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5/12/2020

Remarks As Prepared for Delivery by Assistant Secretary Barr on The Path Forward for the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection…

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Press Center

Remarks As Prepared for Delivery by Assistant Secretary Barr on The Path Forward
for the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act at the Charlotte, North
Carolina Chamber of Commerce
8/4/2010

TG-812
Members of the Charlotte Chamber of Commerce, thank you for inviting me to join you today. President Obama has just signed into law a
set of reforms to our financial system that will lay a foundation for growth and prosperity in the years ahead. I want to follow Secretary
Geithner's speech in New York City on Monday with some further reflections on reform.
Let us take a step back and remember why these reforms were so important to enact. President Obama inherited an economic and
financial crisis more severe than any President since Franklin Roosevelt. The President responded forcefully with a historic job creation
package, with a multi-prong effort to stabilize our financial and housing sectors, and with reforms to make the financial system more
stable, more resilient, and safer for consumers and investors.
The need to reform our financial system is nowhere more clearly illustrated than the great recession from which we are just beginning to
emerge. The cost of the old financial order can be measured in the trillions of dollars of savings lost, in Americans who can't find work, and
in small businesses that still struggle to find funding.
Forces Leading to the Crisis
There were many causes of the crisis, but I want to begin today by talking about the role that innovative financial products seemed to play
and the importance nonetheless of fostering innovation as we implement financial reform.
Those markets with the most innovation and the fastest growth seemed to be at the center of the current crisis. There is no doubt that
taking the long historical view, at many turns we have seen a pattern of tremendous growth that has been supported by financial
innovation.
But in this cycle, as in many times in the past, this growth often hid key underlying risks, and innovation often outpaced the capacity of risk
managers, boards of directors, regulators and the market as a whole to understand and respond.
For instance, securitization helped banks move credit risk off of their books and supply more capital to housing markets. But it also
widened the wedge between principals and agents – lowering underwriting standards and the incentives for due diligence.
Tranching of asset-back securities and the assignment of ratings to tranches of structured products by credit rating agencies seemed to
give investors more control of the precise risk profile they were taking, but risk managers, corporate directors, and regulators did not
account for the tail-risk that this crisis so painfully exposed.
Rapidly expanding markets for hedging and risk protection allowed for better management of corporate balance sheets and freed
businesses to focus on their core missions. Credit protection allowed financial institutions to provide capital to business and families that
needed it. But a lack of transparency hid the movement of exposures. When the downturn suddenly exposed liquidity vulnerabilities and
important counter-party risks, uncertainty froze even the most deeply liquid and highly collateralized markets at the center of our financial
system.
It may be useful to think about our response to this crisis in terms of cycles of innovation. New products develop slowly while market
participants are unsure of their value or their risks. As they grow, however, the excitement and enthusiasm can overwhelm normal risk
management systems. Participants assume too soon that they really "know how they work," and more extreme versions, applied widely
without thought to the differing contexts, and often carrying more risk, flood the market. The cycle turns, as this one did, with a
vengeance, when that lack of understanding and that excess is exposed. But past experience shows that innovation survives and after a
time renews once again.
Innovation creates products that serve the needs of consumers and growth brings new players into the system. Businesses and financial
institutions have an important and ongoing need to manage their risks. Our financial system must maintain its role as an efficient way to
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Remarks As Prepared for Delivery by Assistant Secretary Barr on The Path Forward for the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection…

allocate capital.
But innovation demands a system of regulation that protects our financial system from catastrophic failure, protects consumers from
widespread harm and ensures that consumers have the information they need to make appropriate choices. Rather than focus on the old,
"more regulation" vs. "less regulation" debate, the questions we have asked are why certain types of innovation contributed in certain
contexts to outsize risks, and why our system was ill-equipped to monitor, mitigate and respond to those risks.
Our system failed to require transparency in key markets, especially fast developing ones. Rapid growth hid misaligned incentives that
people didn't recognize. Throughout our system we had inadequate buffers – as both market participants and regulators failed to account
for new risks appropriately. The apparent short-term rewards in new products and rapidly growing markets overwhelmed private sector
gatekeepers, and swamped those parts of the system that were supposed to mitigate risk. And households took on risks that they did not
fully understand and could ill-afford.
With our reforms we will now have a financial system that is safer and fairer; more stable and more resilient. And one that continues to
foster innovation.
Protecting Consumers
With the enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act, we have made a critical, structural change in our approach to consumer protection.
We all aspire to the same objectives for consumer protection regulation: independence, accountability, effectiveness, and balance -- a
system that promotes financial inclusion and preserves choice. The question is how to achieve that. A successful regulatory structure for
consumer protection requires mission focus, market-wide coverage, and consolidated authority.
Today's system has none of these qualities. It fragments jurisdiction and authority for consumer protection over many federal regulators,
most of which have higher priorities than protecting consumers. Non-banks avoid federal supervision; no federal consumer compliance
examiner lands at their doorsteps. Banks can choose the least restrictive supervisor among several different banking agencies.
Fragmentation of rule writing, supervision, and enforcement leads to finger-pointing in place of action and makes actions taken less
effective.
The Act now creates one agency for one marketplace with one mission – protecting consumers. The Consumer Financial Protection
Bureau will create a level playing field for all providers, regardless of their charter or corporate form. It will ensure high and uniform
standards across the market. It will focus on ensuring financial literacy for all Americans. It will end profits based on misleading sales
pitches and hidden traps, but there will be profits made on a level playing field where banks and nonbanks can compete on the basis of
price and quality.
Once we streamline authority, we will be able to leave behind regulatory arbitrage. And we will be assured of accountability.
The Act ensures, not limits, consumer choice; preserves, not stifles, innovation; strengthens, not weakens, depository institutions;
reduces, not increases, regulatory costs; empowers, not ignores, consumers; and increases, not reduces, national regulatory uniformity.
To rebuild trust in our markets, there is no need to wait for the implementation of these reforms. Today, the financial industry can begin to
find new ways to improve disclosure for your consumers, you here in Charlotte can end hidden fees, and create a culture of sound
underwriting that puts people into loans they can afford.
Systemic Risk
Much of the discussion of reform over the past two years has focused on the nature of and proper response to systemic risk.
To address these risks, the Act focuses on three major tasks: 1) providing an effective system for monitoring risks as they arise and
coordinating response; 2) creating a single point of accountability for tougher and more consistent supervision of the largest and most
interconnected institutions; and 3) tailoring the system of regulation to cover the full range of risks and actors in the financial system, so
that risks can no longer build up outside of supervision and monitoring.
The critical role of monitoring for emerging risks and coordinating policy is vested in a Financial Stability Oversight Council.
At the same time, the Act provides for consolidated supervision and regulation of any financial firm whose combination of size, leverage,
and interconnectedness could pose a threat to financial stability if it failed.
This crisis has clearly demonstrated that risks to the system can emerge from all corners of the financial markets and from any of our
financial institutions. Our approach is to bring these institutions and markets into a comprehensive system, where risks are disclosed and
can be monitored by regulators as necessary. That's why the Act brings all over the counter derivatives markets into a comprehensive
regulatory framework, and provides regulatory authority for clearing, payment, and settlement systems; strengthening the regulation of
markets for securitization; and registration of all hedge funds and other private pools of capital over a minimum threshold in size.
We need a system that's flexible enough to adapt to the emergence of other institutions that could pose a risk to the system. And we need
a system that lets regulators see risks as they emerge across the financial system. The reforms we've enacted achieve these aims.
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Basic Reform of Capital, Supervision, and Resolution Authority
As Secretary Geithner has said, the three most important things to lower risk in the financial system are "capital, capital, capital." We need
to make our financial system safer for failure. We cannot rely on perfect foresight--whether of regulators or firms. Higher capital charges
can insulate the system from the build-up of risk. That's why we have proposed raising capital standards across the board. Making the
system safe for innovation means raising the buffers for financial firms against loss. It also means creating a more uniform system of
regulation so that risks cannot build up without adequate regulatory oversight
Financial activity involves risk, and no one will be able to identify all risks or prevent all future crises. We learned through painful
experience that when the financial system is fragile, the failure of a large, interconnected institution can threaten the stability of the
financial system. While we have a tested and effective system for banks, there was no effective legal mechanism to resolve a non-bank
financial institution or bank holding company. The Act fills this gap in our legal framework with a mechanism modeled on our existing
system under the FDIC.
Finally, both our financial system and this crisis have been global in scope. So our solutions have been and must continue to be global.
International reforms must support our efforts at home, including strengthening the capital framework; improving oversight of global
financial markets; coordinating supervision of internationally active firms; and enhancing crisis management tools. We will not wait for the
international community to act before we reform at home, but nor will we be satisfied with an international race to the bottom on regulatory
standards.
Path forward on Financial Reform
I want to turn to the task ahead and describe the principles Secretary Geithner laid out that will guide us in the implementation of this
reform and for which you should hold us accountable.
First, we have an obligation of speed. We will move as quickly as possible to bring clarity to the new rules of finance.
Second, we will provide full transparency and disclosure. The regulatory agencies will consult broadly as they write new rules. Draft rules
will be published. The public will have a chance to comment. And those comments will be available for everyone to see.
Third, we will not simply layer new rules on top of old, outdated ones.
Alongside our efforts to strengthen and improve protections for the economy, we will eliminate rules that did not work. Wherever possible,
we will streamline and simplify.
Fourth, we will not risk killing the freedom for innovation that is necessary for economic growth. Our rules must protect the innovation that
serves customers and increases efficiency, but must end the laxity that allowed for recklessness and abuse.
Fifth, we will make sure we have a more level playing field – not just between banks and non-banks here in the United States – but also
between our financial institutions and those in Europe, Japan, China, and emerging markets who are all competing to finance global
growth and development. We will do this by setting high global standards and blocking a `race to the bottom' from taking place outside the
United States.
Finally, we will bring more order to the regulatory process, so that the agencies responsible for building these reforms are working together
not against each other.
Conclusion
As we go about the task of implementing these reforms, we will be criticized by some for going too far and by some for not going far
enough. This distinction is stuck in a debate that presumes that regulation--and efficient and innovative markets--are at odds. In fact, the
opposite is true. Markets rely on faith and trust. Markets require clear rules of the road. Consumers rely on the trust and fair dealing of
financial institutions. And for all our sakes and that of our economy we must restore honesty and integrity to our financial system. The
President's financial reforms lay a new foundation for financial regulation that will once again help to make our markets vital and strong.
Thank you very much.
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