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Home » Discuss » General Discussion: Presidency Donate to DU
ProSense Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Oct-24-11 11:56 AM
Response to Reply #3
4. That
"What it lacks is the separation that Glass-Steagall provided to keep our money separate from the money they use to gamble with on Wall Street."

...is what the Volcker rule does.

Speech by SEC Chairman: Opening Statement at SEC Open Meeting: Item 1 — Prohibitions and Restrictions on Proprietary Trading

<...>

We begin with the proposal to implement the Volcker Rule, which generally prohibits certain banking entities from engaging in proprietary trading or sponsoring or investing in a hedge fund or private equity fund.

The statute is intended to curb the proprietary interests of commercial banks and their affiliates in order to protect taxpayers and consumers by prohibiting insured depository institutions from engaging in risky proprietary trading. Section 619 is a key component of the Dodd-Frank legislation. Its implementation would be a step forward in reducing conflicts of interests between the self-interests of banking entities and the interests of their customers. The statute is aimed at constraining banking entities’ proprietary trading, protecting the provision of essential financial services and promoting the stability of the U.S. financial system.

In drafting this proposal, the Commission worked with our fellow regulators to ensure the rule will be applied consistently across institutions. Indeed, today’s rule is being proposed jointly with the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and eventually the CFTC. This has been an extensive undertaking. Throughout the process of formulating this proposal, the SEC staff worked actively and continuously with the staffs of our fellow regulators in this collaborative effort, marked by more than a year of weekly, if not more frequent, interagency staff conference calls, interagency meetings, and shared drafting. The dedication and collective efforts of this interagency team deserve our thanks. Under the proposed rule, certain banking entities generally would be prohibited from engaging in proprietary trading. This includes banks, bank holding companies and their affiliates — as well as the U.S. operations of foreign banks and bank holding companies and their affiliates, including affiliated broker-dealers and investment advisers.

In addition, the proposed rule prevents these entities from circumventing this proprietary trading prohibition in that it restricts these entities from sponsoring or investing in hedge funds or private equity funds.

At the same time, the proposed rule — as required by the Dodd-Frank Act — permits certain activities necessary for capital raising and the healthy functioning of our securities markets. These include such things as market-making related activities, risk-mitigating hedging, and underwriting.

These otherwise permitted activities are not permitted, however, if they involve material conflicts of interest, high-risk assets or trading strategies, or if they threaten the safety and soundness of banking institutions or U.S. financial stability.

<...>

It could be strengthened. Still, as I said in my previous comment, Dodd-Frank addressed many issues that Glass-Steagall never did.

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