[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 93 (Monday, June 21, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Page S5167]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FINANCIAL REFORM
Mr. DORGAN. Mr. President, 16 years ago I wrote a cover article for
the Washington Monthly magazine. The title was ``Very Risky Business,''
the subtitle, ``If we don't watch out, a new kind of Wall Street
gambling--exotic derivatives trading--could shake the market and put
taxpayers on the line for another bailout.'' I talked about $35
trillion in derivatives. That is now a fraction of what is out there. I
talked about banks that were trading on derivatives on their own
proprietary accounts. I said they might just as well have a roulette
wheel or a craps table in their lobby. It is just flatout gambling, and
it ought to be stopped.
It is not surprising to me because I made the same point 5 years
after that, when they tried to repeal Glass-Steagall--and did
successfully--in order for us to compete with the Europeans. That took
apart the protections that existed after the Great Depression. It was
decided that we don't need those protections anymore. They took it
apart. I was one of eight Senators to vote no. I warned on the floor
then that another taxpayer bailout would come within a decade. It did,
regrettably.
Now the question is, as we put together a piece of legislation to
address these issues, what do we do that doesn't have us just having a
press conference to say: Look at what we did. What is it we have to do
to make sure this doesn't happen again? Have we really tightened the
regulations?
Let me go through a couple things. Will we have dealt with too big to
fail? The answer is no, not really. Too big to fail means there are
some businesses in this country in the financial services industry,
some of the biggest financial institutions, that are determined ``too
big to fail,'' and their failure would cause grievous harm to the
economy, perhaps bring the entire economy down. Therefore, if they are
too big to fail, they are, by definition, going to be bailed out.
I happen to believe that if you are too big to fail, you are simply
too big. You ought to be pared back, trimmed down until you are not too
big to fail. That is not what is happening here. We are going to pass a
piece of legislation in which the biggest financial institutions are
bigger than they were before we got into this mess. Too big to fail
doesn't mean you are too big. In fact, you can get bigger with the kind
of legislation that is being considered in conference.
Proprietary trading. Will they still allow banks to trade on their
own proprietary accounts? Will they put a restriction, finally, on
banks' ability to make speculative bets using their own capital in
their own lobby? We will see. It doesn't look like it.
What about the issue of naked credit default swaps, CDSs? They have
no insurable interest on any side of them, just flatout betting. No,
this isn't going on in Atlantic City or Las Vegas; it is going on
across the country with financial institutions. Will this be trimmed
down? It doesn't look like it.
How about the ratings agencies, the agencies that gave AAA ratings to
fundamentally worthless securities, had a bunch of people left with bad
securities in the bowels of financial balance sheets? What about that?
There was an amendment on the floor of the Senate to deal with that.
That has now been watered down. Or capital standards.
I won't go on except to say that I hope the sum total of this
conference between the House and Senate on financial reform is about
working for the American people and not the interests that helped
create this mess. I hope this is a time to suck it up and do the right
thing. I hope the conferees understand that if this bill is excessively
weakened--and it wasn't strong leaving here--they should not assume
they will have the votes to automatically pass that kind of legislation
back in the Senate and perhaps the House.
This is very important. This is not some other issue. This is about
whether the economy will continue to provide strength and expand and
promote hiring. It will be what our children and grandchildren
experience in terms of opportunities for the future in our great
country.
It is a conference that is pushed by all sides to do various things
for various interests. I hope they understand that this is something
that will revisit us again in 2 years, 5 years, 10 years from now
unless we do the right thing and make certain we address the key
issues.
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