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Public
confidence in
our nation’s
financial system
has been badly
shaken by the
extent of the
financial
meltdown. The
effects are
being felt not
just on Wall
Street, but in
towns and
communities all
around my home
state of Maine.
Who
would have
guessed that a
global financial
crisis could
deal a serious
blow to Maine’s
iconic lobster
industry? Lower
demand has sent
prices
tumbling. To
make matters
worse, most of
the lobster
caught in Maine
is sent to
Canada for
processing.
Those processors
were largely
financed by
banks in
Iceland. The
recent collapse
of Iceland’s
banking system
has dried up
credit for the
Canadian
processors who,
as a result,
have stopped
purchasing Maine
lobsters.
Our
entire economy
is struggling
with a credit
crisis spawned
by mortgage
defaults and
their ripple
effects in
markets for
mortgage-backed
securities.
Complex
financial
instruments that
were poorly
understood, not
transparent, and
often
unregulated have
added to the
crisis.
America’s
“mortgage
crisis” is now a
nightmare of
converging
forces that
could lead to a
deep and global
recession. We
see falling home
prices, rising
foreclosures,
plunging
consumer sales,
increased
unemployment,
tremendous
erosion of
retirement
savings,
billions of
dollars for
emergency-stabilization
programs, and a
federal deficit
that may reach a
trillion
dollars.
As
we prepare for
the 111th
Congress, we
must continue to
repair the
damage done and
devise new
protective
measures.
That
is why, on the
very first day
of the Senate’s
post-election
session, I
introduced
legislation that
would close
dangerous gaps
in our oversight
of financial
markets and lead
to
comprehensive
reform of our
financial
regulatory
system.
Less
than a year ago,
the American
financial world
boasted five
huge and
long-established
investment-bank
holding
companies: Bear
Stearns, Lehman
Brothers,
Merrill Lynch,
Goldman Sachs,
and Morgan
Stanley. Today,
plagued by many
billions of
dollars in
losses and
write-offs,
these investment
banks have
failed, been
sold, or
converted to
banking
organizations.
Astonishingly,
under current
federal law, no
agency is
responsible for
supervising
these enormous
institutions,
even though
their safety and
soundness has
vast
implications for
the financial
system and the
economy. Think
about that.
Local credit
unions and small
community banks
are subject to
safety-and-soundness
regulations, but
these enormous
Wall Street
financial
institutions are
not.
My
bill, The
Financial
Regulation and
Reform Act,
would assign
safety-and-soundness
regulation for
investment-bank
holding
companies to the
Federal
Reserve.
Without this
reform, any new
investment-bank
holding company
would fall into
the same
regulatory void
as its
predecessors.
Federal officials have pointed out another massive gap in
their ability to
monitor and
manage risks to
the financial
system.
That
is the lack of
oversight for
private
contracts known
as “credit
default swaps,”
or CDS. These
contracts
involve paying
for protection
against default,
loss of value,
or other “credit
event” that
might affect a
financial asset
such as a
government or
corporate bond,
or a
mortgage-backed
security.
These CDS
contracts, which
amount to
trillions of
dollars in
value, can have
legitimate,
risk-hedging or
insurance-like
functions. The
problem is that
they are not
traded on
regulated
exchanges, are
not officially
reported, and
are not even
subject to
record-keeping
requirements.
As
the failure of
Lehman Brothers
and the AIG
insurance
holding company
showed, serious
problems can
arise when a
major “credit
event” suddenly
reveals that
massive claims
for collateral
posting or
payment are
converging on
CDS parties that
cannot meet
their
obligations.
But regulators
currently lack
the information
to spot or act
against emerging
threats from
excessive
commitments or
inadequate
reserves.
The
fallout from
such collapses
extends far
beyond the Wall
Street firms’
investors,
employees, and
business
partners.
Hard-working
Americans
throughout the
country feel the
shock and
despair when
they read their
401 (k) and
other retirement
savings
statements.
Policy makers
and regulators
must have better
information and
stronger
authority to
help prevent
future economic
catastrophes.
My
legislation
would address
this oversight
problem in two
ways. First, it
would require
reporting CDS
contracts to the
Commodity
Futures Trading
Commission,
which will share
data with the
Federal Reserve.
Second, my bill
would add the
force of law to
the CDS
clearinghouse
initiative being
jointly pursued
by the Federal
Reserve Bank of
New York, the
SEC, and the
CFTC. We can’t
rely on
voluntary
participation
for such an
important
safeguard; a
mandate is
essential.
We
also need a full
review and
overhaul of the
complex and
compartmented
federal
regulatory
system that has
gradually
evolved since
the 1930s.
Congressional
debate on
regulatory
reform would
benefit from the
advice of a
special, expert
commission
modeled on the
one we created
to examine the
terrorist
attacks of
September 11,
2001, and to
recommend
improvements in
our homeland
security. Our
economic
security demands
an equally
thorough
review.
My
bill
incorporates a
thoughtful
proposal for
such a
commission
proposed by my
colleagues
Senator Joe
Lieberman and
Senator Maria
Cantwell, who
have worked with
me on earlier,
bipartisan
initiatives to
improve federal
regulation.
The
commission’s
six-month effort
would produce a
comprehensive
reform proposal
for financial
regulation that
can protect
consumers and
investors, avoid
unreasonable
burdens on
industry and
commerce, and
enhance our
ability to
monitor the
safety and
soundness of our
financial
institutions.
This
issue is a
critical one
that Congress
should address
without delay.
The Financial
Regulation
Reform Act of
2008 should
prompt a
much-needed
debate on the
fundamental
changes needed
to modernize and
strengthen our
system for
monitoring and
regulating the
financial
markets that
supply the
lifeblood of
growth for our
country.
--###--
Susan Collins
represents the
State of Maine
in the United
States Senate.
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