Limiting The Extraterritorial Impact of Title Vii of The Dodd-Frank Act
Limiting The Extraterritorial Impact of Title Vii of The Dodd-Frank Act
Limiting The Extraterritorial Impact of Title Vii of The Dodd-Frank Act
HEARING
BEFORE THE
FEBRUARY 8, 2012
(
U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
WASHINGTON
75072 PDF
2012
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(II)
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SUBCOMMITTEE
ON
CAPITAL MARKETS
AND
(III)
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CONTENTS
Page
1
29
WITNESSES
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2012
Allen, Chris, Managing Director, Barclays Capital ..............................................
Brummer, Chris, Professor of Law, Georgetown University Law Center ...........
Thompson, Don, Managing Director and Associate General Counsel,
JPMorgan Chase & Company .............................................................................
Zubrod, Luke, Director, Chatham Financial .........................................................
8
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APPENDIX
Prepared statements:
Allen, Chris .......................................................................................................
Brummer, Chris ................................................................................................
Thompson, Don .................................................................................................
Zubrod, Luke .....................................................................................................
ADDITIONAL MATERIAL SUBMITTED
FOR THE
RECORD
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published earlier this week: The United States is coming to be
seen as a global threat, acting unilaterally and aggressively, with
new market rules that critics say will hurt U.S. firms, foreign
banks, and international markets in one fell swoop.
Indeed, the list of negative consequences is long if these issues
arent handled carefully and appropriately. First, depending on how
this extraterritoriality is applied, the global competitiveness of U.S.
firms could be impacted. Non-U.S. firms may determine it is just
too costly to serve customers and markets. So the overall health
and liquidity of global markets therefore may suffer.
Dual and contradictory regulations will add additional costs or
make it impossible to comply with all the jurisdictional rules that
are out there. Additional costs will be passed on to whom? The endusers, of course. And that is the real economy at the end of the day.
The sovereignty of foreign countries may be inappropriately infringed upon. It might in turn invite regulatory retaliation. Concerns in this area are bipartisan in nature. Several of my colleagues across the aisle have joined me in cosponsoring this bill. In
addition, the ranking member of the full Financial Services Committee joined the Senate Banking Committee chairman in sending
a letter to regulators last October directly addressing these issues.
In part, the letter reads, Congress generally limited the territorial scope of Title VII to activities within the United States. The
general rules should not be swallowed by the laws exception which
calls for extraterritorial application only when particular international activities of U.S. firms have a direct and significant connection with the effect on U.S. commerce or are designed to evade
U.S. rules. We are concerned that the proposed imposition of margin requirements, in addition to provisions relating to clearing,
trading, registration, and the treatment of foreign subsidies of U.S.
institutions, all raise questions about consistency with congressional intent.
So, H.R. 3283 seeks to answer these questions through clear statutory language in order to provide certainty to market participants
and international regulators as well.
Once again, I look forward to the testimony today, and I also look
forward to the comments and questions of the sponsor of this legislation as well, who is taking, obviously, a lead interest in this
issue, and I look to his leadership on this matter as we go forward.
With that, I yield back my time, and I yield 3 minutes to Mr.
Lynch.
Mr. LYNCH. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I would also like to thank
the witnesses for their willingness to help the committee with its
work. I must say I have grave concerns about the legislation before
us today. This bill before us exempts an alarmingly large portion
of the swaps market from many of the important requirements of
Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act, which deals with the over-thecounter derivatives market.
H.R. 3283 would exempt swaps between a U.S. company and a
non-U.S. company or an affiliate from almost all transaction-level
requirements in Title VII, including margin, clearing, and execution requirements intended to make swaps transactions safer and
more secure.
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If you need an example of how this bill would increase systemic
risk to the American economy, look no further than AIG. AIG Financial Products, which almost single-handedly crashed the American economy, was a non-U.S. affiliate of a U.S. company that entered into subprime mortgage credit default swap transactions with
a variety of American and international companies. When these
subprime bonds tanked and it became clear that AIG could not
honor margin calls required by these contracts, its imminent failure put the entire American economy in mortal peril. As a result,
the American taxpayer pumped $85 billion into AIG to keep it
afloat.
Under this bill before the committee, the same transactions that
doomed AIG would receive less oversightnot moreand create
more systemic risk. Even for the standards of this committee, this
is an especially bad idea. Moreover, the sponsors of this bill argue
that exempting these swaps from Title VIIs margin, clearing, and
execution provisions will increase Americas competitiveness. That
is far from the truth. I believe it will have the opposite effect, by
encouraging U.S. companies to move their swap business into an
overseas affiliate or subsidiary where they can fully enjoy the loopholes that this bill creates. This is a major and unwarranted exception to the carefully crafted Dodd-Frank reforms, and it creates the
possibility of regulatory arbitrage.
Finally, this bill creates a regulatory race to the bottom by preventing U.S. regulators from acting until foreign jurisdictions act
first. But of course, as we know, foreign regulators are similarly
afraid to act unless the United States goes first. America should be
the leader in financial regulation, and not allow a you first mentality to put Americans financial security in jeopardy yet again.
Again, this is a bad idea. And I think we are replanting the seeds
that caused this economic crisis in the first place. For these reasons, I oppose the bill under consideration today, and I would urge
my colleagues to do the same.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and I yield back.
Chairman GARRETT. Thank you. The gentleman yields back.
Mr. Schweikert is recognized for 1 minute.
Mr. SCHWEIKERT. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. And to our witnesses, I appreciate you being here. I am hoping, actuallyand I
have been looking forward to this hearingwe are about to have
a discussion of the law of unintended consequences. And as witnesses, as you are speaking, I am hoping I will hear you touch on
everything from jobs to capital availability to competitiveness. Also,
I would love for you to touch on, as we just heard, AIG, because
my understanding is OTS is gone, and under the regulatory framework we are under right now doesnt happen, and that we are living in a very, very different world, and that actually a problem crisis now has already been dealt with.
The other thing I would also love you to touch on is if the rules
stay the way they are, and we see much of our swaps and derivative markets move away from us, move to Europe and other places,
are we really systemically that much safer in the future?
So thank you, Mr. Chairman. I yield back.
Chairman GARRETT. The gentleman yields back.
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Mr. Himes, the sponsor of the legislation, is recognized for 3 minutes.
Mr. HIMES. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Thank you for holding
this hearing and for the comity with which we have worked together on this legislation. I am looking forward to hearing from our
witnesses today on what is a very complicated and technical topic.
I do want to remind all of us that what we are talking about here
is actually pretty esoteric. I suspect my co-author on this bill would
disagree with that statement, but I actually think Title VII and the
dragging of the heretofore unregulated derivatives market into a
regulated environment is a significant achievement of Dodd-Frank.
The notion that derivatives will clear through clearinghouses,
trade on an exchange when possible, be subject to margin requirements, be subject to capital requirements, are very, very powerful
remedies to what we saw happen with AIG. This particular bill
does not touch on any of those issues. And I want to be very clear
that this bill is designed really to do two things. First, perfectly
consistent with the congressional intent of Dodd-Frank, to provide
some certainty about which regulatory regimes apply when you are
talking about multiple countries. Section 722(d) of Dodd-Frank took
a crack at that, at saying that these laws would only apply where
there was a direct and significant connection with activities in the
United States.
Second, this legislation is important, very important for competitiveness. I will give an example. If prudence would dictate that a
particular swap should have a 5 percent margin against it, and the
United States believes that, and Germany believes that, we should
have a 5 percent margin on that transaction, not 10 percent. Because if both jurisdictions impose 5 percent margins and you have
10 percent, that swap is not getting done. As in so many things related to derivatives, there is an awful lot more discussion than
there is understanding.
With all due respect to my friend from Massachusetts, this has
absolutely nothing to do with AIG. This bill would preserve all of
the entity protections imposed by Title VII, ensuring that the
manifest irresponsibility that was shown by AIG would not happen
again. Capital requirements for the entity, specific supervisory obligations, and of course the kinds of oversight provided because, presumably, AIG would have been deemed to be systemically important, all that stays in place.
Again, there is an awful lot of misunderstanding here. An organization I usually appreciate, Americans for Financial Reform, says
that capital requirements would be eliminated for certain entities
abroad. That is not true. Capital requirements would, in nations
that are Basel signatories, defer to the capital requirements in that
nation.
So in conclusion, I would just say this is about competitiveness,
about making sure that banks and nonbanks understand what jurisdiction they are subject to, and in no way weakens Title VII, the
regulation of the derivatives industry, or is an effort to roll back
Dodd-Frank, something I think would be a significant mistake.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I yield back the balance of my time.
Chairman GARRETT. The gentleman yields back.
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The gentleman from Texas, Mr. Hensarling, is now recognized for
2 minutes.
Mr. HENSARLING. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. This is the second
hearing of the Capital Markets Subcommittee dealing with regulatory overreach and its adverse consequences on jobs and economic
growth. Again, another data point: When you yield unprecedented,
unfettered, historic discretionary powers to the unelected bureaucracy, they will indeed use it.
Ultimately, we all know, notwithstanding a good jobs report last
month, that there are still almost 13 million of our fellow countrymen who remain unemployed. Millions more have simply given up
and dropped out of the labor force, which is why jobs and economic
growth continue to be the number one issue for the American people. So we have to look very carefully at the subject of regulatory
overreach.
Allow me to engage in the time-honored tradition of this committee of quoting the Chairman of the Federal Reserve when he
agrees with me, and ignoring him when he doesnt: If those margin rules for foreign operations are maintained, and Europeans and
other foreign jurisdictions do not match it, that would be a significant competitive disadvantage. That is a quote from Fed Chairman Bernanke.
We know that prudential oversight already exists for bank overseas swap activities by the Fed, and by the OCC. So again, we
dont have any evidence now that international regulators will
adopt the more controversial provisions of Title VII, putting us at
a competitive disadvantage. We know that prudential regulation already exists, so we must question just what benefit is to be derived
from what is arguably duplicative and inconsistent regulations.
Significant sectors of the U.S. economy, including manufacturing,
health care, and technology use these derivatives as a tool to manage risk and compete globally. Regulations that miss the mark will
have a negative impact on jobs and the economy.
I appreciate the chairman calling this hearing, and I look forward to hearing the testimony of the witnesses. I yield back.
Chairman GARRETT. The gentleman yields back.
Mr. Royce is recognized for 1 minute.
Mr. ROYCE. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. There were three principles put forward in the Pittsburgh G-20 communique in September of 2009: All standardized OTC derivative contracts should
be traded on exchanges and cleared through central counterparties.
OTC derivative contracts should be reported to trade repositories.
And noncentrally cleared contracts should be subject to higher capital requirements. So that is what the G-20 countries agreed to.
My concern is with the regulatory crusade undertaken by the
CFTC, which is not one geared toward making our markets safer,
but rather an effort to fit an ideological narrative. The effort led
by the CFTC goes against the very idea of international coordination on this. An overly expansive and aggressive implementation of
Title VII will make our markets less competitive, and, problematically, they are going to provide justification for retaliation overseas.
This approach has to be taken in tandem with our allies, not
through a shot across the bow.
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Attempting to regulate the global markets from the CFTC headquarters on 21st Street is not a solution that is going to work with
our allies. So I think the Himes-Garrett legislation here is the right
approach. It brings much needed balance back into the process.
And I yield back.
Chairman GARRETT. The gentleman yields back.
The gentlelady from California is recognized for 2 minutes.
Ms. WATERS. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. As it turns
out, we are getting some complaints from some in the industry who
are alerting us to changes that could take place that were unanticipated. I dont know, and I have not decided about this or any other
legislation. So I want to hear from the witnesses today. I want to
hear what they have to tell us. And so, I am going to yield back
the balance of my time.
Chairman GARRETT. I appreciate that.
Mrs. Biggert is recognized for 1 minute.
Mrs. BIGGERT. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I have many concerns
about the unintended consequences of U.S. regulators steamrolling
ahead with the Dodd-Frank Title VII regulations. Will these regulations introduce more risk into our financial system, particularly
for U.S. insurance companies? Will these regulations create an
unlevel playing field for U.S. financial institutions with international subsidiaries, putting U.S. businesses at a competitive disadvantage in the global economy? And what will the impact of
these regulations be on our U.S. economy? All these issues must be
thoroughly vetted before the Federal regulators take action.
I hope that todays hearing will shed light on the need for an
internationally agreed upon regulatory regime, especially with our
U.S. trading partners. I yield back.
Chairman GARRETT. And the gentlelady yields back.
Mr. Grimm is now recognized for 1 minute.
Mr. GRIMM. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I appreciate you calling
this hearing to examine the efforts and clarify the reach of the derivatives title of Dodd-Frank and what it will do to business conducted outside the United States. I think at a time of both increased global competition and growing regulation, it is imperative
that we ensure that new rules being implemented under DoddFrank do not subject American firms to double, and, in many cases,
redundant
regulations
on
overseas
transactions.
These
redundancies will serve no purpose but to put U.S. firms at an
enormous disadvantage in the global marketplace, and possibly encourage regulatory arbitrage, which could put the worldwide financial system at risk.
I look forward to hearing our witnesses thoughts on the legislation before us, and I truly hope that our regulators are paying attention to the discussions that we are having here today, and take
it into account as they move forward with their rulemaking. With
that, I yield back the balance of my time.
Chairman GARRETT. Mr. Perlmutter is recognized for 2 minutes.
Mr. PERLMUTTER. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I am sympathetic
to the issues raised by Mr. Himes and the chairman. And I am glad
we are highlighting these issues at todays hearing, although legislating, at this point, may be premature. It is important that we do
not competitively disadvantage or penalize U.S. financial institu-
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tions just because the United States is further along in financial
reform than others in Europe and Asia. Our rules should be constructed so foreign businesses still want to conduct business with
U.S. financial institutions abroad.
Undoubtedly, imposing strict margin requirements on certain
trades done abroad that only apply to U.S. financial institutions
would place the U.S. institutions at a disadvantage because foreign
businesses will choose to transact business with foreign institutions, where their rules dont apply.
But I feel like there has been some amnesia reflected on the committee because I still have nightmares surrounding the events of
2008 and the financial crisis. I do not want to legislate broad exemptions or carveouts that could potentially bring down our financial system and the economy. If our financial institutions are going
to stand behind the trades conducted by their foreign subsidiaries,
we must ensure that they are adequately capitalized and protected
so taxpayers, depositors, and shareholders are not at risk. With
that, I yield back to the Chair.
Chairman GARRETT. I thank the gentleman.
The gentleman yields back. Mr. Dold is recognized for the final
1 minute.
Mr. DOLD. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and I certainly thank you
for calling this important hearing. In listening to my colleague from
Colorado, I want to agree that we dont want to have unintended
consequences jeopardize American financial institutions abroad.
And when we look at the global marketplace today, it is probably
flatter than it has ever been. Certainly what we dont need is to
make sure that U.S. financial institutions are operating from a disadvantage.
What I can tell you is that when we look at a 2,400-page bill,
inevitably in those 2,400 pages there are going to be mistakes that
are made, couple with the idea that we are going to have literally
thousands of pages of regulation on top of it trying to interpret that
law. Inevitably, there are going to be mistakes that will be made.
The task that we have is to try to make sure that we rectify
some of those mistakes so that we arent putting American institutions at a disadvantage. And certainly the CFTC, in terms of its
interpretations, may simply be doing that.
So I want to thank my colleagues on the other side of the aisle
for this bipartisan piece of legislation and for their leadership, and
I look forward to hearing from our witnesses today.
Chairman GARRETT. Thank you. The gentleman yields back.
Now, we will turn to our panel. And as we turn to the panel, you
will see that you have a piece of bipartisan legislation before you.
And you can see from the opening statements today some supportive positions, but also some concerned positions, and also some
open minds as we begin to look into something that is, as Mr.
Himes said, a fairly technical piece of legislation before us.
So with that, we will turn to our first witness. And of course, the
entire written testimony of all of the witnesses will be made a part
of the record. We are looking to you for 5 minutes of testimony.
And the first will be Mr. Chris Allen, managing director over at
Barclays. Good afternoon, Mr. Allen.
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STATEMENT OF CHRIS ALLEN, MANAGING DIRECTOR,
BARCLAYS CAPITAL
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the effective and transparent oversight of the global swaps market
without having unnecessary negative impact. Specifically, we support the bills aim of dividing the substantive Dodd-Frank requirements into entity-level requirements, such as those relating to capital or risk management requirements, and then transaction-level
requirements such as clearing or public reporting.
Where comparable home company country entity-level requirements exist, such as in relation to capital, compliance with those
requirements should satisfy Dodd-Frank. U.S. transaction-level requirements would apply to trades with U.S. customers, but local
foreign requirements would apply to trades between foreign entities.
That brings me briefly to the Volcker Rule. In our view, the proposed limitations on proprietary trading and the fund activities go
beyond what is required by the statute and would have severe
extraterritorial consequences that were not intended by Congress.
The various exceptions in Volcker are, in our opinion, insufficient
to avoid extraterritorial overreach.
This is not just a case of the rest of the world playing catch-up.
In the U.K., the Independent Commission on Banking released a
proposal that specifically studied and determined that the Volcker
Rule, as passed in the Dodd-Frank Act, was not necessary when
evaluated in light of other systemic risk management measures the
U.K. is instituting. Without revisions, the Volcker Rule is likely to
decrease foreign investments in the United States, reduce investment opportunities for U.S. pension funds, reduce liquidity and
market opportunity for issuing companies, and reduce the willingness of international financial institutions to trade with U.S.
counterparties. All of this risks encouraging alternative financial
centers to develop outside of the United States, and ultimately results in jobs and transactions moving overseas.
In conclusion, Barclays appreciates the opportunity to testify
today and your attention to these important issues under DoddFrank. We encourage you to continue to work with the CFTC, the
SEC, and prudential regulators to ensure that Dodd-Frank is implemented in a balanced and orderly manner, making efficient use
of supervisory resources and promoting international comity.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
[The prepared statement of Mr. Allen can be found on page 30
of the appendix.]
Chairman GARRETT. And I thank you.
Next, from Georgetown, we have Dr. Brummer.
STATEMENT OF CHRIS BRUMMER, PROFESSOR OF LAW,
GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY LAW CENTER
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nance and securities regulation. I have worked in London with
Cravath, Swaine & Moore, and I serve periodically on NASDAQ
delisting panels, as well as at the Milken Institutes Center for Financial Market Understanding. But this is the first time I have
had the honor, as can you tell, to talk to you today. And thank you
for the invitation.
Each great failure of 2008, whether it be Fannie Mae, Freddie
Mac, Lehman Brothers, or Countrywide held important lessons for
the country, and AIG was no exception. Its tragic downfall illustrated, perhaps above all else, just what happens when complex or
opaque transactions fall through the regulatory cracks, even when
they take place in far-flung parts of the world.
Regulated by a weak and underfunded OTS, and escaping meaningful oversight in London and France, the insurance giants affiliates were able to create and write credit default swaps that, when
combined with poor lending practices, ultimately toppled the international conglomerate when its bets went wrong, and at a cost of
$85 billion for taxpayers.
To plug these gaps made apparent by AIG and other bailed-out
institutions, Congress passed the Dodd-Frank Act, which sought to
enhance not only entity-level, but also transaction-level credit quality in an effort to help prevent future financial crises. Two key elements of these efforts were: one, to regulate some of the, up to
then, largely unregulated derivatives transactions which had
caused and contributed to the crisis; and two, to direct supervisory
agencies most familiar with the transactions, in this case the SEC
and the CFTC, to take a more active role alongside traditional prudential regulators in the oversight of such instruments.
Title VII is an important part of the overall reform package. Essentially, it is designed to move the United States toward a new
system of regulation, with margin requirements to enhance the
credit quality of swap transactions and provide a buffer against
losses. It includes a push towards centralized clearinghouses to reduce counterparty default risk, and to allocate losses and reduce
the likelihood of bailouts, and to ensure that credit risk is supported by realtime mark-to-market benchmarking. It also includes
a move from over-the-counter trading to centralized exchanges in
order to facilitate standardization, ensure price discovery, and increase competition.
And these efforts have not been made in a vacuum. In the wake
of 2008, G-20 countries, of course, have directed their attention to
the task of reforming the international regulatory system and committed to a variety of goals including increased standardization and
trading of over-the-counter derivatives, exchange and electronic
platform trading, capital requirements, and reporting to trade repositories. However, up to this point even now, relatively few prescriptive standards have been articulated at the international level.
The Dodd-Frank Act represents an effort to lead by example, but
its approach has been in certain notable regards unilateral. We
have sought to lead by example, but we have also exported, or at
least sought to export, our own regulatory preferences by
leveraging our own formidable capital markets.
From the standpoint of financial diplomacy, this particular approach can serve an important purpose, both as a means of cross-
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border negotiation and to help get the ball rolling on international
standards-setting that, as we have all seen, can be quite protracted.
But unilateralism carries risks that have only grown as financial
markets have become more globalized. Regulated entities may seek
to avoid your shores, creating competitive disadvantages, as I am
sure we will hear even more about momentarily. Foreign regulators
can, if not retaliate, at least use your own unilateralism as a kind
of precedent in their own territorially-based regulation. And in the
future, collaborative efforts between regulators can be undermined.
So a balance has to be met between financial stability, comity, and
pragmatism.
The particular approach in this bill carries the promise of
rationalizing internationally the transactions between banks, but it
carries the danger of rolling back all of the transaction-based
progress that I had mentioned before.
For that reason, in my written testimony I had expressed my
own confidence in a more thoughtful and calibrated mutual recognition regime that is in the legislation standards for capital. I
think a blanket carte blanche allows an offshore financial center in
the future, or a country from Bangalore to Syria to open up its own
haven for low-level regulation, and in doing so creates certain
kinds of risks that could, unfortunately, bring us back to 2008. I
think we do need to engage our international counterparts. It is essential. But we have to do so in a thoughtful way. And part of the
bill, I think, moves us in the right direction, and quite frankly, part
of the bill does not. Thank you.
[The prepared statement of Dr. Brummer can be found on page
43 of the appendix.]
Chairman GARRETT. Thank you, Professor.
Mr. Thompson is welcomed back and recognized for 5 minutes.
STATEMENT OF DON THOMPSON, MANAGING DIRECTOR AND
ASSOCIATE GENERAL COUNSEL, JPMORGAN CHASE & COMPANY
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tent, there are reasons for concern based upon the current state of
the regulatory discussion.
Today, I will focus on three important points related to this debate. First, the extraterritorial application of Title VII would create
competitive disadvantages for U.S. firms. U.S. banking regulation
has long recognized and preserved the ability of U.S. firms to compete on a level playing field in the international markets. If Title
VII applies to our overseas operations serving European or Asian
clients, but not to our European or Asian competitors, U.S. banks
will lose much of this business. This ultimately will have a negative effect on the competitiveness of U.S. banks, U.S. job creation,
and economic growth. Significantly, losing many of our non-U.S.
customers would also deprive us of valuable diversification in our
credit exposures. This would actually be risk-increasing to our firm
rather than risk-reducing.
Second, global harmonization is not the answer to this competitive disadvantage problem. We are aware that regulators are attempting to harmonize derivatives rules globally. These efforts are
important to ensure against arbitrage and adverse competitive impact, but practical impediments to harmonization make this an unreliable solution to the competitiveness problem. Putting aside for
a moment the fact that perfect harmonization will probably never
be achieved, even with European regulators, it is reasonable to expect that there will be severe differences in the approach to derivatives regulation in Asia, Latin America, and other important markets around the globe. The timing of harmonization is also a problem. Europe is on a much longer timetable than the United States,
and the rest of the world is even further behind. Applying Title VII
extraterritorially would put U.S. firms at a significant disadvantage while the rest of the world catches up, and many customer relationships will be damaged or lost in the gap period.
Third, it is important to note that a prudential supervisory
framework with respect to U.S. banks already exists and is effective. The stated rationale for an aggressive, expansive application
of Title VII to the foreign swap activity of U.S. banks with their
foreign clients is the potential to import excessive risk back into
the United States. Proponents of this view cite the overseas swap
activities of AIG, but this rationale no longer holds true for a number of reasons.
First, the activities of U.S. banks outside the United States, including their swap activities, are already subject to a robust prudential supervisory regime that is administered by the Fed and the
OCC. It is important to note that virtually all U.S. swap dealers
are banks, or affiliates of banks, or bank holding companies, and
are thus subject to this regime.
Second, the regulatory regime for swaps has changed dramatically since 2008 and AIG. Major participants in the market now,
because of Title VII, are required to register as swap dealers or
major swap participants. This requires them to comply with requirements for sound risk management practices, minimum capital
standards, and full regulatory transparency. Under these mandates, AIG would have been subject to this regulatory regime, and
would not have been able to incur the exposures that led to the
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firms demise. As such, an overreaching application of Title VII is
not necessary to protect the U.S. financial system.
Finally, I would like to mention the Himes-Garrett bill. We believe the Himes-Garrett bill is a sensible and workable solution to
these problems. By maintaining the tough entity-level regulatory
framework for all swap dealer activity, even that outside the
United States, it achieves the dual goal of providing important
safeguards for the U.S. financial system while ensuring that U.S.
firms can compete on a level playing field in the global marketplace.
JPMorgan is committed to working with Congress, regulators,
and industry participants to ensure that Title VII is implemented
appropriately. I look forward to answering your questions.
[The prepared statement of Mr. Thompson can be found on page
56 of the appendix.]
Chairman GARRETT. All right. Thank you.
From Chatham Financial, Mr. Zubrod, you are recognized for 5
minutes.
STATEMENT OF LUKE ZUBROD, DIRECTOR, CHATHAM
FINANCIAL
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vision could deter end-users from managing their risks or could
make it materially less efficient to do so.
Today, we add to these concerns by highlighting the ways in
which an expansive extraterritorial application of Title VII could
adversely impact end-users. Global companies often manage risks
arising from their foreign operations by executing hedges out of the
foreign subsidiaries that are actually exposed to those risks. Such
entities often have relationships with both foreign and U.S. banks.
Having a robust pool of bank counterparties enables end-users to
enjoy numerous benefits, including achieving efficient market pricing and diversifying counterparty exposure.
Importantly, and as I elaborate upon in my written testimony,
the transactions end-users execute abroad are not designed to
evade U.S. law; they are so executed for important business, legal,
and strategic reasons. Because it is practically infeasible to perfectly align U.S. and foreign rules, expansive extraterritorial application of Title VII could create structural disincentives for endusers to transact with counterparties that are subject to U.S. law.
Such disincentives could lead foreign end-users or the foreign subsidiaries of U.S. end-users to transact with a smaller potential pool
of counterparties, thus reducing competition and liquidity, increasing pricing, and concentrating counterparty exposure. Measures
banks may take to limit competitive disadvantages that result from
expansive extraterritorial application of Title VII would inevitably
increase costs for end-users.
Additionally, the expansive application of these same requirements to foreign banks operating in the United States could further impact U.S. end-users operating domestically. U.S. end-users
presently transact with a wide array of banking partners, including
both U.S. and foreign banks. In order to avoid the duplicative application of U.S. and home-country law to transactions executed
with non-U.S. end-users, foreign banks have incentives to spin off
their U.S. operations into separately capitalized subsidiaries. This
would adversely impact the end-users in numerous ways, which I
elaborate upon in my written testimony. In essence, it would likely
make hedging risk more expensive and more burdensome. In effect,
expansive extraterritorial application of Title VII could undermine
end-users ability to manage risk efficiently, both when they transact domestically and abroad.
We therefore appreciate this subcommittees consideration of legislation that would clarify the territorial scope of U.S. law. Proposals such as the Himes-Garrett bill will increase certainty for
market participants and resolve inevitable conflicts that would result from overlapping regulations in foreign jurisdictions.
We acknowledge the complexity of the task before policymakers
in considering the appropriate boundaries of U.S. law, and believe
the Himes-Garrett bill thoughtfully recognizes the need to defer entity-level regulations to home-country regulators, while clarifying
U.S. transaction-level requirements apply only in circumstances in
which there is a U.S. counterparty.
We appreciate your attention to these concerns, and look forward
to continuing to support the subcommittees efforts to ensure that
the derivatives markets are both safe and efficient.
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Thank you for the opportunity to testify today. And I am happy
to address any questions you may have.
[The prepared statement of Mr. Zubrod can be found on page 62
of the appendix.]
Chairman GARRETT. Great. I appreciate your testimony.
I have just been advised that we are going to have votes in a little while, so I am going to try to keep everybody right to their 5minute time limit so that everybody here gets the best chance possible on their time for questioning. So I will recognize myself, and
also abide by the 5 minutes.
Running down the line, thanks, Mr. Zubrod, on this point. You
said that companies, investment companies would invest overseas
for strategic reasons, and not to avoid foreign law, or in this case
U.S. law, right?
Mr. ZUBROD. That is right.
Chairman GARRETT. Okay. They do that now. But your argument
would be that if you did have an onerous anticompetitive position,
would that change, that they might change from strategic purposes
of investment to trying to avoid U.S. law in the future?
Mr. ZUBROD. I think if the law is applied expansively abroad, it
would ultimately be a cost issue for end-users.
Chairman GARRETT. So that is part of the strategic decision then
at that point. It is cheaper to do it over here than to comply is part
of the strategicokay. A second question on that would beand
anybody else on the panel can chime in on thiswhen they do do
that, without the expansiveness of the regulation, to advocate for
a minute for that position, when they do make that strategic position, does that potentially have a direct and significant impact on
the United States?
Mr. ZUBROD. I think it does not. I think when end-users transact
abroad with, for example, the foreign branches of U.S. banks, those
foreign branches of U.S. banks, of course the key concern here is
could that activity potentially transmit risk back to the United
States? And I think there you have to look at the entity-level requirements that are imposed on that foreign branch.
Chairman GARRETT. Okay.
Mr. ZUBROD. And I think you would look and say those are robust.
Chairman GARRETT. So maybe just moving down, Mr. Thompson,
following along that line of thinking then, or that discussion, part
of the seminal question is to defineor the understanding of what
that term direct and significant impact would be, I guess, right,
under Dodd-Frank? How would you define that? Would it require
that you have a material impact upon the U.S. financial markets,
a material impact upon the U.S. economy to fall under that definition? Is that appropriate?
Mr. THOMPSON. Unfortunately, the direct and significant test has
no direct analog in any other statute that we have been able to
identify. There are some which are similar, but none uses the exact
language. So we dont have the benefit of court cases to interpret
it.
In my mind, though, it implies something other than a U.S. firm
losing money on a particular swap with a particular client because
there is no margin associated with that particular transaction. I
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think it needs to be something that rises to the level where it affects not just the creditworthiness of a particular institution, but
there are ripple effects for the financial system as a whole.
Chairman GARRETT. Okay. Great. Dr. Brummer or Mr. Allen,
would you like to chime in on that? Dr. Brummer?
Mr. BRUMMER. Sure. It is absolutely true that we dont have any
direct analog. However, effects-based regulation, effectively Congress regulating internationally when certain activities have an impact here, that is, at least under international law, quite common.
I would say that in this particular instance where you have a parent company perhaps guaranteeing the swaps of a foreign entity,
and where those swapswhen bets, quite frankly, go wrong on
those swaps and could imperil the financial health of Parentco here
in the United States, it is hard for me to imagine a situation where
that is not having a direct effect in the United States.
I think it is worthwhile to think about whether or not, in the absence of Title VIIs transactional requirements, what we have here
in the United States for Parentco would be sufficient under, say,
just Regulation K or the OCC, many of whichwhere you have
under Regulation K, sure, you have capital requirements, but even
those capital requirements under Reg K were originally envisioned
in a world which, if you go through Reg K and 210 and other provisions, there are no references made to, say, derivatives activities.
When you look at the permitted activities of a foreign
Chairman GARRETT. And I am going to have to cut you short
since I am going to abide by my own rule.
Mr. Allen, do you want to comment on this? And if there is uncertainty, as we hear from the panel so far as to that terminology,
what have youwhat is the cost, legal, operational, or otherwise,
to that uncertainty for firms such as yours not knowing as far as
whether the swap is going to be subject to it or not then?
Mr. ALLEN. I think in order to answer the question, it is useful
to go to the issue of the entity-level versus the transactional-level
basis of regulation. The reason I say that is that when one looks
at the question of the safety and soundness body of regulation embodied most notably through capital, I dont think there is any suggestion under the bill, or more generally, that there should be deference or deferring to overseas regulators in circumstances where
those regulations are less robust. And in fact, I have heard members comment that the European regulatory agenda, for example,
is somewhat behind the United States in terms of implementation
of those reforms. That is not necessarily the case.
In fact, I dont think that is the case at all in relation to capital.
When it comes to the transaction-level regulation, I think it is absolutely right that to the extent that there is a U.S. nexus, derived
by virtue of the fact that, for example, the one client is based in
the United States, then absolutely the CFTC or the SEC rules, as
appropriate, should be the ones that apply. But I think the point
is that they shouldnt apply in circumstances where the activity is
exclusively outside the United States.
Chairman GARRETT. Thank you. Gotcha. I thank the gentleman.
Mr. Lynch is recognized for 5 minutes.
Mr. LYNCH. Thank you Mr. Chairman. If I listened closely
enough, it seems to me what people are saying is that in order to
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remove the uncertainty in the regulatory process that Dodd-Frank
Title VII, Section 722 creates, in order to remove that uncertainty
we are just going to exempt all the stuff from regulation, so there
wont be any uncertainty because none of it will apply. That is the
solution here. And that exception that you are creating swallows
the rule entirely.
Under H.R. 3283, its provision would exempt foreign affiliates of
U.S. banks from basically all the major protections against derivative risk contained in Title VII. It doesnt eliminate registration, albeit, but margin, capital requirements, clearing requirements, all
that is gone.
What bothers me is looking at the Fed filings, first of all, five
U.S. banks control 95 percent of all the derivatives trading that is
going on. So it is concentrated in five banks. You look at the filings
of these five banks, lets just take right off the top Goldman Sachs,
they have 62 percent of their derivatives books in foreign affiliates
or subsidiaries for international banking. That is about $134 billion
in fair value.
Lets look at Morgan Stanley. They have 77 percent of their derivatives book, $101 billion, in non-U.S. operations. So if you do
this, if you say, okay, thesebecause you have these foreign subsidiaries, if you do your business through them, you can do an endaround of all this regulation. That is what you are doing here. This
is a big end-around. This is recklessness. I understand there is a
danger here in uncertainty, and we would like to, if not harmonize,
using Mr. Thompsons term, if not harmonize, certainly reconcile
the regulatory framework between our country and the countries of
Europe and Asia. But what you are suggesting here is getting rid
ofgiving a huge escape hatch for these firms so they dont have
to do any of the things that Dodd-Frank has required to minimize
the risk. And by doing so, you are again planting the seeds for the
next crisis, the next collapse.
This is a return back to the bad old days. That is what is going
on here. Dr. Brummer, tell me I am wrong. Tell me that this is not
what they are trying to do.
Mr. BRUMMER. Certainly, when you see that most of the derivatives transactions that are currently
Mr. LYNCH. I am sorry, could you pull your microphone closer?
Thank you.
Mr. BRUMMER. Certainly when you see that most derivatives
transactions are occurring overseas, this would effectively exempt
those transactions. And I think it is an overstatement to say that
in the absence of Title VII, the protections that will exist for the
U.S. part of the company are going to be robust. I will say that the
G-20 process is slowly grinding along.
Mr. LYNCH. Very slowly, right? Facially they have set a deadline
of 2012, but do you think that is going to happen?
Mr. BRUMMER. No. It is not going to happen in 2012. And even
with the capital requirements, you see Germany and France trying
to slow down certain parts of Basel III. But my personal concern
is not merely that this encourages a kind of regulatory arbitrage
or opportunity, but the way in which the bill is drafted, you can
go anywhere. You can go to Syria, you can go to Iran, you can go
wherever you want to go, right, set up a financial center. And if
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you are a country looking to attract transactions that are lowly regulated, at least as I interpret the bill, you can set up that financial
center in order to evadeor to appeal to firms seeking to avoid the
protections that were fought for under Title VII. And I personally
dont understand why one would want that to happen.
I do understand and respect the fact that we want to keep our
financial centers here very strong. But it seems like there are better ways to go about engaging our international counterparts.
Mr. LYNCH. Thank you. Thank you, Dr. Brummer. I appreciate
that.
Mr. THOMPSON. Might I have a moment, Chairman Garrett?
Chairman GARRETT. I am going to come back to you for that response if we get through this circle. So hold that thought.
We will now turn to the gentleman from Arizona. But before we
do, I ask unanimous consent to enter into the record some documents with regard to this issue of intent. They are letters from
Senator Schumer pointing out, as we said in the opening statement, with regard to their concerns about inconsistencies with the
congressional intent on this matter; a letter from Senator Johnson
and Representative Frank with regard to the same concern about
unintended consequences from the proposed regulations; a letter
from the New Democrat Coalition on this point; and a letter from
the chairman of the Financial Services Committee, Chairman
Bachus, as well. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Now, to the gentleman from Arizona.
Mr. SCHWEIKERT. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. And we are going
to do some bouncing around, so we will get a chance for that.
Mr. Zubrod, help me, just because I want to make sure I am
doing the flow. If this portion of Volcker goes forward, how different would a transaction look? Do you have to find a flat in London? What happens here?
Mr. ZUBROD. You said Volcker, I assume you mean the derivatives?
Mr. SCHWEIKERT. The derivatives portion, I am sorry.
Mr. ZUBROD. I think, again, it is a matter of cost. If there is a
foreign firm or a foreign subsidiary of a U.S. firm transacting in
Europe, and these requirements have the effect of limiting the
number of counterparties who are effectively available to bid on a
transaction, that is going to impact my price because I have a
smaller, less liquid pool of counterparties. So I think it ultimately
just burdens end-users with additional and unnecessary costs.
Mr. SCHWEIKERT. Thank you, Mr. Zubrod. Do you end up moving
the book of business somewhere else to execute? What do you do?
Mr. ZUBROD. No, I dont think so. I think you pay a higher price.
Mr. SCHWEIKERT. Mr. Thompson, same question.
Mr. THOMPSON. Sure. I think this talk of being able to move
around like you are on a chessboard to evade these requirements
is wildly overstated, the example that Dr. Brummer gave of Syria.
The reality is we are international because that is where our clients are. That is why we are in London. That is why we are in
Paris. That is why we are in Hong Kong. That is why we are in
Singapore. That is why we are in Tokyo. We are not going to, and
we are not capable of picking up shop and moving to Syria or Iraq,
or some other light-touch regulatory jurisdiction, because you dont
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have the facilities there, you dont have the infrastructure there. In
our derivatives trading businesses, every front office person is supported by seven or eight back office and support people. You cant
find those people in light-touch jurisdictions. It is simply not possible.
I will also add that the CFTC and the SEC under Title VII have
broad anti-evasion authority to impose Title VII requirements upon
any registrant who structures his business in a way to avoid the
Title VII requirements.
Mr. SCHWEIKERT. You hit on something. You are one of the big
shops, correct?
Mr. THOMPSON. Yes, we are. We are a major dealer in all of the
asset classes.
Mr. SCHWEIKERT. Just for a reference point, how many employees do you have who actually do interest rate hedging compared to
how many employees you have on the regulatory compliance?
Mr. THOMPSON. We are seeingand this trend is increasing, generally speakingas I said, the number of front office people who
actually do the business are dwarfed by the number of support people, the people who process payments, the people who deal with
documents, the people who do regulatory reporting. And our compliance effort around this is vastly increasing. We have a whole
Title VII implementation infrastructure in JPMorgan now, and
that is between 350 and 400 people.
Mr. SCHWEIKERT. So you have 350, 400, and how many interest
rate hedgers?
Mr. THOMPSON. Our number of front office people, certainly in
New York, where most of them are, is probably 40 to 50.
Mr. SCHWEIKERT. Okay. So an interesting ratio there.
Mr. THOMPSON. Right.
Mr. SCHWEIKERT. Just tell us and make sure, because I think it
is worth an expansion because some of the emails and things that
I have gotten keep referring to this as sort of, you are going to
allow AIG to happen again. And I am going to ask you, Mr. Thompson, because you started, and then I will ask some solicitation of
other people whether they agree or see a hole in your argument,
why wont AIG happen again?
Mr. THOMPSON. Great. So there are three reasons why AIG wont
happen again under the current regulatory framework. The first is
that, as Congressman Lynch noted, the derivatives business in the
United States is vastly concentrated among five or six large bank
holding companies. All of these entities are subject to a full and robust system of prudential regulation globally where the Fed and
the OCC have ample oversight authority on a safety and soundness
basis to examine our foreign branches, subsidiaries, and affiliates.
That is a robust regime. It is ongoing, and it is quite
Mr. SCHWEIKERT. Forgive me, I want to live up to my chairmans
expectation of having only 30 seconds left.
Does anyone on the panel disagree with that as sort of an explanation? Could I start with Mr. Allen in just the last couple of seconds that we have? When you see what is coming up, particularly
in the rules being written and we are moving under Dodd-Frank,
do you believe that the regulators are following the way the statute
was intended?
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Mr. ALLEN. No. It is my belief that they are adopting a very expansive approach to what is written in the statute.
Mr. SCHWEIKERT. Thank you.
Dr. Brummer?
Mr. BRUMMER. All of the examples in Mr. Thompsons testimony
were not prudential, but were disclosure-based, and so I would disagree with the idea that our system is robust enough to deal with
derivatives transactions.
Mr. SCHWEIKERT. Thank you. And I am over my time.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Chairman GARRETT. And the gentleman yields back.
And before I yield to the gentleman who just came to the panel,
also without objection, I would like to offer a statement into the
record which was submitted to us by the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporationthat is the DTTC, of coursewhich has written
to us with regard to an important issue dealing with indemnification, which, by the way, I will just add as an aside, is an issue that
the regulators have also chimed in on. Last week, Congress got a
report from the CFTC and the FTC which stated that a legislative
amendment to the indemnification provision is appropriate. So
without objection, that letter will also be added to the record.
Mr. Hinojosa is recognized for 5 minutes.
Mr. HINOJOSA. Thank you, Chairman Garrett. I commend you for
holding todays hearing on limiting the extraterritorial impact of
Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act. I believe this bill represents an
accomplishment in bipartisanship, and I thank Chairman Garrett
and Congressman Himes for their efforts on behalf of this legislation.
If there is any financial market that begs for clarity, it is the derivatives market. These financial tools can be used to hedge
against risk, or, as we have seen in the subprime lending crisis,
they can be used to obscure risk. I believe this market is now
transparent, much more transparent than it has ever been, thanks
to the Dodd-Frank Act and its implementation by U.S. regulatory
agencies.
At this point, U.S. financial firms are asking for clarity in return
from this body and from the regulatory agencies. While the DoddFrank Act sought to ensure the soundness and transparency of the
derivatives markets, its intent was never to overextend its reach in
a way that might harm the competitiveness of U.S. financial firms
on the global stage. There has been unneeded confusion over the
extraterritorial reach of the regulations set forth regarding swaps
markets. Regulatory agencies should recognize the intent of this
body with regards to Title VII of Dodd-Frank. While I commend the
efforts of the CFTC in implementing this Dodd-Frank Act, I also
would encourage them to limit the scope of their rules to the
United States.
With that, Mr. Chairman, I yield back the remainder of my time.
Chairman GARRETT. Thank you.
The gentleman yields back his time.
Mr. Stivers is now recognized for 5 minutes. Thank you.
Mr. STIVERS. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, I appreciate it. And I
appreciate the witnesses testimony today.
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And obviously, we all want to make sure that we dont drive jobs
out of America and we dont make it harder for companies that
need to manage their risk to do so. And I want all of you to be able
to serve your customers wherever they are, obviously.
So I guess I would like to start by asking a couple of questions
about the big nature of Title VII. Do you think that Title VII is,
as writtenif the regulators would implement it the way it was
written by Congress, would cause a problem forI will start with
Mr. Allenfor firms like yours that are foreign based, but doing
business here in America?
Mr. ALLEN. I believe the answer is no, not as written by Congress, and not as we interpret the relevant sections of the Act,
principally Sections 722 and 772. I see those sections as fundamentally limiting the extraterritorial scope of the Act subject to, obviously, the well-known caveats from that. Our concern is that a regulatory approach which takes a different view and views those provisions as the foundational basis for an expansive application of
regulation is where the problem starts to arise.
Mr. STIVERS. Right. And so you have answered the second part
of the question. Obviously, those regulators have extended their
reach beyond what Congress intended.
What do you think the choices for you will be you, Mr. Allen, in
the long run for Barclays and firms like yourselves that are foreign
based if that extraterritoriality continues and expands? What will
your choice be for jobs in the United States?
Mr. ALLEN. It is important to stress that Barclays is very much
in favor of an enhanced and enriched regulatory marketplace, regulatory-enforced marketplace, but the concern is where we find ourselves faced with regulations which we cannot comply with, as a
matter of, say, U.S. regulation on the one hand and European, or
specifically U.K., regulation on the other, but forces us into the position of potentially having to walk away from that business because, of course, we cannot be noncompliant with CFTC rules on
the one hand, U.K. FSA rules on the other.
Mr. STIVERS. Right. And what does that mean for jobs in America?
Mr. ALLEN. It means that we have to look at our U.S. businesses
and consider whether or not we need to try and insulate that business in some way. The United States is a very important market
for Barclays, and Barclays has no intention of walking away from
that business. It is a core part of our business.
Mr. STIVERS. But it is bad for jobs in America. Is it good or bad?
Mr. ALLEN. It makes it more difficult for us to do that business.
Mr. STIVERS. Thank you. I really just wanted it that simple.
And, Mr. Thompson, you have the other extreme. You are an
American company trying to compete with foreign companies and
trying to follow your customers and clients around the world.
Mr. THOMPSON. Correct.
Mr. STIVERS. Tell me about how extraterritoriality would complicate American firms, and what it means for your ability to serve
your clients and compete internationally with those that might not
have to have the same regulations.
Mr. THOMPSON. In the worst case, it severely disadvantages our
overseas business because we would have to apply Title VII re-
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quirements to business with our non-U.S. customers out of our nonU.S. operations in a way that our competitors would not have to
do so.
It is important to note that this affects not just our derivatives
business, but a lot of our other businesses, such as investment
banking, debt underwriting, and equity underwriting, also have a
symbiotic relationship with our derivatives business, so being unable to compete with respect to the derivative has an adverse impact on your entire investment-banking franchise.
Mr. STIVERS. And as your competitiveness, Mr. Thompson, decreases internationally, what does that do to your profits of, obviously, an American company that you might be able to repatriate
some of those profits?
Mr. THOMPSON. Yes. It would be a significant impact to our revenues. We are a very international firm. It varies from quarter to
quarter, but in some quarters we derive more revenue from our investment-banking business overseas than we do in the United
States.
I would also point out that it would have a perverse effect on the
abilityand regulators are united on this, and we believe that by
and large it is truethe industry needs to become better capitalized. Especially in the current environment for bank equity, the
only way for banks to add capital is through retained earnings. So
impairing our ability to earn significant revenue from our European and Asian and Latin American franchises will hinder our effort to build our capital cushion.
Mr. STIVERS. Thank you.
So the bottom line for jobs and profits
Mr. THOMPSON. Simply phrased, it would be bad.
Mr. STIVERS. If the bill is not passed, it is bad. Kind of simple,
getting to the point.
Thank you. I yield back the balance of my time, Mr. Chairman.
Chairman GARRETT. Thank you.
The gentleman yields back, and before I yield back, without objection, I have three other letters to enter into the record.
Again, these are in support of the underlying legislation, and
also raise the question of the uncertainty under the proposed rules.
They are from SIFMA and ISDA, and the last one is from the Institute of International Bankers. And the reason why I left that for
last is because I just want to make one point, and this goes to what
Dr. Brummer was saying before. They raise the point, the fact that
this can be satisfied for those countries that are signatories to the
Basel Capital Accords, which is, in other words, their protection in
that area. And when we have more time, I will probably allow Dr.
Brummer to address that.
But with that, Mr. Carson is recognized for 5 minutes.
Mr. CARSON. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Thank you, witnesses, for appearing before us.
This question is for Professor Brummer. The CFTC has indicated
that it plans to work on clarifying guidance on this issue by April.
It is not clear whether this will be a formal regulatory proposal, or
if they will utilize a less formal guidance procedure.
Please give me, Professor, your assessment of the need for legislative action now versus waiting to review the guidance we antici-
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pate from the regulators. Do you think more legislative action now
could make the regulators work more difficult? Or do you think it
will be more timely and even useful in some instances?
Mr. BRUMMER. Yes, that question, is in part very difficult, because it is not just a question of the CFTC, it is also a question
as to what our European counterparts are doing and the schedule
with which they are moving with reforms.
Certainly we are ahead of time, and particularly with regards to
our implementation of something like the Volcker Rule, that is a
question that has to be addressed sooner, quite frankly, rather
than later. But I think that we certainly have the time for most
of the Title VII, as opposed to Title VI Volcker Rule, towe have
the luxury to see whether or notsee precisely what the CFTC and
their Office of International Affairs and other folks are doing with
regard to accommodating other regulatory programs in other parts
of the world.
Mr. CARSON. I yield back. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Chairman GARRETT. The gentleman yields back.
Mr. Hurt is recognized.
Mr. HURT. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Just kind of a general
question, and I, first of all, thank the witnesses, and I apologize
that I wasnt able to hear your statements, but I have reviewed
them. And again, thank you for your appearance.
I come from Virginias Fifth District, which is a rural southern
Virginia district, and over the years we haveover the last 10, 20,
30 years, we have been really hit hard by the loss of our manufacturing sector, textiles and furniture in particular. As you look at
the loss of jobs in our area, one cant help but be struck by the fact
that our inability to compete in the global marketplace has contributed a lot to the decline of those sectors. And when you look at the
barriers that we in Washington over the years have put up to make
it more and more difficult for American companies to succeed, I
think that we have to be extremely sensitive to the issue that we
are discussing today.
When you think about the Tax Code, when you think about the
environmental regulations and the labor regulations, all of the litigation, and the accounting that has to go along with all of the different regulations, I think that our American companies have a
steep challenge. And I hope that, whether we as a Congress or the
regulators that are implementing our legislation, it seems to me
that it is more important than ever that we be sensitive to those
challenges and thoseand, frankly, those burdens that we put on
our American companies.
So, I guess my question would be when youand this would be
for everyone. I would love to start with Mr. Allen and then just go
down the line. When you look at the importance of harmonizing our
regulatory and legislative structure as it relates to other countries,
can you think of examples that jump out where we have done that
successfully, and can you think of examples, the worst-case scenario, where we havent done that successfully? I would think that
certainly manufacturing might be one of those, but if you could
speak just generally to that topic, because at the end of the day,
as my colleague from Ohio Mr. Stivers said, at the end of the day,
this is about jobs for us.
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Mr. ALLEN. If I may cite an example which actually resides within Title VII itself, if we think about the position that Europe is currently heading in regarding the clearing of derivatives, the proposals there are substantially the same as those that we see under
Title VII. There is a timing question there, there is a timing delay,
that is unquestionably the case, but there has already been a pretty much arrived-at political consensus in Europe as to what the
shape of that statute should look like. And it is intended that that
statute be on the statute books by the end of 2012 of this year.
When one looks at the substantive regulation that sits in that
clearing framework, it is very substantially aligned to what we see
in the United States. There are other areas where that is not the
case, admittedly, potentially around execution through SEFs and
things of that nature, as I mentioned before. But clearing is a good
example of where there is a reasonablereasonably high prospects
of a degree of international harmonization and convergence around
how that is going to work, which, of course, should not be surprising given that it is embedded within the G-20 commitments articulated at Pittsburgh.
Mr. HURT. Thank you.
Mr. BRUMMER. I would agree.
Mr. HURT. Mr. Thompson?
Mr. THOMPSON. There clearly are some areas where harmonization is working, and I agree that clearing is one of them, but it
is important to note that there are many where harmonization does
not seem to be working. I will give a couple of examples.
The swaps push-out rule of Section 716, which is a feature of
Title VII, no other jurisdiction of commercial importance has indicated any interest in adopting it soever.
A second example with respect to the margin rules for uncleared
swaps, the U.S. approach is very proscriptive and significantly varies from current market practice. The indications of the approach
in Europe will be quite different, and that you can deal with the
risk relating to uncleared swaps by either capital or margin, but
not both, as is in the case in the United States.
Finally, the approach to the execution mandate on electronic
trading platforms will probably be quite different in Europe as opposed to the United States.
So it is important to note that although there are some successes
on the harmonization front, there are many areas where the global
regulatory framework will not harmonize.
Mr. HURT. Thank you.
Mr. Zubrod?
Mr. ZUBROD. I would echo some of those comments. In particular,
among the most salient aspects of regulation that will impact endusers, both financial and nonfinancial, is the imposition of margin
requirements. The U.S. prudential regulators rule on margin does
impose margin requirements on all market participants, albeit to
varying degrees, depending on the type of participant. It is not
clear that the world will follow that approach. Indeed, that approach isnt aligned with congressional intent here in the United
States, but even globally foreign regulators have given signals that
they have questions about the U.S. approach and whether or not
capital requirements are sufficient to address the risks associated
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with noncleared swaps. And I think that whether or not harmonization is possible on that front is a question that will be answered
in time.
Chairman GARRETT. The gentleman yields back.
The gentleman who sponsored the legislation is recognized for 5
minutes.
Mr. HIMES. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Just to start, I would like
to seek unanimous consent to submit two statements for the
record, one from my colleague Gwen Moore, and one from the
ABASA. Thank you.
Chairman GARRETT. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. HIMES. I guess I would like to exploreI hear two criticisms
of the bill that the chairman and I have written. One is the whole
AIG thing, which I think is faulty, to say the least, and if I have
time, I will come back to that. But I would also like to explore the
concept that this bill would lead to a race to the bottom. And to
do that, I guess I am very interested in currently.
My understanding is that the vast bulk of the swaps market occurs within the G-20, and, in fact, specifically trades largely in
New York, London, Hong Kong, Tokyo and Germany. Can somebody just ballpark for me what percentage of the swaps market
happens in those five jurisdictions?
Mr. THOMPSON. I will give you my guess. I would say north of
90 percent, probably closer to 95.
Mr. HIMES. Okay. So just for shorthand, let me say that all of
the trading in these instruments happens in those five or six jurisdictions. If I listen to some of my friends on the other side, and
some of my friends in the banking industry, I would hear that the
efforts that were made to address the financial meltdown, whether
it was Dodd-Frank, or transaction taxes being discussed in Europe,
compensation limits imposed in the U.K., that we have unleashed
the four horsemen of the apocalypse on the industry. And I wonder,
in these last 3 years in which we have done this, how much of the
swaps market has migrated away from these five or six entities to
low regulationDr. Brummer talks about Syria and Iran. How
much of that market, in the face of this assault on the industry,
has migrated away from those jurisdictions?
Mr. THOMPSON. Certainly at JPMorgan the answer is zero, and
the reason is we are in those jurisdictions because that is where
the clients are, that is where the business is, that is where the infrastructure is.
As a practical matter, we cant pick up and move to Syria. Even
aside from the anti-evasion authority that the CFTC has under the
statute, we simply cant do it as a practical matter.
Mr. HIMES. So my colleague from Massachusetts says that if we
enact this, that effectively we will lift all regulations on the transactions. Do any of these jurisdictions, London, Hong Kong, Tokyo,
Germany, that effectively are all of the swaps marketdo any of
the witnesses want to characterize the transactional level requirements in those jurisdictions in which all of these transactions
occur? And I am talking about margin, registration, reporting. Does
anybody want to characterize the regulations in those markets
where these transactions occur as lax?
Yes, Dr. Brummer?
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Mr. BRUMMER. I would certainly not characterize them as lax, in
part because we dont really know what they are. And they are yet
on the books yet, which creates its own problems.
Mr. HIMES. But in each of those markets, there are currently
clear regulations subject to evolution.
Mr. BRUMMER. We have proposals, right. And I would also want
to emphasize, as I said in my report, when you look at the European Unionand I would agree with Mr. Allenthat there are
some broad levels of consensus. We are different countries with different histories; we are going to come up with different approaches.
I am not for trying to find a way to accommodate those differences.
Mr. HIMES. But if I could just interrupt you there. Regulations
exist currently in those jurisdictions. It is probably fair to assume
that they will get through Basel III or through other mechanisms
probably more regulatory, probably fair to assume that. So, again,
I justmy question is is the status quo in any of those jurisdictions
currentlycan you characterize the status quo as lax?
Mr. BRUMMER. I dont think so.
Mr. HIMES. Okay. I yield back the balance of my time.
Chairman GARRETT. The gentleman yields back, and the gentleman from California is recognized for 1 minute, and then we will
close since we have votes that were already called.
Mr. SHERMAN. Thank you.
Mr. Brummer, given the sizable derivative exposures of foreign
branches of some of our major U.S. banks, how can we ensure that
such exposures do not contribute to the systemic risk here in the
United States? And is it typical for the U.S.-based corporate entity
to guarantee or otherwise expose themselves to the risk of these
foreign branches?
Mr. ALLEN. If I may
Mr. SHERMAN. I guess, Dr. Brummer, although
Mr. ALLEN. My apologies, of course.
I was just going to say that when it comes to the safety and
soundness regulation which underpins the prudential approach to
the activities of the non-U.S. branches of the U.S. firms, and this
is true internationally as well, they are subject to considerable regulatory oversightin the case of the United States, by the Federal
Reserve, and in the case of the U.K., by the likes of the FSA
which goes to the safety and soundness of the activities which
those institutions undertake.
Much of what we are talking about around Title VII relates far
more to the transactional level-type regulation, where there is more
of a fragmentation in terms of the international approach to the
regulation of those issues, but far less the case when it comes to
fundamental principles of prudential safety and soundness.
Mr. BRUMMER. I agree. That is certainly the case. But it is also
useful to understand that many of our prudential regulations are
created with certain expectations as to what kinds of activities our
entities are permitted to do. So therefore, if you have capital requirements, say, under Reg K that is not necessarily anticipating
foreign banking organizations from engaging heavily in derivatives
and swaps transactions, and if you also have, say, under DoddFrank provisions that say we are not going to bail out dealers in
derivatives and swaps, then you have to think very hard about
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whether or not preexisting capital standards sufficiently account
for the additional risk not only at the entity-level, but also at the
transactional level.
Chairman GARRETT. I thank the gentleman for his answers. I
thank the sponsor and all of the members of the subcommittee. I
thank the panel as well.
The Chair notes that some Members may have additional questions for the panel which they may wish to submit in writing.
Without objection, the hearing record will remain open for 30 days
for Members to submit written questions to these witnesses and to
place their response in the record.
And with that, this hearing is adjourned. Again, thanks to the
panel.
[Whereupon, at 3:43 p.m., the hearing was adjourned.]
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APPENDIX
February 8, 2012
(29)
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