Donald Trump orders review of financial crisis law

US president signals action against Dodd-Frank regulations on banks

US president Donald Trump signs an executive  order to review the Dodd-Frank Wall Street regulations, in Washington, DC. Photograph: Aude Guerrucci/Getty Images
US president Donald Trump signs an executive order to review the Dodd-Frank Wall Street regulations, in Washington, DC. Photograph: Aude Guerrucci/Getty Images

US president Donald Trump on Friday ordered a review of banking regulations introduced after the 2008 financial crisis, including a review of a rule on retirement advice.

Mr Trump pledged during his election campaign to replace the Dodd-Frank law introduced under the Obama administration, which raised capital requirements for banks, restricted their trading by means of the “Volcker Rule” and also created the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

The presidential order also imposed a 180-day delay on the implementation of a new “fiduciary rule” for brokers offering retirement advice, according to a draft memo seen by Reuters.

During that time, the US labour department is to conduct an economic and legal analysis of the regulation and rescind the rule if it is inconsistent with Trump administration priorities, according to the memo, which is not final.

READ SOME MORE

Originally slated to take effect in April, the rule requires brokers to act as “fiduciaries”, or in their clients’ best interests, when advising them about retirement plans.

The US chamber of commerce and other trade groups are seeking to have the fiduciary rule overturned in court.

A federal judge reviewing the case signalled in a court filing on Thursday that she plans to issue a decision no later than February 10th.

Democrats and consumer rights groups say the rule is necessary to protect individuals against potential conflicts of interest that brokers may have when guiding clients to invest for the future.

US Republicans on Friday also repealed a rule aimed at curbing corruption in oil, gas and mining companies and voted to axe emissions limits on drilling operations, as part of a push to remove Obama-era regulations on the energy industry.

Mr Trump’s order on reviewing the 2010 Dodd-Frank Wall Street reform regulations may be largely symbolic, because only Congress can rewrite the legislation.

Nevertheless, Wall Street embraced the possibility of simpler bank regulations by pushing financial stocks up in morning trade.

"The first thing that we are going to attack is regulation, over-regulation. It's not just in the financial markets, it's in all markets," said White House national economic council director Gary Cohn on Fox Business Network on Friday.

“So today you’re going to start seeing the beginning of some of our executive actions to roll back regulation in the financial services market,” he said.

Banking rules

Dodd-Frank, the biggest Wall Street regulatory overhaul in decades, set out a long list of rules intended to keep the financial system from a repeat of the 2007-2009 crisis.

The rules included strict new capital standards for banks and called for annual stress tests for banks considered “too big to fail”.

It also provided for more oversight of derivatives trading, and restricted banks trading on their own accounts by means of the so-called “Volcker Rule”.

The legislation also created a new consumer protection watchdog to guard against predatory lending.

Analysts said Mr Trump could make many changes to banking regulation without involving politicians, such as appointing new personnel or simply choosing not to enforce rules already enacted.

“A lot of the regulations of Dodd-Frank required a bit of a cop-on-the-beat, if you will, to ensure enforcement and if you have a different cop-on-the-beat, they enforce different rules, or they enforce the rules differently,” said FBR & CO financial policy analyst Edward Mills.

Mr Trump cannot fire the heads of independent agencies, including the three top bank regulators: Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen, comptroller of the currency Thomas Curry and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation chairman Martin Gruenberg.

In addition, the terms of Melvin Watt, director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency that oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and Richard Cordray, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau director, extend beyond the end of this year.

Republican politicians are pushing Mr Trump to fire Mr Cordray, but a federal court’s decision giving him the power to do so has been stayed pending appeal.

Many prominent US financial leaders support the Dodd-Frank law.

Chicago Fed president Charles Evans said on Friday Dodd-Frank "has largely been helpful" and the stress tests have led to a banking system with "more and better capital".

Republican congressman Sean Duffy said earlier this week that House financial services committee chairman Jeb Hensarling is expected to advance his Choice Act legislation to weaken Dodd-Frank later this month.

Reuters