H.R. 766 – Financial Institution Customer Protection Act of 2015
(Rep. Luetkemeyer, R-MO, and 30 cosponsors)
The
Administration strongly opposes H.R. 766. This bill would constrain
Federal banking regulators' ability to appropriately engage with the
financial institutions they regulate for compliance with and enforcement
of U.S. legal and regulatory requirements that are designed to protect
the United States financial system from money laundering, terrorist
financing, and other serious financial crimes. Requiring Federal
banking agencies to satisfy a written materiality requirement is
unnecessary, overly burdensome, and could impede the Federal banking
agencies' ability to ensure financial institutions comply with important
regulatory obligations, including maintaining effective risk management
and controls. Restricting the Federal banking agencies in this way
could unnecessarily and dangerously hinder or compromise important law
enforcement and national security efforts.
A
critical component of the Federal banking agencies' capacity to
supervise banks for compliance with U.S. laws and regulations is their
ability to ensure that financial institutions understand and
appropriately account for their specific money laundering and terrorist
financing risks. To help institutions understand such risks, the
Financial Crimes Enforcement Network and Federal banking agencies
periodically advise financial institutions of money laundering and
terrorist financing threats and related vulnerabilities, risks, and
suspicious activity. Financial institutions may use this information to
understand and manage their risks, including determining whether to
terminate certain customer accounts if the institution determines that
it is unable to manage such risks adequately after giving such risks due
consideration.
H.R.
766 would add a series of impediments to financial fraud enforcement by
limiting, in various ways, the Attorney General's authority to
investigate and bring claims under the Financial Institutions Reform,
Recovery, and Enforcement Act (FIRREA). The FIRREA statute serves as a
powerful tool to address and deter frauds committed against American
consumers and financial institutions. The various hurdles imposed by
H.R. 766 would only make such enforcement efforts more burdensome, time
consuming, and rare – a series of effects that will allow fraud schemes
to continue unaddressed for longer periods of time, to the detriment of
the safety of consumers and the American financial system.
In
addition, requiring Federal banking agencies to provide financial
institutions with written justification disclosing information related
to terrorist or other criminal activity may disclose sensitive
information that could compromise important criminal and national
security investigations and interests. Such disclosures could lead
financial institutions to take actions that will tip off suspects that
they are under investigation, undermining national security.
Imposing
burdensome and arbitrary standards hinder the ability of Federal
financial regulators to protect the financial system and consumers from
unnecessary risks.
If the President were presented with H.R. 766, his senior advisors would recommend that he veto the bill.
H.R. 1675 – Capital Markets Improvement Act of 2016
(Rep. Hultgren, R-IL, and 8 cosponsors)
The
Administration strongly opposes H.R. 1675. Among other flaws, this
bill includes several provisions that pose risks to investors, are
overly broad, allow financial institutions to avoid appropriate
oversight, and are duplicative of existing administrative authorities.
Title
III, entitled Small Business Mergers, Acquisitions, Sales, and
Brokerage Simplification, is overly broad and would eliminate
registration requirements for merger and acquisition (M&A) brokers
engaged on a transaction for any privately held company with gross
revenues up to $250 million, thus exempting deals of significant size,
and for businesses far bigger than the local small businesses the bill
purports to aid. Moreover, the legislation is duplicative insofar as
the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has already taken
administrative action to exempt certain M&A brokers from
broker-dealer registration without hindering the agency's ability to
protect investors.
Additionally,
Title IV, entitled Small Company Disclosure Simplification, would
exempt certain publicly traded companies from requirements to file
machine-readable financial statements. Open data disclosure systems
benefit investors, issuers, and the public, increasing transparency of
publicly traded companies by making their filings more easily
accessible. Impeding regulators' ability to use 21st century technological tools to regulate markets and protect investors is contrary to the SEC's mission.
Lastly,
Title V, entitled Streamlining Excessive and Costly Regulations Review,
would require the SEC to periodically review all of its existing
significant regulations and determine by Commission vote whether each
regulation is outdated, among other requirements. These requirements
are unnecessarily duplicative, wasteful and costly. The SEC already
complies with the Regulatory Flexibility Act and is encouraged, under
Executive Order 13579, to review rules to assess whether they are
outdated or excessively burdensome. Requiring a review and full
Commission vote on every major rule every 10 years under full
Administrative Procedure Act-style requirements would severely hinder
the SEC's ability to monitor markets and protect investors.
If the President were presented with H.R. 1675, his senior advisors would recommend he veto the bill.
Source: The Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget
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