Category Archives: Dodd-Frank Act

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Did Dodd-Frank end too-big-to-fail?

The New York finance attorney who blogs at Economics of Contempt argues that critics who claim the Dodd-Frank Act didn’t end the era of too-big-to-fail financial institutions are premature in their assessment. The Act establishes a resolution authority, to unwind … Continue reading

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Regulators seek repo data

The repurchase market could get more sunlight under a new proposal announced Jan. 25 by the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. Under the proposal, hedge funds, private equity funds and unregistered money market funds will have … Continue reading

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NYU: Most of the leverage was in repos

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“Repo financing was the basis of most of the leveraged positions of the shadow banks.” From RepoWatch’s view, that’s the key sentence in “Regulating Wall Street,” a November 2010 book authored by New York University Stern School of Business professors Viral … Continue reading

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Tett: Silence on repo reform is “shocking”

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On the second anniversary of the collapse of Lehman Brothers, forced into insolvency by its repo lenders demanding more collateral or refusing to renew their loans, little has been done to reform the repurchase market, writes Gillian Tett, U.S. managing … Continue reading

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Dodd-Frank is weak on repo

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Banking reporter Peter Eavis at the Wall Street Journal is wondering why the Dodd-Frank Act didn’t do more to limit banks’ use of short-term debt like repurchase agreements. From his September 7 comments at Heard on the Street: While the … Continue reading