October, 11 2011, 01:08pm EDT

Regulators Ignore Intent of Volcker Rule's Promise to Reshape Wall Street
Statement by Bartlett Naylor, Financial Policy Advocate, Public Citizen’s Congress Watch Division
WASHINGTON
Congress approved the Volcker Rule to liberate the American taxpayer from the government-subsidized casino culture that overtook American banking and enriched speculators. This cornerstone of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act is intended to return banking to the honest work of channeling savings into the real economy. The statute specifically prohibits banks from profiting on self-serving bets in price changes in financial instruments, so-called proprietary trading.
Today, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) released a 298-page draft of the proposed rule, requesting comment through January 13, 2012.
Public Citizen believes the proposed rule draws too few bright lines to make clear what banks can and cannot do. For example, the Volcker Rule already permits legitimate market-making, allowing banks to earn fees by matching buyers and sellers of financial instruments. Rather than clearly separating permissible market-making and prohibited proprietary trading, the regulators are proposing that they will detect the difference between various trades by fishing through complex data provided by the banks after the fact. This is an invitation for evasion. Regulators also should prohibit market-making in financial instruments so complex as to elude regulatory understanding.
The Volcker Rule invites regulators to reconsider core values of the American economy and the proper role of banks. Our Wall Street watchdogs should think first of Main Street and ensure that banks return to serving the real economy. Public Citizen urges regulators to remove the gratuitous exemptions for practices not specifically permitted in the Volcker Rule, and to draw clearer, more readily enforceable bright lines.
Public Citizen is a nonprofit consumer advocacy organization that champions the public interest in the halls of power. We defend democracy, resist corporate power and work to ensure that government works for the people - not for big corporations. Founded in 1971, we now have 500,000 members and supporters throughout the country.
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