Skadden,
Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP & Affiliates has authored a 200-page
analysis of the Dodd-Frank Act, which will offered as a LexisNexis Emerging Issues
Analysis in the near future. Following is the firm's overview of their
commentary:
The Dodd-Frank Act effects a profound increase in regulation of
the financial services industry. The Act gives U.S. governmental authorities
more funding, more information and more power. In broad and significant areas,
the Act endows regulators with wholly discretionary authority to write and
interpret new rules.
The coming months and years will reveal the answers to important
questions that will determine how effectively this increased regulatory
presence will advance the Act's objectives: Will talent and capital flow to
pockets of finance that the new regulations do not reach? Will new financial
products make the regulations irrelevant? Will the Act have unintended consequences
on nonfinancial companies? Will U.S. firms lose business to foreign
competitors? Will the regulations stifle innovation? Will the availability of
credit be impaired by increased uncertainty and costs?
We examine the Dodd-Frank Act and the business implications
expected to flow from it, based on the text approved by the House of
Representatives. If the Act is approved by the Senate, some of the provisions
might be changed by subsequent legislation implementing "technical
corrections." Our analysis covers the following aspects of the Act:
Oversight and Systemic Risk. The Act gives
regulators new resolution authority, creates a new council to monitor and
address systemic risk, and changes the mandate of the Federal Reserve.
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Orderly Liquidation Authority. Regulators
will receive new authority under the Act to take control of and liquidate
troubled financial firms if their failure would pose a significant risk to the
financial stability of the United States. We explore the types of financial
companies subject to this authority, the elements of the systemic risk
determination, and the mechanics and funding of the liquidation process.
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Key Measures to Address Systemic Risk. Under
the Act, for the first time, the mitigation of systemic risk and the maintenance
of system-wide financial stability will be regulatory objectives. Our analysis
covers the powers of the new Financial Stability Oversight Council established
to fulfill these objectives and their application to financial firms, including
nonbank financial companies.
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Federal Reserve Emergency Credit. We
describe the Act's limitation of the Federal Reserve's authority to extend
credit in "unusual and exigent circumstances" to participants in facilities
with broad-based eligibility.
Financial Institutions. The Act imposes significant
new regulations on banking organizations. In addition, for the first time, the
Act will allow the Federal Reserve to regulate companies other than banks -
such as insurance companies and investment firms - if they predominantly engage
in financial activities and are selected for regulation by the Council based on
an evaluation of their balance sheets, funding sources, and other risk-based
criteria. We explore the reach and scope of the new federal regulations, which
will extend to the entire holding company structure of these "nonbank financial
companies." In this area, we consider the following impacts of the Act:
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Regulation of Banking Organizations. The
Act effects numerous, significant changes in the regulation of banking
organizations. We explore these changes, including creation of the Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau, enhancement of supervision of large institutions
and nonbank affiliates, and establishment of additional capital regulations.
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Volcker Rule. The
"Volcker Rule" is embodied in the Act's limitations on insured depositary
institutions and their affiliates conducting "proprietary trading" and
investing in hedge funds and private equity funds. We describe these
limitations, as well as provisions of the Act that will force these
institutions to move much of their derivatives activities to nonbank affiliates
and to comply with new capital and support standards.
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Private Fund Investment Advisers. We
describe the Act's impacts on advisers to hedge funds and private equity funds,
which include new requirements for registration, recordkeeping, and reporting,
as well as the effect of the "Volcker Rule" on the ability of certain types of
firms to sponsor or invest in hedge funds and private equity funds.
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Insurance Companies. The
Act will potentially subject some of our largest and most well-respected
insurance companies to designation as nonbank financial companies and oversight
by the Federal Reserve for the first time. We explore these developments and
the functions of the new Federal Insurance Office created by the Act to monitor
the industry, along with related provisions designed to promote uniformity
among the states in market regulation of specified types of insurance.
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Supervision of Payment, Clearing and
Settlement. We describe the greater role that the Act assigns to the Federal
Reserve in the supervision of systemically important financial market utilities
and payment, clearing and settlement activities conducted by financial
institutions.
Capital Markets. The Act brings significant
changes to the rules that affect the process of financing business enterprises.
We explore these changes in the following areas:
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Derivatives and Swaps Clearinghouses. The
Act imposes a new regulatory regime on over-the-counter derivatives, which
includes clearing, exchange trading and other requirements intended to increase
transparency, liquidity and efficiency, and to decrease systemic risk. We
describe the mechanisms established to satisfy these objectives and some of
their anticipated effects on current market practices. We also evaluate the
potential for the new regulations - coupled with new implementation and
monitoring responsibilities placed on regulators - to produce market dislocations,
increase the cost of certain swap transactions, and adversely affect certain
types of investment funds and structured finance transactions.
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Securitization. Under
the Act, issuers or originators of asset-backed securities generally will be
required to retain at least five percent of the credit risk associated with the
securitized assets. We describe these provisions of the Act and explore their
potential impact on the securitization field.
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Credit Rating Agencies. Credit
rating agencies will enter into an entirely new regime of regulation under the
Act. We summarize the new substantive standards, disclosure obligations, and
private litigation rules applicable to rating agencies.
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Investor Protection and Securities
Enforcement. The Act enhances the SEC's enforcement program and investor
protection mission by establishing a new whistleblower bounty program,
providing the SEC with new enforcement authority, and permitting the SEC to
impose a "fiduciary duty" on broker-dealers that provide retail investment
advice. We consider the implications of these changes and conclude that the Act
will make the SEC a stronger and potentially more assertive agency.
Governance and Compensation. The Act authorizes
the SEC to adopt rules giving nominating shareholders access to the company's
proxy. In addition, the Act requires enhanced disclosure of executive
compensation and gives shareholders the right to a "say-on-pay" vote on
executive compensation.
Consumers. A new governmental authority, the Bureau
of Consumer Financial Protection, is endowed by the Act with broad power to
regulate retail financial products and services. We describe the responsibility
of the Bureau and offices within it to supervise and examine specified types of
institutions and to establish and enforce rules related to consumer finance. We
also describe the Act's new prohibitions or restrictions on certain lending
practices.
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We hope that you find these materials to be informative
and helpful in understanding and adapting to the impending changes in the
regulatory landscape and meeting the business challenges expected to arise from
the Act. We
will continue to monitor, analyze and report on this (and related) legislation
and the new regulations that it will engender.
In
anticipation of the release of the Emerging Issues Analyses of the Act, we are
providing the first installment as a free download on the LexisNexis
Communities. As soon as the Analyses are
available, we will be posting free excerpts as well, so check back frequently
for updated content.