Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Much ado about trading

FIVE years is the length of a modern British Parliament and one of Stalin’s economic plans. And apparently, it is the time needed to bring in a new American financial regulation. When the Dodd-Frank Act was passed in 2010, the so-called Volcker rule was seen as one of its key provisions. But the rule only formally became operative on July 21st this year.
The pertinent clause of the Dodd-Frank Act amounts to all of 165 words (with the key points covered in 40). Two activities are banned: proprietary trading and ties (through investment and relationships) to hedge and private equity funds. Putting that into practice involved a collaboration of five regulatory agencies: the Federal Reserve, the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the Federal Deposit Insurance Commission, and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC). This group produced an 881-page preamble leading to a 76-page rule, all of it written in dense bureaucratese.
 
The aim of the rule is to stop banks (and their worldwide affiliates) with access to American government funds from indulging in...


from The Economist: Finance and economics http://ift.tt/1LuL9Hy

No comments:

Post a Comment