With debate heating up in Washington about reforming the financial rules, regulators charged Wall Street giant Goldman Sachs with fraud on Friday.
Bank shares and the broader stock market fell on fears the civil lawsuit could make it more difficult for the financial industry to ward off reform.
After successfully shepherding his healthcare overhaul through Congress, Obama is pushing for victory on the financial regulatory reforms — a popular issue with voters in the run-up to congressional elections in November after a financial meltdown sparked the worst US recession in decades.
The Senate is expected to vote within weeks on the reform bill, which Obama said would “hold Wall Street accountable” and put rules in place to prevent any more taxpayer-funded bailouts of companies in trouble.
“Never again will taxpayers be on the hook because a financial company is deemed ‘too big to fail,‘“ Obama said in his weekly radio and Internet address.
Under the controversial Troubled Asset Relief Program launched by the Bush administration, $700 billion was set aside to help major financial firms and automakers, including AIG, Bank of America, Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs.
Republicans insist the Democratic bill will lead to more taxpayer-funded bailouts and say it establishes new regulatory powers that will stifle small businesses and community banks.
All 41 Republicans in the 100-seat Senate expressed their opposition to the bill in a letter on Friday but said they were willing to work with Democrats on the issue.
Obama said he still hoped to win Republican support for the bill but lashed out at Republican Senate leader Mitch McConnell, accusing him of making a “cynical and deceptive assertion that reform would somehow enable future bailouts — when he knows that it would do just the opposite.”