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DEEP CAPTURE: It Only Hurts When I Laugh

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Joanne98 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-06-09 01:49 PM
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DEEP CAPTURE: It Only Hurts When I Laugh

March 4th, 2009 by Patrick Byrne

The Congressional Research Service is a Library of Congress think-tank with just one client: Congress. A member of Congress requests a study on a subject of interest, and CRS researchers generate it. The CRS is one of the most respected institutions in Washington, DC, and its output is universally considered non-partisan, objective, and thorough.

Last Tuesday, February 24, 2009, the Congressional Research Service published a 40 page report, “Who Regulates Whom? An Overview of U.S. Financial Supervision” (Mark Jickling, Edward Murphy, CRS, February 24, 2009) As the title suggests, the report is a primer on the parts of the US financial system, and who regulates which part. As the Summary section puts it:

“This report provides an overview of current U.S. financial regulation: which agencies are responsible for which institutions and markets, and what kinds of authority they have….This report does not attempt to analyze the strengths and weaknesses of the U.S. regulatory system. Rather, it provides a description of the current system, to aid in the evaluation of reform proposals.” (Page 2)

And in the Introduction:

“A number of studies and reports have already proposed broad changes to the division of supervisory authority among the various federal agencies and in the tools and authorities available to individual regulators. This report provides a basis for evaluating and comparing such proposals by setting out the basic structure of federal financial regulation as it stood at the beginning of the 111th Congress.” (Page 5)

And describe the basic structure of the the financial system, its regulators, and their regulatory principles, it does, thoroughly, in 35 more pages of clear and informative, if not exactly gripping, prose. It covers US banking regulation and federal securities regulation, the regulation of derivative trading and of GSE’s such as Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, and the non-regulation of foreign exchange and US Treasuries, nonbank lenders, hedge funds and venture capitalists. I confess it answered every question I could think to ask regarding the parts of the US financial system and which office of government regulates each part. I commend Messiers Jickling and Murphy for so thorough and well-organized a review of that subject.

There’s just one thing: it does not mention the Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation. In fact, it does not mention securities settlement.

Does that seem strange?

Consider this: The regulatory structure of the US capital market was set in the Secuties Exchange Act of 1934. It devoted a section (immediately after the section on Directors, Officers, and Principle Shareholders, and the section establishing the need to keep records), to describing the need for a “National System for Clearance and Settlement of Securities Transactions” (Section 17a). Its opening is instructive:

“a. Congressional findings; facilitating establishment of system

“1. The Congress finds that–

“A. The prompt and accurate clearance and settlement of securities transactions, including the transfer of record ownership and the safeguarding of securities and funds related thereto, are necessary for the protection of investors and persons facilitating transactions by and acting on behalf of investors.

“B. Inefficient procedures for clearance and settlement impose unnecessary costs on investors and persons facilitating transactions by and acting on behalf of investors.

“C. New data processing and communications techniques create the opportunity for more efficient, effective, and safe procedures for clearance and settlement.

“D. The linking of all clearance and settlement facilities and the development of uniform standards and procedures for clearance and settlement will reduce unnecessary costs and increase the protection of investors and persons facilitating transactions by and acting on behalf of investors.”

It seems that in 1934 Congress thought having securities transactions clear and settle promptly was pretty important.

Which makes it especially odd that in 2009, in the Congressional Research Service’s admirably thorough report on the parts of the US financial system and the regulators who oversee them, no mention is made of that “”National System for Clearance and Settlement of Securities Transactions” whose establishment Congress in 1934 found “necessary for the protection of investors.”

I am reminded of an event from early 2005. It was the early days of the Mitzvah. I was having trouble synthesizing the data. It would be more honest of me to say: the data suggested that our settlement system was Swiss Cheese, an enormous derivative risk was building up that no one understood, the same SEC to which I had spent a lifetime looking up in awe and fear was actually lapdog to a tight circle of Wall Street crooks, the savings of America were being looted, and it was all going to end in systemic collapse. But clearly, I thought, that’s crazy. So I was having trouble forming a hypothesis to fit the data, other than a crazy one.

I decided to find out who regulated the DTCC. Listen to what they had to say. No doubt I’d learn some piece of the puzzle that I was missing, something that would cause the light bulb to go on and me to say, “Oh, that’s where this is coming from. Oh, I see, there’s nothing to worry about after all.”

The problem was, I could not find out who regulated the DTCC. It was not on their website. I couldn’t find any government agency that claimed to regulate the DTCC, or any news story that mentioned the subject of DTCC regulation. A core finding of Congress in 1934, in the foundational document of modern regulation, established that something had to be done, but 71 years later I could find no evidence that it was the job of anyone in the federal government to do it. And that’s odd because usually government agencies fight turf wars over who gets to regulate this or that. But here was a great vital section of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, authorizing the establishment of a crucial component of the system, yet no one seemed to be doing it.

That can’t be right, I thought. Clearly just another moment of bad craziness.

So I went to see two securities lawyers whom I knew socially. I asked them if they would research something for me, that I would be willing to pay them for their time, and that they did not have to worry about writing anything formal. I just needed from them one simple sentence of the form, “The DTCC is regulated by _____ .” They agreed to produce it.

Continued>>>
http://www.deepcapture.com/it-only-hurts-when-i-laugh/
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