US lawmakers seal deal on historic Wall St reform

WASHINGTON,  (Reuters) – U.S. lawmakers hammered out  a historic overhaul of financial regulations yesterday, handing  President Barack Obama a major domestic policy victory on the  eve of a global summit of world leaders.    In a marathon session of more than 21 hours, congressional  negotiators agreed to a rewrite of Wall Street rules that may  crimp the industry’s profits and subject it to tougher  oversight and tighter restrictions.

The bill, the most sweeping financial rules revamp since  the 1930s, is headed toward final congressional approval next  week although implementation will be bogged down for months in  regulatory rule-making.

The legislation would set up a new financial consumer  watchdog, create a protocol for dismantling troubled financial  firms and mandate higher bank capital standards, all in an  effort to avoid a repeat of the 2007-2009 credit crisis that  hammered the economy and triggered taxpayer bailouts of  floundering firms.

To secure agreement, lawmakers reached deals in the final  hours on the most controversial sections, which restrict  derivatives dealing by banks and curb their proprietary trading  to shield taxpayer-backed deposits from more risky activities.

Banks will be allowed to keep most swaps dealing activity  in-house, although the riskiest trading would be pushed out  into an affiliate. They will also be permitted small  investments in hedge funds and private equity funds.

The concessions could lessen the impact on bank profits.

The KBW bank stock index, which registered its worst  performance since October last month, closed up 2.9 percent,  with Goldman Sachs Group Inc and Morgan Stanley, two of the  banks that will be most affected, helping lead the way. The reforms must still win final approval from both  chambers of Congress before Obama can sign them into law. Quick  approval is expected.

Democrats had raced to complete their work before Obama  left for a weekend meeting of the Group of 20 economic powers,  where he can tout the changes as a blueprint for other  countries.

“Just as economic turmoil in one place can quickly spread  to another, safeguards in each of our nations can help protect  all nations,” Obama said at the White House shortly before  departing.

Despite last-minute deals, the bill has actually gotten  tougher in its yearlong journey through the halls of Congress.  Democrats rode a wave of public disgust at an industry that  awarded itself rich paydays while much of the country struggled  through a deep recession.

“They tried to water it down, but still there’s enough  regulation in there that it’s going to affect banks, it’s going  to affect their profitability,” said Chris Hobart, founder of  Hobart Financial Group in Charlotte, North Carolina.

Passage of the bill will give Democrats an important  legislative victory, alongside healthcare reform, ahead of  congressional elections in November. As part of the package,  financial institutions would have to pay $19 billion to cover  the estimated cost of the bill.

The House of Representatives could vote as soon as Tuesday,  and Senate action is expected to swiftly follow.

Under congressional rules, it would be difficult but not  impossible to change the bill, and Democratic leaders are  confident that they won’t have to do so. However, they will  need to hold the support of some moderate Republicans in the  Senate to assure they can clear any procedural roadblocks.
CURBS ON RISKY TRADING

Lawmakers munched chocolates to stay awake as regulators  and administration officials hovered in the wood-paneled room  and as the night wore on, they yielded the microphones to staff  to debate the bill’s finer points.

The panel completed its work just after 5:30 a.m. (0930  GMT), more than 21 hours after it sat down to its final  negotiating session.

Along the way, the negotiators resolved several sticking  points that had threatened to scuttle the bill.

They agreed to water down a proposal by Democratic Senator  Blanche Lincoln that would have required banks to spin off  their lucrative swaps-dealing desks to a separately capitalized  affiliate.

Dozens of House Democrats said Lincoln’s proposal would  force trading to move overseas, and they threatened to vote  against the bill if it included the provision.

The compromise allows banks to stay involved in  foreign-exchange and interest-rate swaps dealing, which account  for the bulk of the $615 trillion over-the-counter derivatives  market. They also could participate in gold and silver swaps  and derivatives designed to hedge banks’ own risk.

But they would need to spin off dealing operations that  handle agricultural, energy and metal swaps, equity swaps and  uncleared credit default swaps.

“Quite frankly, common sense prevailed,” Lincoln said  shortly after agreement was reached on the bill. “Our  objectives were to get the risky stuff out of banks. We figured  out how to do that.” Lawmakers resolved another controversial element around  midnight when they agreed that banks should face restrictions  on the proprietary trading they do for their own accounts and  not for their customers.

As with Lincoln’s swaps provision, the financial industry  won significant last-minute concessions in that rule, named for  White House economic adviser Paul Volcker.

The final version of the Volcker rule would give regulators  little wiggle room to waive the trading ban but it would allow  banks to invest up to 3 percent of their Tier 1 capital in  hedge funds and private equity funds.

The bill would dramatically reshape the U.S. financial  landscape. The industry is already turning its sights on how it  might influence implementation by regulators.

“We need to hold the course,” Federal Deposit Insurance  Corp Chairman Sheila Bair, one of the regulators who would be  charged with putting the reforms in place, told Reuters. “We  cannot let ourselves forget what happened in October of 2008”  when the financial system risked breaking down.

The legislation sets up a new agency within the Federal  Reserve charged with protecting consumers of financial  products. It also gives regulators new power to seize troubled  financial firms before they harm the broader economy.Though it leaves largely intact the patchwork of federal  regulators that failed to stop the last crisis, it sets up an  interagency council to monitor system-wide risks to stability.

It forces much of the over-the-counter derivatives market,  which worsened the financial crisis and led to a $182 billion  bailout of insurer AIG, onto more accountable channels like  clearinghouses and exchanges.

Larger banks will have to raise more capital to help them  ride out future crises.

Credit-rating agencies such as Moody’s Corp could see their  business models upended by regulators seeking to resolve  conflicts of interest, while debit-card issuers like Bank of  America will probably have to reduce the transaction fees they  charge merchants who use their cards.