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Financial overhaul at a glance

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Here are significant provisions of the legislation to overhaul financial regulations.

CONSUMER PROTECTION

Bill would: Create an entity to write and enforce consumer protection rules on mortgages, credit cards and other financial products.

Key differences: House version creates an independent agency and largely exempts auto dealers from oversight. Senate version creates a bureau in the Federal Reserve and does not exempt auto dealers.

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DERIVATIVES

Bill would: Require most derivatives to be traded on public exchanges and through central clearinghouses, which would require collateral to cover deals that go bad.

Key differences: House version has broader exemption from clearinghouse rules for non-financial firms that use derivatives to hedge commercial risks. Senate version requires commercial banks to spin off derivatives businesses.

‘TOO BIG TO FAIL’

Bill would: Give government power to seize and dismantle large firms on the brink of bankruptcy if their failure would threaten the economy.

Key differences: House version creates a $150-billion fund, prepaid by large financial institutions, to pay for dismantling seized firms. Senate version has no prepaid fund, but would recoup costs later from the financial industry.

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FINANCIAL INDUSTRY OVERSIGHT

Bill would: Create a council of regulators to oversee the financial system for signs of risk. Appoint the Federal Reserve to regulate large firms.

Key differences: Senate version gives the Federal Reserve power to regulate the fees that banks charge merchants for processing debit card transactions. House version does not.

EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

Bill would: Grant shareholders a non-binding say-on-pay vote; give Securities and Exchange Commission power to grant shareholders proxy access to nominate directors; require publicly traded companies to have compensation committees with independent directors.

Key differences: No major differences.

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