By Sarah Borchersen-Keto, CCH Washington News Bureau, Contributing Author, the CCH Federal Banking Law Reporter.
Proposed new authority that would allow the government to step in and resolve large, failing financial institutions would not result in a category of firms deemed too big to fail, Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner assured Congress on Oct. 29, 2009. Geithner told the House Financial Services Committee that the proposed legislation, announced a day earlier by the Treasury Department and the committee, would mean that if systemically important firms got themselves in the position where they could not survive on their own, “then the only authority we would have is to manage their failure.” Committee Chairman Barney Frank, D-Mass., said he hoped to mark up the legislation next week.
Continue reading "Geithner Defends Resolution Authority Plan; Bair Raises Objections" »
This story appeared in Bank Digest.
The House Financial Services Committee approved the Accountability and Transparency in Rating Agencies Act (H.R. 3890) by a vote of 49-14. The bill is intended “to curb the inappropriate and irresponsible actions of credit rating agencies which greatly contributed to our current economic problems,” according to principal sponsor Rep. Paul E. Kanjorski (D-Pa.), Chairman of the Subcommittee on Capital Markets, Insurance, and Government Sponsored Enterprises.
Continue reading "Bipartisan Credit Rating Agencies Bill Approved" »
This story appeared in Bank Digest.
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency has released OCC Working Paper 2009-5 “Correlation in Credit Risk", by Xiaoling Pu and Xinlei Zhao which examines the correlation in credit risk using credit default swap (CDS) data. The researchers found that the observable risk factors at the firm, industry, and market levels and the macroeconomic variables cannot fully explain the correlation in CDS spread changes, leaving at least 30 percent of the correlation unaccounted for.
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By Sarah Borchersen-Keto, CCH Washington News Bureau, Contributing Author, the CCH Federal Banking Law Reporter.
Reworking roughly $180 million in guaranteed bonus contracts that come due at American International Group’s financial products division next year is a “top priority,” Special Master for TARP Executive Compensation Kenneth Feinberg told Congress October 28. “We will see what we can work out with AIG going forward in an effort to satisfy the statute, satisfy the regulations, satisfy the American people. And I view that as a top priority,” Feinberg told the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee.
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By Gregg D. Killoren, J.D., CCH State Banking Law Reporter, Bank Digest and Individual Retirement Plans Guide.
The House Financial Services Committee has passed by a vote of 67 to 1 the Private Fund Investment Advisers Registration Act of 2009 (H.R. 3818), which would require managers of most hedge funds, private equity funds and venture capital funds in the U.S. to register with the Securities and Exchange Commission under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940. The existing exemption for investment advisers with fewer than 15 clients would be eliminated, and specific information reporting would be required for advisers to any “private fund.” A limited exemption would continue to apply to certain “foreign private advisers.” The existing threshold of $30 million of assets under management for mandatory SEC registration would continue to apply.
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