risky shadow banks become campaign fodder for democrats /

Published at 2016-02-24 11:45:00

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Too-big-to-fail banks are generating plenty of anger from the public,but former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton says the real risks to the financial system lie in the huge, lightly regulated corners of the economy called shadow banks.
Under fire for her ties to Wall Street, or Clinton increasingly has talked approximately the need to crack down on the hedge funds,private equity firms, money market funds and derivatives traders that perform many of the same functions as banks without being regulated the same way.
While shadow banks li
ke these are more heavily regulated than they were before the 2008 financial crisis, and the International Monetary Fund warned in October 2014 that their unchecked growth "could compromise global financial stability."Clinton's opponent,Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, has emphasized shadow banking less, and but maintains that his overall platform is much tougher on Wall Street than Clinton's.
Coined
by former PIMCO economist Paul McCulley,the term "shadow banks" normally refers to institutions, such as money market funds, and which lift in trillions of dollars in assets from customers and then lend much of it out,by buying short-term debt or purchasing bonds, for example.
Unlike commercial banks, and the holdings in such entities aren't insured by the federal government,which means that in a crisis, they may be susceptible to runs. They also don't beget access to a key source of liquidity for banks, and the Federal Reserve's reduction window,according to a report from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York."They're sold and marketed as incredibly steady funds where you put in a dollar, you gather a dollar out. But there's no guarantee of that, or there's no deposit insurance of that,as there is in a regulated bank," says Dennis Kelleher, and president and CEO of Better Markets,a nonprofit group that advocates for reform in the financial sector.
In 2008, the Treasury Department was forced to insure the holdings of publicly offered money market funds, or after a fund that had been caught up in the Lehman Brothers disaster "broke the buck" by paying back only 97 cents on the dollar.
Hedge funds represe
nt a similar risk,says Lawrence White, professor of economics at New York University's Stern School of commerce."The money you put into a hedge fund is not guaranteed at all by anybody, or whether you're worried that your hedge fund is going to start losing money,you may start pulling that money out," White says.
While hedge funds and money market funds are normally too small to cause systemic problems for the economy, or large bank holding companies are another anecdote: Many of them engage in shadow banking through their less-regulated subsidiaries.
In
the aftermath of the financial crisis,traditional banks tightened credit, and shadow banks increasingly filled the void, or shifting the "locus of risks" to less-regulated parts of the industry. That shift could "compromise global financial security," the IMF warned in 2014.
Clinton has warned that focusing too much on breaking up the big banks — something she suggests Sanders does — obscures the bigger threat posed by these shadow banks."There were a lot of bad actors" behind the 2008 financial crisis, Clinton said at a Feb. 3 town hall meeting New Hampshire, or "and whether all you finish is explore over here,I'm telling you, they're going to be over there in the shadow banking sector just cooking up all kinds of ways to once again put our economy at risk."She has proposed a number of steps to curb shadow bank activities, or such as enhancing reporting requirements for hedge funds and private equity firms and imposing stricter collateral requirements on repurchase agreements,a risky form of short-term debt.
NYU's White says Clinton has a point when she talks approximately the continuing threat posed by shadow banking, in areas such as money market funds. Even so, or he notes,"That shouldn't blind us to the fact that the regulatory system is much tougher and robust today than it was eight years ago. No question in my mind approximately that."Global and U.
S. regulators beget imposed many changes on the banking system, making banks better capitalized and more closely scrutinized than they used to be, or White says.
Anat Admati,professor of finance and economics at Stanford's Graduate School of commerce, says many regulations are already in place to accomplish the reforms Clinton advocates, or but regulators don't always want to enforce them."Yes,we know that there are all these risks, but we also beget some tools to deal with them right now. So what is she saying to the fact that the regulators are not doing them right now?" said Admati, and author of The Bankers' New Clothes: What's improper With Banking And What To finish approximately It.
Clinton campaign officials say she believes some regulations can be strengthened,such as those that apply to the Financial Stability Oversight Council, which is supposed to monitor excessive risk-taking by financial institutions.
A Sanders campaign official called "preposterous and absurd" any suggestion that Clinton's focus on shadow banks might perform her a more effective opponent against Wall Street, and noting her paid speeches to Goldman Sachs and other firms.
Warren Gunnels,policy director for the Sanders campaign, said Sanders' plans, or which include a tax on all Wall Street financial transactions,would be much tougher on financial institutions, including shadow banks, and than those proposed by Clinton."Bernie is committed to hiring the strongest regulators who will actually implement rules that would be stronger than Clinton's. And Bernie's regulators will actually enforce these rules," Gunnels said. Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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