Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Senate set to revamp bank rules

Bill leaves much of Dodd-Frank intact;Wall Street loses

- ELIZABETH DEXHEIMER

The U.S. Senate is expected to approve a sweeping revamp of financial rules this week.

Of all the surprises that entails — about a dozen Democrats signing on, Republican­s leaving a lot of the much-maligned Dodd-Frank legislatio­n intact — the biggest is the lack of goodies for Wall Street.

Some big banks are lobbying right up to the vote in hopes of salvaging a victory because the legislatio­n probably marks the last time lawmakers with full plates will take up financial regulation­s before November’s crucial midterm elections. After that, it’s anyone’s guess when the industry will get another chance at relief.

“Is there something more that is going to happen this Congress? You can make the case that it is hard to see,” said Ken Bentsen, chief executive officer of the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Associatio­n, a Wall Street lobbying group.

The bill has a good chance of becoming law. The U.S. House and President Donald Trump are eager to pass legislatio­n altering the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act, and White House staff have been making calls to lawmakers to build support.

The move to alter some key aspects of Dodd-Frank has overwhelmi­ng Republican support and enough Democratic backing that it’s expected to gain the 60 votes necessary to clear the Senate. Several Democratic lawmakers facing tough re-election races this year have broken ranks with Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. and Sen. Elizabeth Warren, DMass.

Sponsored by Senate Banking Committee Chairman Mike Crapo of Idaho, the Republican’s bill seems intent on not helping the giant financial institutio­ns that fueled populist anger in the lead-up to the 2008 crisis, and other firms that have continued to trigger criticism.

Megabanks like JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Bank

The move to alter some key aspects of Dodd-Frank has overwhelmi­ng Republican support and enough Democratic backing that it’s expected to gain the 60 votes necessary to clear the Senate.

of America Corp. could walk away almost empty-handed. And Equifax Inc. — the credit company that left millions of consumers vulnerable to identify theft after being hacked last year — might even be punished with tougher rules.

A core component of Crapo’s bill is giving small banks relief from a key provision in Dodd-Frank that they’ve been fighting to change for years. It would raise to $250 billion from $50 billion the asset threshold for banks to be subject to stricter Federal Reserve oversight, freeing firms like American Express Co. and SunTrust Banks Inc. from higher compliance costs associated with being considered “systemical­ly important financial institutio­ns,” or SIFIs.

Among the bill’s biggest losers are large regional firms like Capital One Financial Corp. and PNC Financial Services Group Inc., whose SIFI designatio­ns would remain.

Wall Street has been more successful in getting changes it wants from regulators. With agencies like the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and Office of the Comptrolle­r of the Currency overseen by industry-friendly officials, among the regulation­s expected to be relaxed are the Volcker Rule, which prohibits banks from trading with their own cash, and lending rules that put brakes on predatory loans.

The legislatio­n does allow big banks to include municipal bonds in required stockpiles of assets that could be sold to provide funding in a crisis. It’s a modificati­on JPMorgan and Citigroup Inc., especially, have pushed for years.

Wall Street is still lobbying for changes to the bill, including making one regulator responsibl­e for the Volcker Rule, instead of the five agencies

that now have a role in its implementa­tion. The tweak, which is being sought by big banks such as Goldman Sachs Group Inc., could make it easier to relax the rule in the future.

The big banks also lobbied for relief in some capital requiremen­ts, but lost out. Instead, custodial banks such as State Street Corp. and Bank of New York Mellon Corp. are likely to see relief. Giant asset managers have been pushing to prevent the government from ever classifyin­g firms such as BlackRock Inc. and Fidelity Investment­s as SIFIs.

Another last-minute tweak under considerat­ion could benefit private-equity titans including Apollo Global Management LLC by removing regulatory burdens for entities known as business developmen­t companies. Business developmen­t companies, many of which are controlled by private-equity firms, invest in small businesses.

Capitol Hill staff and lobbyists said they are skeptical that any changes helping Wall Street will make it into the legislatio­n under the wire.

The measure must still pass the House, where some Republican­s are likely to agitate for stripping away more regulation.

In many ways, Crapo’s bill forever enshrines the framework

for post-2008 rules despite years of Republican­s’ promises to gut Dodd-Frank and Trump’s pledge to do a “big number” on it about 14 months ago.

“Dodd Frank is still left in much of its form,” says Jim Nussle, president of the lobbying group Credit Union National Associatio­n. “That doesn’t change.”

The support of some Senate Democrats has been key to advancing the bill. Particular­ly supportive are Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota and Indiana’s Joe Donnelly, who are up for re-election in states that Trump won in 2016.

The bill has divided Democrats, magnifying the party’s divisions on financial issues. On one side are progressiv­es like Warren who have attacked fellow Democrats for supporting a measure that she says is a handout to Wall Street and puts consumers at risk. While the fighting isn’t expected to dim the bill’s chances of passing, it does create a wedge that could have implicatio­ns in this year’s midterm elections as Democrats try to take back control of the House and Senate.

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