Business Standard

Trump pledges ‘big number’ on Dodd-Frank in anti-rule push

- BEN BAIN & JESSE HAMILTON

President Donald Trump stepped up his criticism of financial regulation­s, pledging to go after the 2010 DoddFrank banking overhaul because he said the law has made it difficult for businesses to get loans.

“We’re going to be doing a big number on Dodd-Frank,” Trump said Monday at an event with small business leaders at the White House. He called the legislatio­n “a disaster” and said, “it’s almost impossible now to start a small business and it’s virtually impossible to expand your existing business.”

Trump didn’t provide data linking borrowing to DoddFrank, and the law’s impact on business lending isn’t clear cut. Commercial and industri- al lending is up significan­tly since the law was approved, though the amount of money lent to small businesses was little changed, according to government data.

Trump’s remarks are his most pointed on financial rules since he took office January 20. His advisors vowed to dismantle DoddFrank during the transition period, but have provided scant details on how they plan | Key lending portfolios have been on the rise since former President Barack Obama signed Dodd-Frank into law in July 2010 | At the time, commercial and industrial lending was at $1.2 trillion Almost seven years later, that measure of credit from US banks to the business sector is up almost 70 per cent to $2.1 trillion There were $310 billion in loans outstandin­g to small business before the law was passed As of the end of September, those loans totalled $328 billion | to go about it. Trump didn’t say whether he planned to attack the law through executive action or by working with Congress on legislatio­n.

Banks and investors have been trying to decipher how the billionair­e will balance his populist message to the middle class with his Wall Street ties, which include a cadre of former Goldman Sachs Group bankers he’s tapped for key roles in his administra­tion.

The president’s comments came as he signed an executive order requiring that government agencies revoke two existing regulation­s for each new one they issue, fulfilling a campaign promise. Trump campaigned on cutting a federal bureaucrac­y that he blames for making it harder for businesses to grow and get funding.

Key lending portfolios have been on the rise since former President Barack Obama signed Dodd-Frank into law in July 2010. At the time, commercial and industrial lending was at $1.2 trillion, according to data from the Federal Reserve. Almost seven years later, that measure of credit from US banks to the business sector is up almost 70 per cent to $2.1 trillion.

There were $310 billion in loans outstandin­g to small business before the law was passed, according to Federal Deposit Insurance. As of the end of September, those loans totaled $328 billion. While there was a dollar value increase, those loans grew at a far slower pace than larger business loans and nominal gross domestic product. The FDIC defines small business loans as those totalling $1 million or less.

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