The Borneo Post

Fed gives banks five years to comply with Volcker Rule limits

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THE Federal Reserve Board laid out how US banks can apply to take five more years to comply with the VolckerRul­e,areformeme­rgingfrom the 2007-2009 financial crisis that has received some of the harshest criticism from Wall Street.

The rule, intended to keep banks from speculatin­g with their customers’ money, limits the amount of illiquid investment­s firms can hold. Big Wall Street banks have said they need more time to exit fund investment­s that are difficult to sell but no longer allowed by the 2010 Dodd-Frank Wall Street reform law.

The Fed said it was the final grace period it could grant following three one-year extensions.

It said a bank would qualify for an extension as long as it demonstrat­ed meaningful progress in divesting illiquid funds, had a sufficient compliance program and the Fed was not concerned it was trying to evade the law.

Firms will also need to certify that the funds meet the definition of illiquid and lay out a plan for divesting or making the investment­s conform to the rule.

Before the crisis, big banks had proprietar­y trading desks that made bets on market direction, as well as in-house hedge funds, investment­s in external hedge funds and co-investment­s alongside clients in internal private-equity funds. Underlying assets could range from investment­s in private companies to real estate and longdated derivative­s.

In regulatory filings, banks have said they may face difficulty in getting rid of those investment­s by upcoming deadlines.

 ??  ?? Lower Manhattan including the financial district is pictured from the Manhattan borough of New York, US. — Reuters photo
Lower Manhattan including the financial district is pictured from the Manhattan borough of New York, US. — Reuters photo

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