Shutdown is starting to hurt Trump's
financial deregulation agenda
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[January 17, 2019]
By Pete Schroeder, Suzanne Barlyn and Michelle Price
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. government
shutdown over President Donald Trump's call for Congress to fund a wall
he promised to build on the U.S.- Mexican border is threatening another
campaign pledge to make rules easier to navigate for banks and
corporations.
The partial shutdown, sparked by a standoff between Democrats and
Republicans over how to address Trump's demand, is already the longest
ever, entering its 27th day on Thursday with no signs of a resolution.
The Trump administration has outlined plans to ease bank rules, overhaul
corporate governance, and boost financial innovation, sparking hopes
among executives that they would already start to feel the benefits this
year.
Yet with Democrats now in control of the House of Representatives and
the 2020 presidential campaign expected to stymie policymaking, industry
lobbyists worry the shutdown will further limit the narrow window for
the new rules to kick in.
Of particular concern is the fate of rules being penned by regulators to
implement changes, passed by the Republican Congress last May, that
relaxed restraints imposed on banks after the financial crisis, said
lobbyists and regulatory sources.
Republican lawmakers had expected many of those changes would be close
to the finish line by now, but several have yet to be put to public
comment. This step, among others, is part of a strict rule-changing
process dictated by federal law that cannot be easily expedited once the
government reopens.
Given many of the changes face opposition from consumer groups, lawyers
say any hiccups in their implementation could expose them to litigation
and delay them indefinitely.
“While there is an image of folks coming in and cutting red tape, for
better or worse that is not the way our legal process works and the
government shutdown really impedes that process,” said Ben Olson, a
lawyer with Buckley Sandler who previously worked for several agencies
including the Federal Reserve.
At the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)and the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission (CFTC), whose budgets are set by Congress, less than
a tenth of staff continue to work in areas such as law enforcement,
market surveillance and investor protection while all non-emergency
rule-making is suspended.
The CFTC, for example, was scheduled to agree rules that would pave the
way for Intercontinental Exchange to begin trading digital currency
futures in coming weeks, but that timeline is now unrealistic, according
to a person familiar with the CFTC's original plan.
With no SEC staff available to approve paperwork, initial public
offerings are getting backed up, said lawyers. Brokers are also unable
to get critical guidance on whether some trades are compliant, said
Marlon Paz, a Washington-based lawyer who advises financial firms. "I
fear there is little oversight in tumultuous times."
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President Donald Trump speaks to the news media before boarding
Marine One to depart for travel to New Orleans from the South Lawn
of the White House in Washington, U.S., January 14, 2019.
REUTERS/Leah Millis
Although the three banking regulators are funded independently,
lobbyists say the shutdown may derail their work on rule changes
overseen jointly with the SEC and CFTC. That includes the "Volcker
Rule", which imposed curbs on banks' proprietary trading as part of
the 2010 Dodd-Frank law.
U.S. and international banks have criticized the rule as too
burdensome and lobbied hard for changes, but the five financial
regulators are obliged to review thousands of pages of comments
before taking further action. With CFTC and SEC policy staff barred
from even checking their emails, however, these types of joint
projects are stalled.
"They still have to review all comments, and the folks who have to
review them are at home watching TV," said Wayne Abernathy,
executive vice president at trade group the American Bankers
Association.
"Our worry is that the shutdown could be slowing down the process."
A CFTC spokeswoman confirmed the agency has halted all rule-writing.
An SEC spokesman said the SEC was staffing emergency functions.
Furloughs at the Office of the Federal Register, which must formally
publish all steps in the rule-writing process, have also delayed
other changes Congress agreed in May, public records show.
For example, days before the shutdown began on Dec. 22, the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and the Fed, alongside other
agencies, unveiled two proposals to ease rules on broker deposits
and community banks.
But those have yet to be published in the register, which is
required to start public comment periods.
Bridget Dooling, a research professor at George Washington
University, said the law allowed few shortcuts, meaning a backlog
created now would likely not get cleared for months.
"Losing a month or two months or, who knows, maybe more from your
productive timeline could ultimately jeopardize your ability to
finish the work you set out to do in a presidential administration,”
said Dooling, who previously worked in the regulatory office at the
U.S. Office of Management and Budget.
Spokespeople for the FDIC and Fed declined to comment. The Office of
the Federal Register was not able to respond to requests for comment
due to the shutdown.
(Reporting by Pete Schroeder and Suzanne Barlyn; writing and
reporting by Michelle Price; Editing by Tomasz Janowski)
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