Author: George M. Bollenbacher Associate Partner, Capital Markets Advisors This July marks the fourth anniversary of the passage and signing of the Dodd-Frank Act, so it is appropriate to reflect on the two sections of the DFA most of interest to Tabb Forum members, Title VII on derivatives, and Section 619, the Volcker Rule. Title VII The first question we might ask about Title VII is whether swaps were really… Read More »
After the final version of the Volcker Rule was published in December, and banks began to prepare for the July 15, 2015 effective date, the only remaining question was how it will be enforced. That enforcement is up to the examiners of the various agencies. Recently, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) published a 26-page VR examiners’ manual, which may be an inside peek into how the… Read More »
It has been more than two years since the proposed Volcker Rule (VR) was published by a consortium of US regulators. With not much being said publicly about it over the ensuing period, and all the public attention paid to derivatives reform worldwide, one might be forgiven if one took one’s eye off that particular ball. As it turns out, that would have been a mistake. In a recent article… Read More »
In my last piece, I discussed the general compliance requirements of the Volcker Rule (VR) as it was proposed in 2011. This is now timely because the Secretary of the Treasury apparently told a group of bankers recently that the final rule would be published before the end of the year. Although there may be some adjustments to the proposed requirements, we should expect the basics to remain, and that… Read More »
In my last piece, I discussed the exemption-specific compliance requirements of the Volcker Rule (VR) for liquidity management and underwriting. In this article, I will focus on market-making and hedging. All together, now – the operative language of the Act is, “Except as otherwise provided in this subpart, a [bank] may not engage in proprietary trading, and further defines the term; proprietary trading means engaging as principal for the trading… Read More »
A recent article in the Wall Street Journal predicted that the looming “Volcker Rule Won’t Allow Banks to Use ‘Portfolio Hedging.’” This subject has been discussed and re-discussed for a while, but much of the discussion, and perhaps the rule itself, appears to misunderstand the very nature of hedging.
As we get closer and closer to mandated SEF trading, we keep finding little things that don’t work quite the way they are supposed to. I covered some of these in previous articles, including one just yesterday. Well, it seems that the CFTC can’t get out of its own way, or ours for that matter. The latest “clarification” from them relates to impartial access to SEF, and covers something called… Read More »
As derivatives reform spreads out from Washington to places like Europe, some of the subtle, and not so subtle, differences in regulation are starting to make waves, if not tsunamis. One of the biggest areas of change is the clearing of derivatives contracts, and one of the most interesting, if not troubling, developments is EMIR’s rules allowing indirect clearing.