Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Agencies plan to ease limits on banks’ short-term trading

- JESSE HAMILTON AND BEN BAIN

Wall Street is poised to get a big reprieve from the Volcker Rule, as U.S. agencies prepare to scrap a restrictiv­e presumptio­n that most short-term trades violate the post-crisis regulation, three people with knowledge of the matter said.

In a much-anticipate­d overhaul, the Federal Reserve and other regulators are planning to drop an assumption written into the original rule that positions held by banks for less than 60 days are speculativ­e — and therefore banned, the people said. Instead, banks would have leeway to conclude that their trades comply with the rule, putting the onus on regulators to challenge such judgments, the people said.

The change is one of many that regulators appointed by President Donald Trump are expected to propose in the coming weeks when they unveil their revamp, known internally as “Volcker 2.0,” said the people who requested anonymity because it hasn’t been made public. The release will mark a key milestone in the Trump administra­tion’s push to roll back regulation­s that it blames for stifling financial markets and economic growth.

The rule, named for former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker, has been in Wall Street’s cross hairs for years. It was included in the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act as a way to limit excessive risk-taking by restrictin­g speculativ­e trading by banks, and curtailing lenders’ investment­s in hedge funds and privateequ­ity firms. But the industry argues that it has dried up market liquidity, is overly complex and is difficult to

comply with.

The Fed has led the rewrite, though there is broad agreement on how to proceed among all five agencies responsibl­e for the rule.

The other agencies involved in the process are the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Office of the Comptrolle­r of the Currency, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

Additional changes the regulators intend to propose include making it easier for banks to stockpile assets that their customers may want to buy in the near term and dialing back compliance burdens for smaller lenders, the people said. The agencies expect to release the proposal by the end of the month — a

timeline confirmed publicly by Joseph Otting, the former banker who leads the Office of the Comptrolle­r of the Currency. Spokesmen for the five agencies declined to comment.

The unveiling of the regulators’ plan will be the first step in a lengthy process. There will then be votes at the agencies on whether to seek public comment on the proposal, followed by what could be months of rewriting before a final round of votes on making the changes official.

Many of the Volcker revisions under considerat­ion adhere to a blueprint issued last year by Trump’s Treasury Department, which advised doing away with many of the rule’s more subjective demands.

Asking banks to figure out the purpose of each purchase or sale of an asset “effectivel­y requires an inquiry into the

trader’s intent at the time of the transactio­n, which introduces considerab­le complexity and subjectivi­ty,” Treasury argued.

Its report said the rule’s complexity had caused banks to be overly conservati­ve in their trading activity, a contention also made by industry lobbyists.

The main component of Volcker was banning what’s known as proprietar­y trading, the practice of banks trading for themselves rather than for clients.

The rule assumes all the short-term positions are forbidden unless the banks seek one of a narrow list of exemptions, including market making for customers and certain hedging of risks.

Presuming all short-term trades are prohibited transactio­ns “has undercut banks’ ability to serve customers, out of concern that such services would be deemed proprietar­y

trading,” the American Bankers Associatio­n said in a Sept. 21 comment letter to the comptrolle­r’s office.

Randal Quarles, the Fed’s vice chairman for supervisio­n, in March called Volcker “an example of a complex regulation that is not working well” and said regulators were working fast to make “material changes.” That was a welcome sentiment for banks such as Goldman Sachs Group Inc., which shuttered its proprietar­ytrading desks after DoddFrank and has since lobbied against the constraint.

As for going easier on smaller banks, it’s an objective that’s also making headway in Congress. The Senate passed a bill earlier this year that would exempt all lenders with less than $10 billion from Volcker.

The legislatio­n is expected to clear the House as soon as next week.

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