U.S. Treasury outlines sweeping reform of
capital markets
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[October 07, 2017]
By Michelle Price and Pete Schroeder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Treasury on
Friday unveiled a blueprint for sweeping reforms of the U.S. capital
markets as it looks to implement Republican President Donald Trump’s
agenda to promote economic growth by slashing red tape.
The report recommends a raft of measures to encourage companies to seek
public listings, to promote company access to capital, and to give
investors a wider array of investment opportunities, in what is likely
to be a boon for small business, banks, brokers and crowd-funding
platforms.
It also called for regulators to put U.S. interests first when engaging
in international regulatory forums.
"The U.S. has experienced slow economic growth for far too long," said
Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin.
"By streamlining the regulatory system, we can make the U.S. capital
markets a true source of economic growth which will harness American
ingenuity and allow small businesses to grow."
The 232-page report largely steers clear of proposing legislative
changes that would have to be passed by a divided Congress, instead
focusing on tweaks that could be made relatively quickly by the
country's two markets regulators, which are both led by Trump
appointees.
Christopher Giancarlo, chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission (CFTC) and Jay Clayton, chairman of the Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC), said in statements on Friday they had
provided extensive input to the "thoughtful" report and supported its
recommendations.
Friday’s report is the second of four expected from the Treasury as it
completes a comprehensive review of existing financial rules, as
mandated by an executive order President Donald Trump signed in
February.
The first report, released in June, sought to promote lending by easing
banking regulations outlined under the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act, with major
parts requiring legislative revisions that are unlikely to be passed
with Democrats fiercely opposed.
Friday's report, in contrast, outlines a broad range of 91 technical
fixes aimed at boosting stock, bond and derivatives markets. All but
nine can be put into effect by the country's federal regulatory
agencies, who were consulted on the report.
The recommendations were met with quick praise from financial industry
groups, who said capital markets regulations were also long overdue for
a review.
"Efficient capital markets are at the core of a growing and prosperous
economy. The Treasury Department’s report offers a blueprint to unlock
the resources needed to spur economic growth and job creation," said
David Hirschmann, president and CEO of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's
Center for Capital Markets Effectiveness.
DISCLOSURE RULES
The Treasury proposes streamlining disclosure and compliance
requirements for companies that are both publicly-listed and which are
looking to go public, in bid to reduce a secular downward trend in
initial public offerings.
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U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Steven Mnuchin and Director of the
National Economic Council Gary Cohn walk after meeting with
Republican law makers about tax reform on Capitol Hill in
Washington, U.S., September 12, 2017. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
It also proposes scrapping a Dodd-Frank rule requiring public
companies to disclose information about the potential conflict
minerals in their products, and the ratio between the pay for top
executives and the company’s average worker.
To boost small companies' access to capital, the report recommends
loosening the rules around crowd-funding, and suggests revising the
definition of an 'accredited investor' in order to provide more
opportunities for mom and pop investors.
The Treasury also waded into the long-running debate over equity
market structure, proposing the SEC review share-tick sizes, order
types, exchange fee models, and how exchanges themselves operate and
are governed.
To reduce regulatory duplication and bring the United States more in
line with other markets, the report calls for the SEC and CFTC to
work more closely and harmonize their rules, but stopped short of
recommending a merger of the two - something policymakers have
called for in the past.
"The focus on harmonizing rule sets ... is a vital part of efforts
to reduce the compliance burden for derivatives end users," Scott
O’Malia, chief executive of bank group the International Swaps and
Derivatives Association and a former CFTC commissioner, said in a
statement.
Derivatives dealers also stand to gain from a recommendation to
relax rules around swaps trading and the cash they must post against
derivatives trades.
While banks, brokers and small companies have cheered the report,
many of the requirements are likely to draw criticism from public
advocacy groups worried they may reduce investor protections, and
open the door for banks to pursue risky trading behavior once again.
"It's almost uniformly deregulatory. It calls for cutting back on
post-crisis Dodd-Frank rules," said Marcus Stanley, policy director
for Americans for Financial Reform. "It's quite dangerous."
(This version of the article corrects title for David Hirschmann in
12th paragraph)
(Reporting By Michelle Price in Washington; Editing by Nick
Zieminski)
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