Volcker Rule - How does this affect them?

Did anyone catch the Volcker hearing in front of the Senate Banking Committee today? I think the senate rocked that hearing asking the questions that most people were waiting to hear.

Bob Corker was the man and made clear the fire walls that are already present that prevent commercial deposits being used for proprietary trading, and mark johannes made clear that this rule would not have prevented the crisis if it was in effect pre-crisis.

IMO, prop trading was not involved in the crisis, so is this policy or politics? and I have a couple of friends in Asset Management for GS/JPM, how does this affect them if banks can't invest in hf/pe?

6 Comments
 

The whole problem goes back to investing in illiquid assets right? I mean when shit was hitting the fan and no one knew what various derivatives were worth, it was b/c they were illiquid. So prop trading should be limited to liquid assets. The government should mandate that a clearing house be established so there is a liquid market.

Although, I thought that was the original plan??? This administration is like a chicken with its head cut-off. They run for whatever the flavor of the day is in financial regulation.

As far as PE is concerned and if lending is riskier than investing in the fund itself, I would think that it all depends on where the bank falls in line as far as claims on the company's assets are concerned. The bank would have to be senior to all other creditors/investors, assuming the portfolio company goes under and thus making their investment less risky than that of an LP.

 

Yeah, having a clearinghouse would make a lot of sense, however most of the crisis that affected the banks themselves was the inventory of toxic assets they had on their balance sheet that they couldn't sell, had to take severe write-downs based on the mark-to-market rule when another bank sold some asset at a large discount, and the freeze up of the commercial paper/repo market. All of the major players that were hurt weren't even commercial banks, MS/GS/AIG/LEH/GM.

One senator said it best, "Never let a good crisis go to waste" And they are using this as an opportunity to put through excessive laws just for the sake of regulation

----------------------------------------------------------------- “It's all nonsense. Firms use titles to pander to the egos of the employees without giving away the store. If you are getting the money, who cares about the title?"
 
Best Response

I hope not. I think that some new regulations are necessary because right now the largest banks have a government guarantee in their back pocket. The "living will" and special bankruptcy court idea i've heard a few times I think is a good one. I also agree that a clearning house for CDS products and some other things that are now OTC would help by lowering the risk that the originator goes bankrupt. I just hope that the new laws are passed for the right reasons, and not to just pick on bankers because they are an easy political target.

The mark to market rule has to stay. Taking it away only gives investors less clarity on what a company is holding. Even though fire-sales led to a lot of markdowns on mortgage securities, that was still the going market price and what people would pay you if you stepped out and tried to sell those securities.

 

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----------------------------------------------------------------- “It's all nonsense. Firms use titles to pander to the egos of the employees without giving away the store. If you are getting the money, who cares about the title?"

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