Wednesday, February 22, 2012

From our Dept. of Unintended Consequences: Volcker Rule smacks unlikely targets


The good people at Reuters inform us that some public agencies that rely on the municipal bond market for financing fear that a landmark financial reform rule will cripple their ability to sell bonds and make it more expensive to raise money for crucial services.

The Volcker Rule was designed to curb the risks that banks take with depositor dollars, a practice known as proprietary trading. But the rule risks ensnaring public agencies ranging from housing agencies to hospital authorities because the way muni bonds are sold and traded results in banks risking their own capital -- the very practice banned under the Volcker Rule.

And although the rule, a key component of the Dodd-Frank reform law passed in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, did include an exemption to ensure that state and local governments would still be able to raise money in the municipal bond market, it left a gaping hole.

As a result, state and local authorities are worried that the rule will inhibit banks from underwriting bonds and trading, inadvertently driving up water and sewer bills, delaying public transportation projects and making affordable housing scarcer unless changes are made. The rule exempts about 60 percent of municipal bonds from the restrictions on banks' proprietary trading....

Find out more at http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Aimed-banks-Volcker-Rule-hits-rb-212383953.html?x=0

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