iTulip.com Forums     
     iTulip Ad Policy   Report Non-Compliant Ad   iTulip does not endorse all products and services advertised by Google Adsense

       Forums Home - Join our FREE Email Mailing List - Archive - America's Bubble Economy: Profit When It Pops

How to use the iTulip Forums

The best and the brightest among our more than 30,000 registered community members from 78 countries debate the issues of the day. Their commentary is enriched by a variety of media supported by our forums, from charts to video. You can find the information you want using the forum's powerful Search function on the main menu bar below. You will only see the Search function after you log in. To log in you need to 'Register' as a forum user.

           Subscribe to iTulip Select

Each time you return to the forums, log in and click on New PostsNew Posts to see new posts created since your last visit. If you want to be notified when new posts are made to a forum or thread of interest, you can subscribe to a forum from the Forum Tools menu or to a thread from the Thread Tools menu after you log in.
   

Go Back   iTulip.com > Public Discussion Forums > News
Register FAQ Members List PhotoPlog Members Map Calendar Mark Forums Read

News Link to a news story by a credible source plus member commentary. News stories posted here by iTulip Select Subscribers will be moved to the Select area.

 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Prev Previous Post   Next Post Next
                       
                        iTulip Ad Policy   Report Non-Compliant Ad   iTulip does not endorse all products and services advertised by Google Adsense
  #1  
Old 11-08-09, 03:08 PM
Sapiens's Avatar
Sapiens Sapiens is offline
iTulip Select Premium Member, Market Insider
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 2,313
Default New Bill Would Keep Public In The Dark About Threats To Financial System

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/1...tml?view=print

Quote:
Members of Congress and the general public may not be told of "potential emerging threats to the stability of the financial system," thanks to a Thursday vote by a House panel shepherding the bill that's supposed to end "too big to fail."

An amendment offered by Rep. Gregory Meeks (D-N.Y.) and unanimously approved by a voice vote in the House Financial Services Committee specifically deletes a provision in the Financial Stability Improvement Act of 2009.

The two draft versions of the bill originally called for the proposed overseer of threats to the entire financial system to prepare an annual report to Congress describing, among other things, "significant financial market developments and potential emerging threats to the stability of the financial system."

But on Thursday, Meeks' amendment deleted that language and instead compels the council to describe:

"Significant financial and regulatory developments, including insurance and accounting regulations and standards, and assesses the impact of those developments on the stability of the financial system."

Thus, "potential emerging threats" was replaced by "financial and regulatory developments."

Groups advocating for financial reform criticized the move.

"Instead of looking out and actually trying to protect the system, the goal appears to be to make sure we have the regulatory structure that is most amenable to corporate interests of anywhere in the world," said Heather Slavkin, senior legal and policy adviser at AFL-CIO. "It's a complete shift in the purpose and goal of the [systemic risk regulator].

Barbara Roper, director of investor protection at the Consumer Federation of America, said of Meeks' amendment, "that language is a prescription for a race to the bottom in terms of regulation."

During Thursday's debate, Rep. Mel Watt, a senior Democrat on the committee, also expressed concern about another aspect of Meeks' amendment.

The amendment additionally calls for the council to monitor international developments in financial, insurance and accounting regulations, and to specifically identify those that may "place United States financial services firms or United States financial markets at a competitive disadvantage."

"Part of what we're addressing here when we deal with systemic risk is a race to the bottom," said Watt, of North Carolina. "We need to be careful not to leave the impression that competitive disadvantage trumps safety and soundness."

During the debate, Meeks defended his amendment:

We must work with our counterparts around the world to elevate the playing field to a higher global standard, monitor international regulatory developments to ensure that our firms remain globally competitive and to prevent international regulatory shopping, and the inevitable buildup of systemic risk outside our borders, outside of our regulatory reach, and beyond our capacity to act.


As happened domestically with individual regulators in the years leading up of the financial crisis, it is quite possible for the members of the council to become so focused on the domestic trees that they fail to see the forest of the international regulatory landscape and its evolution. This amendment would explicitly require them to monitor this global landscape, its impact on the competitiveness of the American financial sector, as well as any new emerging pockets of systemic risks which could spill over into our economy, triggering another financial crisis.

In June the Obama administration released a white paper outlining its plan to reform the way banks and financial firms are regulated. There were gaps in the system, simply put, which played a role in the collapse last fall.

In that paper, the administration called for the formation of the council. It would identify "emerging systemic risks" and "emerging risks in firms and market activities." It would also "identify gaps in regulation and prepare an annual report to Congress on market developments and potential emerging risks."

The bill that emerged calls for a council to oversee risks to the entire financial system, which includes firms and activities that pose such a risk. The firms that required billions in taxpayer funds to keep them afloat, like Citigroup and AIG, and those that ultimately flopped, like Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns, are the kind of financial companies the bill would target. The activities include some of the things that worsened the crisis last fall, like firms' unfunded liabilities -- which ultimately were paid by taxpayers, like the billions paid out to honor AIG's derivatives contracts.

Now, the bill in Chairman Barney Frank's Financial Services committee does call for this proposed council to look for and address such dangers; however, Meeks' amendment deleted the provision that the information be relayed to Congress, and thus the public.

In an interview, Meeks' legislative director, Milan Dalal, said the bill's original language of "potential emerging threats" was "very dangerous. The purpose is to make the language clearer and more concise."

Dalal added that regulators may "have different definitions of 'threats'" and that Meeks' amendment does not necessarily preclude the council from reporting to Congress and the public threats that exist to the financial system.

"It's not just threats. We're trying to make it so the regulators have more information to look at," he said. "We're looking at developments as well.

"There might be a new development that we might want to take into account, like 'Oh, England is doing something that we think we should take a look at as well, and consider implementing. It may not be a threat that's going on over there, but it's something that we might want to consider as well."

CFA's Roper remains skeptical.

"You do start to get the picture that the legislation responding to a crisis that was brought about by lax regulation will perpetuate that same approach."

Read more at: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/1...?view=print&cp


Hope you have your funds well protected, these bastards will not give an inch or a nickle even if it depends on sacrificing the system.

"It is never enough" the great mantra of the Oligarchy.
Reply With Quote
 


Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
The world financial system has disintegrated - Soros LargoWinch News 3 02-23-09 09:20 PM
El-Erian on CNBC: Financial System to get slimmer LargoWinch Video 0 09-14-08 01:18 PM
IMF undertakes audit of U.S. financial system Lukester Currencies 0 07-02-08 11:33 PM
Derivatives will collapse the world's financial system jeffolie News 26 05-04-06 01:28 PM


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 07:58 AM.

Opinions expressed herein are those of the posters, not those of iTulip, Inc., its owners, or management. All material posted on this board becomes the intellectual property of the poster and iTulip, Inc., and may not be reposted in full on another website without the express written permission of iTulip, Inc. By exception, the original registered iTulip member who authored a post may repost his or her own material on other sites. Permission is hereby granted to repost brief excerpts of material from this forum on other websites provided that attribution and a link to the source is included with the reposted material.

Nothing on this website is intended or should be construed as investment advice. It is intended to be used for informational and entertainment purposes only. By using this board you agree that you understand the risks of trading, and are solely responsible for your own investment and trading decisions.

Journalists are not permitted to contact iTulip members through this forum's email and personal messaging services without written permission from iTulip, Inc. Requests for permission may be made via Contact Us.

Objectionable posts may be reported to the board adminstrators via Contact Us.

All contents Copyright © iTulip, Inc. 1998 - 2010





/content area table

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.0
Copyright ©2000 - 2010, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
vBCredits v1.3 ©2007 by Darkwaltz4
Copyright iTulip, Inc. - All Rights Reserved