Sifma : News on the capital markets, securities and financial industry
vendredi 16 décembre 2011 SIFMA
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House panel approves mortgage securitization
proposal
Rep. Scott Garrett, R-N.J., introduced legislation that would
repeal the Dodd-Frank Act's risk-retention rule and put the Federal
Housing Finance Agency in charge of mortgage-servicing standards. A
House subcommittee approved the bill. The legislation would also
prohibit regulators from forcing mortgage servicers to offer
principal reductions. Housing Wire(12/15)
SEC seeks to overturn court's rejection of
Citigroup settlement
The Securities and Exchange Commission appealed to the 2nd U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals in New York to overturn a judge's decision
to reject the agency's proposed settlement with Citigroup. "We
believe the district court committed legal error by announcing a
new and unprecedented standard that inadvertently harms investors
by depriving them of substantial, certain and immediate benefits,"
SEC Enforcement Director Robert Khuzami said in a statement.
Bloomberg(12/15), CNNMoney.com(12/15), The New York Times (tiered subscription
model)(12/15), The Wall Street Journal(12/16)
Accounting regulators agree on how banks will book
loan losses
The International Accounting Standards Board and its U.S.
counterpart, the Financial Accounting Standards Board, agreed on
how banks will be required to book losses on loans. Banks will have
to book losses earlier. Reuters(12/15)
Corzine defends his actions regarding MF Global
client funds
Jon Corzine, former chief executive officer at MF Global, told
Congress that he did not know that customer funds had been
improperly transferred before the brokerage's collapse. "Let me be
clear. While the last few days of MF Global were chaotic, I did not
instruct anyone to lend customer funds to MF Global or any of its
affiliates, nor was I told that anyone had done so," Corzine said
at House Financial Services subcommittee hearing. The Hill/On The Money blog(12/15), Financial Times(tiered subscription
model)(12/15), The Wall Street Journal(12/16), Los Angeles Times/The Associated
Press(12/15)
Editorial: Regulators are right to remove raters
from system
Regulators are working to loosen the ratings agencies grip on the
financial industry by removing them as the "official arbiters of
financial reliability," this New York Times editorial notes.
Regulators are replacing ratings with objective and transparent
criteria that determine how risky an asset is. "Removing the
ratings agencies from the regulatory process would make the system
safer." The New York Times (tiered subscription
model)(12/14)