Banks temper expectations for first 'Volcker Rule'
rewrite
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[May 30, 2018]
By Michelle Price and Pete Schroeder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. regulators are
set to rewrite rules reining in banks' risky trading behavior, making
changes that will cut compliance costs but stopping far short of
allowing firms to return to their gambling days seen before the
2007-2009 global financial crisis.
The Federal Reserve's long-anticipated proposal to alter the so-called
Volcker Rule on Wednesday marks another step by Trump administration
regulators to ease banking rules in a bid to boost lending and economic
growth.
Part of the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial reform law, the Volcker Rule is
aimed at preventing banks from making market bets while accepting
taxpayer-insured deposits. It has forced many Wall Street banks to
overhaul their trading operations and hive off billions of dollars worth
of hedge funds and private equity funds.
Banks have long complained that the rule, which took four years to write
and runs at more than 1,000 pages, is vague and complex, creating a
disproportionate compliance burden and limiting their ability to
facilitate investments and hedges for investors.
"This revision is likely to make only modest changes to the rule that
would benefit banks at the margin. It will not mark the wholesale return
of bank proprietary trading. The fundamental framework remains," said
Isaac Boltanksy, director of policy research at Compass Point Trading &
Research LLC in Washington.
Still, Wednesday's proposal should provide clarity over how banks can
show trades qualify for certain safe harbors, especially when
facilitating client trades, according to people familiar with the
matter. Reuters had reported the expected changes in February.
JPMorgan Chase & Co <JPM.N> chief executive Jamie Dimon was once quoted
as saying traders would need a lawyer and a psychiatrist by their side
in order to prove their trading intentions complied with the rule.
The proposed changes will also likely tailor compliance requirements to
an institution's size and alter aspects of the rule so it no longer
encroaches upon some overseas firms, the people said.
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Former U.S. Federal Reserve Board Chairman Paul A. Volcker speaks at
a news conference in New York, U.S. on June 8, 2015. REUTERS/Mike
Segar/File Photo
JPMorgan is looking forward to more clarity on its requirements and to
spending less to prove compliance, Daniel Pinto, chief executive for the
bank's corporate and investment banking business, said at an investor
conference on Tuesday.
But the Volcker Rule proposal "is not going to change too much what we do and
how we do it," Pinto said.
Banks of all sizes as well as private equity funds and investor groups have
lobbied hard for the rule to be simplified, according to public records and
sources.
U.S. Congress wrote the broad strokes of the Volcker Rule into law, but five
regulators oversee the rule and wrote its finer details.
Industry attempts to persuade Congress to overhaul the Volcker Rule so far have
failed, but regulators agree after three years of trying to enforce it that
revisions are necessary to help all parties.
They have been working on tweaks ever since the rule became effective in 2015,
but efforts behind the scenes to draft a new rule accelerated over the past two
months, the sources said.
The Fed has been leading the efforts and other regulators are expected to
propose the same changes in the coming days.
Some bank lobbyists hope for another opportunity to push for a more radical
overhaul. But such changes could take years, analysts said.
"The only way that the Volcker Rule can be fundamentally altered is if Congress
chooses to do so, and that clearly isn’t happening this year or anytime in the
near future," said Boltansky.
(Reporting by Michelle Price and Pete Schroeder; additional reporting by Patrick
Rucker and David Henry in New York; Editing by Meredith Mazzilli)
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