Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Wall Street Banks Push To Weaken An Already Watered-Down Volcker Rule #p2 #tcot

"The industry threw "one last roundhouse punch at the law," and most of the letters from across the financial industry were negative. Among the rule's most vocal opponents: JPMorgan Chase CEO Jaime Dimon and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, according to the Wall Street Journal:

Opponents minced few words. J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. said the proposed rule "appears to take the view that banking entities, their customers, and the economy must pay almost any price in order to ensure absolute certainty that there can never be an instance of prohibited proprietary trading." [...]

"In short, the American engine of economic growth will be deprived of the fuel needed to operate," the U.S. Chamber of Commerce wrote.

What the industry doesn't mention in its effort to weaken the rule is just how successful it has been in watering it down already. With the help of Massachusetts Sen. Scott Brown (R), the industry weakened the rule even before it became law, and it has spent the last year lobbying to make it even weaker. By the time it was unveiled, it was so weak that former Fed Chair Paul Volcker, for whom it is named, said he didn't like it."


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