Archive for Tuesday, July 08, 2008
Fed, SEC to work more closely
Financial regulators announced Monday an information-sharing agreement aimed at better detecting risks to the financial system.
The pact between the Federal Reserve and the Securities and Exchange Commission should enhance regulatory cooperation between the two agencies, enabling them to more effectively carry out their regulatory duties, officials said.
Data to be shared include banks’ and investment firms’ cash and trading positions, proportion of debt to capital, financing resources and risk-management systems. The Fed is the main regulator of banks, while the SEC oversees Wall Street investment firms.
The agencies have been working together more closely, especially since the near collapse in March of investment firm Bear Stearns Cos. JPMorgan Chase & Co. took over Bear Stearns after it plunged to the brink of bankruptcy.
Under the pact the Fed will get a role in setting capital cushions at securities firms. The agencies also are to collaborate in designing risk management systems.
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- A semester abroad ... in Tinseltown
- Biden, the master gasbag
- Is now a good time to panic?
- House of Blues on Sunset Strip in jeopardy of sanctions
- Thousands celebrate 100th anniversary of Philippe's
- Maher's mockery misses the point
- Millionaire ex-inmate dies in scooter crash
- Red Sox send Angels home again
- Elgin Baylor out, Mike Dunleavy very much in with Clippers
- 'The Real Housewives of Atlanta'
- Denver wants pro-Obama mural removed
- In debate, McCain and Obama battle mostly to a draw
- Plunge in markets brings another kind of depression
- Debate reaction varies
- The debate in body language
- Killing of Mexico mayor sends message
- It's (almost) all good for Lakers' Andrew Bynum
- McCain, Obama clash over economy in a testy debate
