

Barney Frank calls for simplified Volcker Rule by Labor Day
One of the lead authors of the Dodd-Frank financial reform law is calling on regulators to complete a simplified version of one of its key components by Labor Day, saying their original attempt was "far too complex."
Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.) said Thursday that regulators should streamline their efforts to implement the "Volcker Rule" to ensure they can actually put something in place in the near future.
Financial regulators were swamped with critiques of their original proposal implementing the rule, receiving roughly 17,000 public comments. As they try to go through and address all those concerns as they work to finalize the rule, regulators have begun warning lawmakers that while the law states the Volcker Rule should take effect on July 21, it is unlikely they will have final rules in place for how it should actually work.
The Volcker Rule is a key but contentious piece of the financial overhaul, which aims to set limits on the risky trades made by banks seeking to bolster their profit line. However, regulators are agonizing over how to curb that "proprietary trading" while still allowing banks to engage in legitimate activity to keep markets humming.
"The agencies tried to accommodate a variety of views on implementation but the results reflected in the proposed rule are far too complex, and the final rules should be simplified significantly," he said.
Frank added that regulators should make clear to financial institutions what exactly, if anything, they must comply with pertaining to the Volcker Rule when the July deadline hits. Regulators have missed a number of statutory deadlines in Dodd-Frank, and Frank said he tolerated the "slippage" to ensure regulators did their work well.
But it is more complicated with the Volcker Rule, as the law states that the rule shall go into effect on July 21, regardless of the rulemaking process. The end result is an "untenable" position where institutions must follow the rule without knowing what regulators will require, according to Frank.
Federal Reserve Governor Daniel Tarullo told lawmakers at a hearing Thursday that regulators are aware that they might miss the deadline, and plan to set out some guidelines for what banks must do pertaining to the rule on that date.
The House lawmaker's call comes the same day that a bipartisan group of senators unveiled legislation that would also ease the Volcker Rule deadline. A group of six members of the Senate Banking Committee has offered a bill that would make clear that financial firms are not required to comply with the Volcker Rule until one year after regulators have finalized their rules.








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