Las Vegas Review-Journal

Trump signs bill loosening post-crisis restraints on banking

- By Marcy Gordon The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Thursday signed into law a measure that loosens key restraints for banks imposed after the 2008 financial crisis and Great Recession. Savoring the legislativ­e triumph, he called it “the next step in America’s unpreceden­ted economic comeback.”

The Republican-crafted bill passed Congress on Tuesday with the help of some Democratic votes and allowed Trump to fulfill his campaign pledge of dismantlin­g the landmark Dodd-frank law. The 2010 law was enacted by President Barack Obama and Democrats in Congress in response to the crisis that brought millions of lost jobs and foreclosed homes, and a taxpayer bailout of hundreds of billions for banks on Wall Street and beyond.

The new law raises the threshold at which banks are deemed so big and plugged into the financial grid that if one were to fail it would cause major havoc. Such banks are subject to stricter capital and planning requiremen­ts.

“As a candidate, I pledged that we would rescue these community banks from Dodd-frank, the disaster of Dodd-frank, and now we are keeping that commitment,” Trump said at the signing event in the Roosevelt Room.

The law makes a fivefold increase, to $250 billion, in the level of assets at which banks are deemed to pose a major threat if they fail. The change eases regulation­s and oversight on more than two dozen financial institutio­ns, including BB&T Corp., Suntrust Banks, Fifth Third Bancorp and American Express.

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