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Lodestar

(2,388 posts)
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 11:32 PM Nov 2015

How Wall Street captured Washington’s effort to rein in banks



Part 1: Intense lobbying of regulators, many of them veterans of the industry themselves, helped ensure that practices the Dodd-Frank law was
meant to stop would remain in place.


NEW YORK – In the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, Keith Higgins was certain: Banks weren’t to blame.

Higgins, a top attorney at prominent law firm Ropes & Gray LLP, was chairman of an American Bar Association committee on securities regulation. As such, he lobbied strenuously against a rule U.S. regulators were drafting that would require banks to disclose a lot more about asset-backed securities like those that had just torpedoed the economy.

In letters to the Securities and Exchange Commission, Higgins argued that divulging more details about the mortgages and other financial products that go into such securities would only confuse investors. And it was investors, with “insufficient understanding and … commitment” to their investments, who had been the real cause of the crisis, he argued in a July 2008 letter.

Then, in May 2013, as the SEC was still hashing out the rule, Higgins was tapped to lead the very 500-person SEC division that was writing it.

http://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/usa-bankrules-weakening/
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How Wall Street captured Washington’s effort to rein in banks (Original Post) Lodestar Nov 2015 OP
K&R LiberalArkie Nov 2015 #1
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