FIA President and CEO Walt Lukken sent an open letter to President Trump and key congressional and regulatory leaders calling for a comprehensive review of all U.S. financial reform regulation.
The letter notes that after the financial crisis, the Dodd-Frank Act has generated more than 22,000 pages of regulations and fundamentally changed the regulatory structure of financial markets. Now is the appropriate time to review and simplify the regulatory framework developed following the financial crisis and determine whether these regulations are in fact meeting their public objectives.
"While some elements of Dodd-Frank may warrant repeal, others simply require reform," Lukken writes.
In addition to the call for a wholesale review of regulation, FIA also requests that policymakers focus on smart regulation and enforcement, globally accessible markets, and innovation and competition.
In releasing the letter, Lukken noted that he is encouraged to learn that President Trump and UK Prime Minister Theresa May are meeting later this week and looks forward to more coordination between the two jurisdictions, which are of critical importance to the financial services industry.
The signed letter is available here, and the text follows below.
Dear Mr. President:
FIA appreciates the attention your administration is devoting to the impact of financial regulation on the economy. After the financial crisis, the Dodd-Frank Act has generated more than 22,000 pages of regulations and fundamentally changed the regulatory structure of financial markets. Now is the appropriate time to review and simplify the regulatory framework developed following the financial crisis and determine whether these regulations are in fact meeting their public objectives.
While elements of Dodd-Frank may warrant repeal, others simply require reform. In particular, Title VII, which created the framework for the regulation and clearing of the swaps market, has led to both improvements to the swaps and futures markets (collectively, derivatives market) as well as significant challenges.
Derivatives serve an important purpose in our economy by allowing manufacturers, airlines, pension funds, ranchers and farmers to manage risk and discover market prices. A cornerstone of these regulated markets is centralized clearing, which requires clearinghouses and their members to stand behind the performance of each trade and contribute to a rainy-day fund to protect against defaults. This system of guarantees ensures the resilience and financial stability of these markets as evidenced by the fact that no U.S. clearinghouse has ever defaulted on its guarantee.
Regulation is not new to the derivatives markets. In fact, futures contracts have been subject to regulatory oversight, exchange trading and clearing for decades before the financial crisis. What is new is that Dodd-Frank extended regulation and the concepts of central clearing and regulated trade execution beyond futures to certain swaps.
Exchanges, clearinghouses and their members, and customers all have made considerable efforts to reduce risk and increase transparency for the derivatives markets. Progress has been made on improving the safety and soundness of these markets. Seventy-five percent of interest rate and credit default swap transactions are now cleared, compared to only fifteen percent before the crisis.
With this progress comes challenges. While each new regulation has been implemented individually, their effects are cumulative, and only now are the impact of these rules and the totality of their costs being born by the private sector. This is the time to take stock of how these regulations are functioning in practice rather than concept. Why is volume and growth stagnating? Why is there consolidation among members of this industry such that risk is now more concentrated? Why are commercial enterprises that had nothing to do with the crisis being saddled with dozens of new rules?
The key driver of these concerning trends is the cumulative regulatory burden on this sector, which appears to be harming competition, reducing market liquidity and stifling innovation and growth.
As policymakers consider ways to promote healthy markets, FIA recommends the following:
Derivatives markets play a critical role in our national economy. Our markets exist for the purpose of allowing businesses to hedge against uncertainty and volatility and focus their attention on growth and innovation. We look forward to working with you as policymakers consider how to best reform Dodd-Frank in a coordinated manner that benefits the markets and its users. Ensuring that these risk management tools remain available, affordable, and accessible for businesses is essential.
Most respectfully,
Walt L. Lukken
President and CEO