By Anna T Pinedo
| Morrison & Foerster |
Address 1290 Avenue of the Americas New York, NY 10104-0050 USA
Telephone: +1 212 468 8000 Fax: +1 212 468 7900 Visit website: www.mofo.com |
Birthdays provide an opportunity to look back and look ahead. Dodd-Frank
is now two years old. Looking back, we can report that 129 rules have been
finalised. And looking ahead, we can see that another 137 proposed rules await
completion. Perhaps more importantly, 134 rules have yet to be tackled. So,
before we help ourselves to birthday cake, it might be helpful to describe in a
bit more detail where we think things stand.
We have a fair bit of insight regarding the oversight of systemically
important financial institutions, and the resolution scheme for these entities.
But regulators have not identified the non-bank entities that will be subject
to oversight. We only recently learned more about the proposed implementation
of Basel III in the United States. The regulatory framework affecting
derivatives has begun to take shape: product definitions and entity definitions
have just been finalised.
Despite this progress, many of the most significant questions remain
unanswered. Largely, these relate to the mortgage market and the future of
securitisation in the United States. Perhaps this is understandable given that
the regulations that are pending will have the broadest impact on average
Americans. The most controversial aspect of securitisation reform, the risk
retention rule, remains in the proposal phase. The other big piece of
securitisation reform, proposed revisions to Regulation ABs registration,
disclosure, and reporting requirements for asset-backed securities and other
structured finance products, remains on hold while the SEC focuses on meeting
pressing Dodd-Frank rulemaking deadlines. Federal banking regulators, acting
jointly, introduced risk-based capital guidelines and alternatives to credit
ratings for securitisation positions that will apply high capital requirements
to the subordinated tranches of a securitisation that are the first to absorb
losses. Capital rules seem to favour plain vanilla residential mortgage loans
over more complex loan structures. The Volcker Rule, as proposed, would
prohibit or restrict the ability of banking entities to retain an ownership
interest in, or sponsor, certain securitisation transactions; and impose
burdensome compliance requirements on such entities. A number of uncertainties
also remain in terms of the applicability of various provisions of Title VII to
the derivatives activities of securitisation trusts.
While on the subject of Dodd Frank uncertainties, it should be noted
that the most significant uncertainties are likely to arise out of the
cost-benefit analysis being rehashed by the relevant Congressional committees.
This review may result in some efforts to roll back certain provisions
perceived to affect the cost or availability of credit.
Listen to our free web
seminar on the status of Title
VII rulemaking on September 6 at GMT 4pm. Panelists will discuss
entity definitions, swap dealer registration and compliance issues,
registration process, business conduct standards and policy requirements, and
compliance challenges.