.
Mnuchin cannot force regulators to change or rewrite rules, but will have ways
of cajoling potential dissenters.
For example, all FSOC members are required to sign off on an annual report
identifying potential problems facing the financial system. Those who refuse to
do it are required to publicly explain their position and so far no one has
dissented.
Another, more acute power available to Mnuchin is frequently called "naming and
shaming." The Dodd-Frank law gives the FSOC the power to identify a specific
threat to the financial system, and direct the primary regulator on that issue
to address it.
That regulator then must either enact the FSOC-recommended course of action
within 90 days, or explain in writing why it did not. The mechanism, designed to
eliminate any blind spots in financial oversight, has only been used once
before, to spur the SEC to complete its long-stalled work on money market fund
rules in 2013.
In the context of easing rather than tightening regulation, such a strategy
could be applied, for example, to rules that can affect market liquidity, which
in turn could be deemed a risk.
Past FSOC participants warn that such heavy-handed tactics would only be used
sparingly.
"It’s going to be used judiciously. No one really wants to call out another
agency," said Nellie Liang, who headed the Federal Reserve's Division of
Financial Stability until her retirement in 2016.
(Editing by Carmel Crimmins and Tomasz Janowski)
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