Senate Dems eye easing Volcker rule's fund limits |
Date: Thursday, June 24, 2010
Author: Bloomberg
The Senate was
moving on Wednesday to water down the controversial "Volcker rule" on
bank trading and investing as lawmakers raced to complete landmark Wall
Street reform legislation within days. In a potential victory for bank
lobbyists, banks would be allowed to invest up to 2 percent of total
Tier 1 capital in hedge funds and private equity funds, under a version
of the Volcker rule outlined in a document obtained by Reuters. More specifically, the document proposes a
3-percent Tier 1 capital cap on bank interests in hedge fund "seed
capital," and a cap on banks' stakes in private equity funds that could
not exceed 5 percent of an individual fund's total capital. Banks would have five years after the law
takes effect to sell off stakes in funds that exceed the proposed caps,
according to the document. Democratic
Senator Christopher Dodd, head of the Senate negotiating team on a
panel writing the Wall Street reform bill, said the Volcker rule debate
was not over yet. "We don't have
language yet on the Volcker rule, we are working on it," he said, adding
Senate staffers would work into the night on the proposal to be
unveiled on Thursday. The original
Volcker rule called for barring any sponsorship of or investment in
private equity and hedge funds by banks, while also curbing proprietary
trading that banks do for their own accounts unrelated to the needs of
customers. Billions of dollars in
profits for some of Wall Street's biggest financial institutions are at
stake. BROWN SEEKS RULE
CHANGES-AIDES Senator Scott Brown
-- who has clout on Wall Street reform as a key Republican swing vote --
was increasingly at the center of efforts to weaken the rule, Senate
aides said. He is one of a handful
of Republicans seen as likely to vote with Democrats to overcome
procedural hurdles in the Senate and win passage of the final overall
bill. Then it could be sent to President Barack Obama to sign into law. Lobbyists for Bank of New York Mellon,
State Street Corp and Northern Trust Co have been especially active in
pressing for exemptions to let their asset management units continue to
make small, or 'de minimis,' investments in private equity and hedge
funds, aides said. More recently,
the aides said, proposals for changes to the rule seem to reflect the
business needs of Wall Street giants such as Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan
Chase, both big players in recent years in the private equity business. The rule is named after White House
economic adviser Paul Volcker, who proposed it in January along with
President Barack Obama, stunning banks deeply involved in proprietary
trading, private equity and hedge funds. The
Senate included a version of the rule in landmark Wall Street reform
legislation it passed last month. Critics said that version left the
door open to watering down of the rule by regulators in the
implementation phase. Democratic
senator Jeff Merkley and Carl Levin have rewritten the rule to reduce
regulators' latitude on writing the rule's details. The Merkley-Levin
language will be used in the final bill, Dodd said on Tuesday. A joint Senate-House of Representatives
panel is now working to combine the Senate bill with one approved in
December by the House, which excluded the Volcker rule. Tier 1 capital is a key measure of a bank's
strength.