New York  London  GMT  Tokyo  Singapore 
Charles Rotblut

Bernanke Proposes New Oversight: Will It Have Any Meaningful Impact?

By Charles Rotblut on October 1, 2009 | More Posts By Charles Rotblut | Author's Website

Speaking before the House Financial Services Committee, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke proposed a new regulatory mechanism to monitor and respond to broad risks affecting the financial system. This would consist of a panel that would exist outside of the Fed, tapping resources from all agencies with current oversight over the financial system.

The proposal is a move by Bernanke to thwart efforts to give the Fed more power. It also increases the potential penalties for taking excessive risk by imposing losses on shareholders and bondholders.

Bernanke is bringing forth some good ideas. Particularly, his call for coordination across multiple agencies is something that should fortified by regulation. Clearly, the joint actions by the Fed and the Treasury Department have helped to prevent the current crisis from becoming worse. This said, turf wars in Washington may make accomplishing this goal difficult in the future.

His proposal also calls for creating a special resolution process for winding down a failed bank or financial institution. Though good in concept, handling toxic assets remains difficult in reality. The government continues to hold large stakes in Citigroup (C) and Bank of America (BAC), with no clear exit plan existing. Taxpayers also own AIG (AIG) and may never see their investment paid back.

Which brings us to Bernanke’s call to hold shareholders and bondholders accountable for a financial firm’s losses. It’s great in concept because capitalism works by punishing those who make bad decisions. In reality, the political pressures placed upon the oversight committee will make wiping out investors in a future failed firm difficult.

Over the short-term, today’s proposal will not have meaningful impact on financial institutions. Over the long-term, it could lead to new regulations that would impact how big firms can grow.

If you like this article please...
Subscribe by RSS Subscribe by Email Email This Post To A Friend Email This Post To A Friend

1 Comment :
Comment by Hal (GT) Subscribed to comments via email
2009-10-01 15:29:16

“…could lead to new regulations”.

No surprise there. DC is all about regulations and more regulations. It’s what gives them purpose anymore it seems.

 
Name (required)
E-mail (required - never shown publicly)
URI
Subscribe to comments via email
Your Comment (smaller size | larger size)
You may use <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong> in your comment.
Opinions From Our Contributors
Commodities Financials Exchange Traded Funds
Stocks Forex Economy



HEADLINES
UPCOMING EVENTS
In 4 hrs: EUR German GfK Consumer Confidence Survey (DEC)
In 6 hrs: EUR Italian Consumer Confidence Index s.a. (NOV)
In 6 hrs: EUR Italian Retail Sales s.a. (MoM) (SEP)
In 6 hrs: EUR Italian Retail Sales (YoY) (SEP)
In 7 hrs: GBP Index of Services (3Mo3M) (SEP)
Enter Your Email Address
Theme By: WordPress Theme Shop