Law Outlines Federal Banking Regulation Outlines
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In General
Breakdown of Glass-Steagall
The 1999 Gramm-Leach Bliley Act culminated the destruction of the Glass-Steagall firewall after a long period of erosion by regulatory actions.
Repealed Glass-Steagall's anti-affiliation provisions and permitted banks to affiliate through specially qualified bank holding companies called "financial holding companies" with companies engaged in the full range of financial activities:
Activities included (1) underwriting, dealing in, and brokering securities; (2) acting as an investment advisor; (3) merchant banking (i.e., making long-term equity investments for which no public market exists); and (4) underwriting and selling insurance.
To qualify as a financial holding company, its subsidiary FDIC-insured depository institution must be (1) well-capitalized and adequately managed and (2) have satisfactory community-reinvestment records.
Two key Glass-Steagall provisions remain in force:
(1) A bank can underwrite and deal in only a limited range of securities (e.g. government bonds). 12 U.S.C. ยงยง 24(Seventh), 335, 378(a)(1).
(2) The same firm cannot both accept deposits and underwrite securities. 12 U.S.C. ยง 378(a)(1).
Breakdown of Distinction Among Different Types of Financial Institutions
A Bank vs. A Thrift
Three Key Differences
(1) Thrifts generally have more constrained investment powers than banks.
Thrifts generally cannot have more than 20% of their assets in commercial loans
Any commercial loan exceeding 10% of assets must be to small businesses
Loans secured by nonresidential real property generally cannot exceed four times a thrift's capital
(2) Thrifts must meet a "qualified thrift lender test" by keeping a certain percentage of their assets in investments like home mortgages
If not, risk being regulated as banks and their holding companies as bank holding companies
(3) The Bank Holding Company Act generally does not apply to a thrift holding company if the company owns no banks and the company's subsidiary thrifts all meet the qualified thrift lender test
A thrift holding company that acquired a thrift after May 4, 1999 can engage only in the sort of activities permissible for financial holding companies
What is a Bank?
Definitions
(1) Legal Form: A bank is a firm with a commercial bank charter
(2) Services: A firm that accepts deposits withdrawable by check and makes loans
(3) Economic Function: A financial intermediaries that provide transaction services to customers
Financial Intermediary
Financial intermediaries take money from investors, pool it, and invest the pooled money in other enterprises
Includes depository institutions, life insurance companies, mutual funds, pension funds, etc.
Benefits: (1) diversification, (2) Enable investors to enjoy economies of scale, (3) expertise, (4) ability to convert illiquid assets into liquid assets
Transaction Services
Provide an accounting system of exchange - a means of transferring wealth through bookkeeping entries
debiting (-) buyer's account and crediting (+) seller's account
Includes depository institutions and mutual funds
UNDER the functional definition of a bank, some mutual funds might be characterized as banks as they (1) take money from investors, pool it, and invest the pooled money in other enterprises, and (2) some allow customers to effect redemptions by writing checks on the fund payable to third parties.
Functional difference between banks and mutual funds is that demand accounts at banks represent demand debt (the bank agrees to repay whatever sum the customer had on deposit) whereas demand accounts at mutual fund represent demand equity (the mutual fund agrees to repay not a sum...
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