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5/13/2020

Secretary Timothy F. Geithner before the House Financial Services and Agriculture Committees Joint Hearing on Regulation of OTC Deri…

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Press Center

Secretary Timothy F. Geithner before the House Financial Services and Agriculture
Committees Joint Hearing on Regulation of OTC Derivatives
7/10/2009

TG-204

Chairman Frank, Ranking Member Bachus, Chairman Peterson, Ranking Member Lucas, members of the Financial Services and
Agriculture Committees, thank you for the opportunity to testify today about a key element of our financial regulatory reform package – a
comprehensive regulatory framework for the over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives markets.
Over the past two years, we have faced the most severe financial crisis in generations. Some of our largest financial institutions failed.
Many of the securities markets that are critical to the flow of credit in our financial system broke down. Banks came under extraordinary
pressure. And these forces magnified the overall downturn in the housing market and the broader economy.
President Obama, working with the Congress, has taken extraordinary steps to stabilize the economy and to repair the damage to the
financial system. As we continue to put in place conditions for economic recovery, we need to lay the foundation for a safer, more stable
financial system in the future.
This financial crisis has exposed a set of core problems with our financial system. The system permitted an excessive build-up of
leverage, both outside the banking system and within the banking system.
The shock absorbers that are critical to preserving the stability of the financial system – capital, margin, and liquidity cushions in particular
– were inadequate to withstand the force of the global recession, and they left the system too weak to withstand the failure of major
financial institutions.
In addition, millions of Americans were left without adequate protection against financial predation, particularly in the mortgage and
consumer finance areas. Many were unable to evaluate the risks associated with borrowing to support the purchase of a home or to
sustain a higher level of consumption.
The United States entered this crisis without an adequate set of tools to contain the risk of broader damage to the economy and to
manage the failure of large, complex financial institutions.
Many forces contributed to these problems. Household debt rose dramatically as a share of total income, financed by a willing supply of
savings from around the world. Risk management practices at financial firms failed to keep abreast of the rising complexity of financial
instruments. Compensation rose to exceptionally high levels in the financial sector, with rewards for executives unmoored from an
assessment of long-term risk for the firm, thus mis-aligning the incentive structures in the system. Our framework of financial supervision
and regulation, designed in a different era for a more simple bank-centered financial system, failed in its most basic responsibility to
produce a stable and resilient system for providing credit and protecting consumers and investors.
The Administration proposed in June a comprehensive set of reforms to address the problems in our financial system that were at the core
of this crisis and to reduce the risk of future crises.
We proposed to establish a new Consumer Financial Protection Agency with the power to establish and enforce protections for consumers
on a wide array of financial products.
We proposed to put in place more conservative constraints on risk taking and leverage through higher capital requirements for financial
institutions and stronger cushions in the core market infrastructure.
We proposed to extend the scope of regulation beyond the traditional banking sector to cover all firms who play a critical role in market
functioning and the stability of the financial system.
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5/13/2020

Secretary Timothy F. Geithner before the House Financial Services and Agriculture Committees Joint Hearing on Regulation of OTC Deri…

We proposed to put in place stronger tools for managing the failure of large, complex financial institutions by adapting the resolution
process that now exists for banks and thrifts.
We proposed to reduce the substantial opportunities for regulatory arbitrage that our system permitted by consolidating safety and
soundness supervision for federal depository institutions, eliminating loopholes in the Bank Holding Company Act, moving toward
convergence of the regulatory frameworks that apply to securities and futures markets, and establishing more uniform standards and
enforcement of standards for financial products and activities across the system.
And we proposed to work with other countries to establish strong international standards, so the reforms we put in place here are matched
and informed by similarly effective reforms elsewhere.
Any regulatory reform of magnitude requires deciding how to strike the right balance between financial innovation and efficiency, on the
one hand, and stability and protection, on the other. We failed to get this balance right in the past. The reforms that we propose seek to
shift the balance by creating a more resilient financial system that is less prone to periodic crises and credit and asset price bubbles, and
better able to manage the risks that are inherent in innovation in a market-oriented financial system.
We consulted widely with members of Congress, consumer advocates, academic experts, and former regulators in shaping our
recommendations. And we look forward to refining these recommendations through the legislative process.
One of the most significant developments in our financial system during recent decades has been the substantial growth and innovation in
the markets for derivatives, especially OTC derivatives.
Because of their enormous scale and the critical role they play in our financial markets, establishing a comprehensive framework of
oversight for the OTC derivative markets is crucial to laying the foundation for a safer, more stable financial system.
A derivative is a financial instrument whose value is based on the value of an underlying "reference" asset. The reference asset could be
a Treasury bond or a stock, a foreign currency or a commodity such as oil or copper or corn, a corporate loan or a mortgage-backed
security. Derivatives are traded on regulated exchanges, and they are traded off exchanges or over the counter.
The OTC derivative markets grew explosively in the decade leading up to the financial crisis, with the notional amount or face value of the
outstanding transactions rising more than six-fold to almost $700 trillion at the market peak in 2008. Over this same period, the gross
market value of OTC derivatives rose to more than $20 trillion.
Although derivatives bring substantial benefits to our economy by enabling companies to manage risks, they also pose very substantial
challenges and risks.
Under our existing regulatory system, some types of financial institutions were allowed to sell large amounts of protection against certain
risks without adequate capital to back those commitments. The most conspicuous and most damaging examples of this were the
monoline insurance companies and AIG. These firms and others sold huge amounts of credit protection on mortgage-backed securities
and other more complex real-estate related securities without the capacity to meet their obligations in an economic downturn.
Banks were able to get substantial regulatory capital relief from buying credit protection on mortgage-backed securities and other assetbacked securities from thinly capitalized, special purpose insurers subject to little or no initial margin requirements.
The apparent ease with which derivatives permitted risk to be transferred and managed during a period of global expansion and ample
liquidity led financial institutions and investors to take on larger amounts of risk than was prudent.
The complexity of the instruments that emerged overwhelmed the checks and balances of risk management and supervision, weaknesses
that were magnified by systematic failures in judgment by credit rating agencies. These failures enabled a substantial increase in
leverage, outside and within the banking system.
Because of a lack of transparency in the OTC derivatives and related markets, the government and market participants did not have
enough information about the location of risk exposures in the system or the extent of the mutual interconnections among large firms. So,
when the crisis began, regulators, financial firms, and investors had an insufficient basis for judging the degree to which trouble at one firm
spelled trouble for another. This lack of visibility magnified contagion as the crisis intensified, causing a very damaging wave of
deleveraging and margin increases, and contributing to a general breakdown in credit markets.
Market participants and investors used derivatives to evade regulation, or to exploit gaps and differences in regulation, and to minimize the
tax consequences of investment strategies.
The lack of transparency in the OTC derivative markets combined with insufficient regulatory policing powers in those markets left our
financial system more vulnerable to fraud and potentially to market manipulation.
These problems were not the sole or the principal cause of the crisis, but they contributed to the crisis in important ways. They need to be
addressed as part of comprehensive reform. And they cannot be adequately addressed within the present legislative or regulatory
framework.
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5/13/2020

Secretary Timothy F. Geithner before the House Financial Services and Agriculture Committees Joint Hearing on Regulation of OTC Deri…

In designing its proposed reforms for the OTC derivative markets, the Administration has attempted to achieve four broad objectives:
Preventing activities in the OTC derivative markets from posing risk to the stability of the financial system;
Promoting efficiency and transparency of the OTC derivative markets;
Preventing market manipulation, fraud, and other abuses; and
Protecting consumers and investors by ensuring that OTC derivatives are not marketed inappropriately to unsophisticated parties.

Our proposals have been carefully designed to provide a comprehensive approach. The plan will provide for strong regulation and
transparency for all OTC derivatives, regardless of the reference asset, and regardless of whether the derivative is customized or
standardized. In addition, our plan will provide for strong supervision and regulation of all OTC derivative dealers and all other major
participants in the OTC derivative markets.
We propose to achieve this with the following broad steps:
First, we propose to require that all standardized derivative contracts be cleared through well-regulated central counterparties and
executed either on regulated exchanges or regulated electronic trade execution systems.
Central clearing involves the substitution of a regulated clearinghouse between the original counterparties to a transaction. After central
clearing, the original counterparties no longer have credit exposure to each other – instead they have credit exposure to the clearinghouse
only. Central clearing of standardized OTC derivatives will reduce risks to those on both sides of a derivative contract and make the
market more stable. With careful supervision and regulation of the margin and other risk management practices of central counterparties,
central clearing of a substantial proportion of OTC derivatives should help to reduce risks arising from the web of bilateral interconnections
among our major financial institutions. This should help to constrain threats to financial stability.
Second, through capital requirements and other measures, we propose to encourage substantially greater use of standardized OTC
derivatives and thereby to facilitate substantial migration of OTC derivatives onto central clearinghouses and exchanges.
We will propose a broad definition of "standardized" OTC derivatives that will be capable of evolving with the markets and will be designed
to be difficult to evade. We will employ a presumption that a derivative contract that is accepted for clearing by any central counterparty is
standardized. Further attributes of a standardized contract will include a high volume of transactions in the contract and the absence of
economically important differences between the terms of the contract and the terms of other contracts that are centrally cleared.
We also will require that regulators carefully police any attempts by market participants to use spurious customization to avoid central
clearing and exchanges. In addition, we will raise capital and margin requirements for counterparties to all customized and non-centrally
cleared OTC derivatives. Given their higher levels of risk, capital requirements for derivative contracts that are not centrally cleared must
be set substantially above those for contracts that are centrally cleared.
Third, we propose to require all OTC derivative dealers, and all other major OTC derivative market participants, to be subject to substantial
supervision and regulation, including conservative capital requirements; conservative margin requirements; and strong business conduct
standards. Conservative capital and margin requirements for OTC derivatives will help ensure that dealers and other major market
participants have the capital needed to make good on the protection they have sold.
Fourth, we propose steps to make the OTC derivative markets fully transparent. Relevant regulators will have access on a confidential
basis to the transactions and open positions of individual market participants. The public will have access to aggregated data on open
positions and trading volumes.
To bring about this high level of transparency, we will require the SEC and CFTC to impose recordkeeping and reporting requirements
(including an audit trail) on all OTC derivatives. We will require that OTC derivatives that are not centrally cleared be reported to a
regulated trade repository on a timely basis.
These reforms will bring OTC derivative trading into the open so that regulators and market participants have clear visibility into the market
and a greater ability to assess risks in the market. Increased transparency will improve market discipline and regulatory discipline, and will
make the OTC derivative markets more stable.
Fifth, we propose to provide the SEC and CFTC with clear authority for civil enforcement and regulation of fraud, market manipulation, and
other abuses in the OTC derivative markets.
Sixth, we will work with the SEC and CFTC to tighten the standards that govern who can participate in the OTC derivative markets. We
must zealously guard against the use of inappropriate marketing practices to sell derivatives to unsophisticated individuals, companies,
and other parties.
Finally, we will continue to work with our international counterparts to help ensure that our strict and comprehensive regulatory regime for
OTC derivatives is matched by a similarly effective regime in other countries.
Turning our proposals into law will require that a number of difficult judgments be made. Some of these judgments involve assigning
jurisdiction over particular transactions or particular market participants to particular regulatory agencies. We have been working with the
SEC and the CFTC over the past few months to develop a sensible allocation of duties. We have made great progress in narrowing the
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5/13/2020

Secretary Timothy F. Geithner before the House Financial Services and Agriculture Committees Joint Hearing on Regulation of OTC Deri…

outstanding issues, and intend to send up draft legislation that will provide for a clear allocation of oversight authority between the SEC
and CFTC. In making these decisions, we are striving to utilize each agency's expertise, eliminate gaps in regulation, eliminate
uncertainty about which agency regulates which types of derivatives, and maximize consistency of the regulatory approach of the two
agencies.
Our plan will help prevent the OTC derivative markets from threatening the stability of the overall financial system.
By requiring central clearing of all standardized derivatives and by requiring all OTC derivative dealers and all other significant OTC
market participants to be strictly supervised by the federal government, to maintain substantial capital buffers to back up their obligations,
and to comply with prudent initial margin requirements, the regulatory framework that we seek to put in place should help lower systemic
risk.
Our plan will help make the derivatives markets more efficient and transparent.
By requiring all standardized derivatives to be cleared through regulated central counterparties and executed on regulated exchanges or
through regulated electronic trade execution systems and by requiring that detailed information about all types of derivatives be readily
available to regulators, our plan will help ensure that the government is not caught--as it was in this crisis--with insufficient visibility into
market activity, risk concentrations, and connections between firms.
Our plan will help prevent market manipulation, fraud and other abuses by providing full information to regulators about activity in the OTC
derivative markets and by providing the SEC and the CFTC with full authority to police the markets.
Finally, our plan will help protect investors by taking steps to prevent OTC derivatives from being marketed inappropriately to
unsophisticated parties.
As Congress moves to craft legislation to reform our financial system, we are moving quickly to advance the overall process.
Following the release of our White Paper on financial regulatory reform in mid-June, we sent up detailed legislative language for the
establishment of the Consumer Financial Protection Agency.
We have used the President's Working Group on Financial Markets to pull together all government agencies that oversee elements of the
financial system to begin the process of formulating more detailed proposals for implementing the comprehensive reforms outlined by the
President.
The SEC is moving forward to put in place new rules to govern credit-rating agencies, which failed to adequately assess the risks of
mortgage-backed and other structured securities at the center of the crisis.
The CFTC has announced hearings on whether to impose limits on speculation in energy derivatives in order to dampen price swings, and
to require new disclosures by derivative traders.
SEC Chairman Schapiro and CFTC Chairman Gensler were recently on Capitol Hill testifying together about progress in coordinating their
agencies' approaches to derivatives and developing a reasonable division of labor in the oversight of these markets.
We welcome the commitment of the Congressional leadership and of the key committees to move forward with legislation this year. This
is an enormously complex project. It is important that we get it right. And we need a comprehensive approach.
This crisis caused enormous damage to trust and confidence in the U.S. financial system and to the American economy.
We share responsibility for fixing the system and we can only do that with comprehensive reform.
We look forward to working with you to achieve that objective.
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