November 8, 2011
The Volcker Rule Must Not Be Watered Down!
There is a comment period open on the Volcker Rule (really, the Volcker "Law" -- a provision of the Dodd-Frank Act). Everyone, whether involved with OWS or not, should get to a computer and submit a comment on the formulation of new rules by the major regulators, i.e. FDIC, SEC etc., since lobbyists are trying very hard to water down the Volcker Rule's impact. The Rule would limit speculation by banks -- the kind of speculation that helped bring about the recent financial crisis. I urge everyone who does not want to see a return to the status quo ante, to seize the opportunity to submit comments on the rulemaking efforts. Comments can be submitted via www.regulations.gov. The comment period closes in January, but the regulators should hear from us NOW. When last I checked, the specific url was
http://www.regulations.gov/#!searchResults;dct=PR;rpp=10;po=0;s=volcker%252Brule .
Click the submit a comment link for each of the regulatory organizations listed once you arrive at the regulations.gov page that addresses the the Volcker Rule and the rulemaking concerning it. You will be asked for your name and such, and you will see a comment box on the right. You can cut and paste the suggested text below, or draft your own comment.
Don't know what the Volcker Rule is? Go to http://www.davidemcclean.us/politicalcommentary.html and read the two pieces I wrote on it last year.
This is really important, as it goes directly to the question of what OWS can do NOW to effect real change - - before the lobbyists take away more of our protections.
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The so-called Volcker Rule, which severely restricts proprietary trading by banks and their affiliates, should not be permitted to be watered down by lobbyists in the rule-making process. Arguments that suggest it is not feasible to distinguish proprietary trades from agency trades fly in the face of a significant fact that conveniently goes overlooked, i.e. that every CFO on Wall Street has been able to make just such a distinction for decades. That they can make such a distinction is important, because there are important tax and other consequences to the firm for not making it.
It has been argued that the Volcker Rule will make our financial services industry less competitive with those of foreign countries. Not so. Proprietary trading activities will simply migrate to broker-dealers, hedge funds and other institutions. No doubt, banks will lose a significant source of revenue; but they have demonstrated what happens when banks, critical to the national security of the nation, are turned into hedge funds, engaging in wild and heavy speculation while ignoring the primary missions for which they have been granted charters. Despite what some think, proprietary trading must be understood to mean, as well, buying and holding speculative risk assets, even if the holding period is months or years. Speculation does not mean, simply, day trading, as some suggest. Citigroup's exposures to mortgage-backed CDOs, which were massive, makes this point quite well.
What is clear now is that banks should be banks, however uninteresting banking is thought to be in the minds of some banking executives. Notwithstanding the creative arguments put forward by lobbyists, and those heavily influenced by them, to the effect that the economic sky will fall if the Volcker Rule is implemented as intended, rulemaking must go forward in a manner that recalls the true concern of Dodd-Frank -- national security.