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Big Bank Bankruptcy Bill Back on Table: Will It Prevent Meltdown?

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Bankruptcy protections tailored to large financial institutions in crisis are back on the agenda in Congress, but using chapter 11 in these situations has its drawbacks, some scholars and practitioners say, Bankruptcy Law Reporter reported on Wednesday. Bipartisan legislation passed by the House and now wrapped into a larger appropriations measure may improve its chances in the Senate if it should get there. It would enable mega banks to restructure in bankruptcy should they run aground. It would create a new sub-chapter in Chapter 11 for financial institutions with assets of at least $50 billion, which would include institutions such as JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo & Co., and Citigroup Inc. Proponents say the Financial Institution Bankruptcy Act (FIBA) of 2017 (H.R. 1667) would help ensure financial market stability in the event of a major bank failure. That occurred in 2008 amid the global financial crisis when Lehman Brothers went bankrupt. There’s some optimism in the House that the plan will make it to the other side of the Capitol as early as this summer, where a similar bill died in 2016. But there is disagreement among bankruptcy scholars and practitioners as to whether bankruptcy, by itself, can address systemic risk concerns.
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Seven Years After Dodd-Frank Passage, There Still Aren’t Proposals for a Fifth of Rules

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Financial regulators have written more than 26,000 pages of rules for the landmark Dodd-Frank bank reform law passed seven years ago, MarketWatch reported on Friday. But there’s still 20 percent of the Dodd-Frank requirements left to go, according to data from Davis Polk, which has been the go-to source for tracking the unwieldy law. In addition, 280 of 390 rulemaking requirements have finalized rules, and there are proposals for another 30 more. Regulators aren’t exactly feeling the pressure to move forward, as Republicans in Congress and in the White House want to dismantle the law. For example, several agencies including the Securities and Exchange Commission have dropped efforts to limit CEO pay. The House has passed a law that would scale back Dodd-Frank, though the Senate isn’t likely to take it up because of the difficulty in making it filibuster-proof. Sen. Mike Crapo, the Idaho Republican who chairs the Senate Banking Committee, is working with Democrats to create a more targeted bill.
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Senator: Republicans Aim to Block CFPB Arbitration Rule Before August Recess

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GOP senators are aiming to adopt a resolution that would block implementation of a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rule that limits financial institutions’ ability to require arbitration clauses in consumer contracts, according to Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.), who said that the goal is to get the measure to President Donald Trump’s desk before the August recess, MorningConsult.com reported yesterday. Cotton, who’s a member of the Senate Banking Committee, said that he’s working with Chairman Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) to rally enough votes for the Senate to adopt a disapproval resolution under the Congressional Review Act. Amanda Critchfield, spokeswoman for the banking panel, confirmed that Crapo is collaborating with Cotton. The CFPB’s rule, which was published yesterday in the Federal Register, is slated to take effect on Sept. 18. A separate deadline for companies to come into compliance is set for March 19. Cotton said he’s hoping that the House will take up its own disapproval resolution as early as next week.

Senate Joint Resolution 47

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Providing for congressional disapproval under chapter 8 of title 5, United States Code, of the rule submitted by Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection relating to “Arbitration Agreements”.
 
Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That Congress disapproves the rule submitted by the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection relating to “Arbitration Agreements” (82 Fed. Reg. 33210 (July 19, 2017)), and such rule shall have no force or effect.
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S. 1521, the "Student Loan Relief Act of 2017"

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To amend the Higher Education Act of 1965 to reduce the interest rate caps for Federal Direct student loans, to eliminate loan origination fees on all Federal Direct student loans, and to provide for refinancing of Federal Direct student loans and Federal family education loans.

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S. 1521, the "Student Loan Relief Act of 2017"

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

To amend the Higher Education Act of 1965 to reduce the interest rate caps for Federal Direct student loans, to eliminate loan origination fees on all Federal Direct student loans, and to provide for refinancing of Federal Direct student loans and Federal family education loans.

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Illinois House Overrides Veto to Pass First Budget in More Than Two Years

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Illinois has a budget for the first time in more than two years, ending a standoff that threatened to downgrade the state’s debt to junk status and was wreaking havoc with cities, colleges and school districts across the state, the Wall Street Journal reported today. The state’s House of Representatives, led by Democratic Speaker Michael Madigan, voted yesterday to override Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner’s vetoes of revenue and spending measures the chamber passed on Sunday. The House’s repudiation of the governor marked the final hurdle in enacting a budget for Illinois — the first state in the union to have gone without a budget for more than a year since the Great Depression. Illinois entered its third fiscal year without a budget on July 1.

Volcker Says Trump Changes to Volcker Rule Won’t Erode Principle

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Paul Volcker said he isn’t worried that the Trump administration will undermine the financial rule that bears his name, Bloomberg News reported yesterday. “The basic principle remains valid,” Volcker said. “I hope that won’t go away, and I expect that it won’t.” The Volcker Rule, part of the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act, restricts trading by banks to ensure they don’t make risky bets that lead to big losses. It took five regulatory agencies more than three years to hammer out the details of how firms can continue to help clients trade without engaging in so-called proprietary bets with their own money. A report released by Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin last month recommended that regulators simplify some of those directions and exempt community banks.

Moody’s: Illinois Risks Rating Cut to Junk Even with Budget

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Moody's Investors Service warned yesterday that even if Illinois' House of Representatives takes action to enact a new budget today, the state still risks a downgrade in its credit rating to junk, Reuters reported. The Democratic-controlled House today will attempt to overturn Republican Governor Bruce Rauner's vetoes of spending and tax increase measures aimed at ending the state's unprecedented two-year budget impasse. Moody's said it placed Illinois' Baa3 rating, which is one step above the junk level, on review for a possible downgrade. The $36 billion fiscal 2018 budget and $5 billion income tax increase passed by lawmakers over the extended Fourth of July holiday weekend, may fall short in addressing the state's financial woes, particularly its huge unfunded pension liability and $15 billion unpaid bill backlog, according to Moody's.