U.S. Financial Regulatory Week Ahead

July 29 - August 2, 2024

The Dog Days of Summer in Washington Haven’t Quite Started Just Yet

Last week we said Washington’s financial regulatory world was entering the dog days of summer.  That might have been a bit premature.  First, we saw former President Donald Trump address the Bitcoin 2024 Conference in Nashville, Tennessee, where he promised to fire SEC Chair Gary Gensler and create a “strategic national bitcoin stockpile.”   Financial regulation has now officially entered the 2024 presidential election debate!

Then, we saw the Federal Reserve, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) issued a request for information from the industry on bank’s partnerships with fintech firms.  Specifically, the regulators want to hear about how banks are maintaining “effective risk management practices.”  They also separately issues a joint-statement reminding banks’ of the potential risks of working with third-party companies that provide bank despot products and services.

The same trio of bank regulators also issued a notice requesting comment on interagency efforts to reduce regulatory burdens, focusing on consumer protection, the role of directors, officers, and employees, and money laundering.

Also this past week, FDIC Vice Chair Travis Hill stepped up and made a public call for scrapping the pending bank capital rules and starting over from scratch and not simply making modifications to the draft. He went on to argue the Basel-mandated rules, as currently drafted, may not be legal.  Hill then presented a vision for a number of important bank regulatory issues.  If former President Trump is elected, Hill is seen as his choice as FDIC Chair.

The Federal Courts were also active this past week as a federal judge in Texas stayed the long-suffering Department of Labor’s fiduciary rule.

Looking at the week ahead, the FDIC is holding an Open Meeting to consider new rules on industrial loan companies and brokered deposits. And the SEC is holding a Small Business Capital Formation Advisory Committee. 

Up on Capitol Hill, the Senate Agriculture Committee is tentatively planning to mark up a crypto regulatory bill while the Senate Banking Committee might vote on the nomination of Christy Goldsmith Romero to be FDIC Chair (much depends on whether recently convicted Senator Bob Menendez (D-NJ), a member of the committee, will show up to vote.  Following his recent federal bribery conviction, Menendez said he would resign.

But what will likely be the best event this week will be Capitol Account’s event in the Capitol Visitors Center. SEC Commissioner Mark Uyeda will participate in a fireside chat, giving great insights into the SEC’s agenda for the rest of the year and what to expect in the wake of the Chevron decision. You can watch it virtually, but you have to register, which you can do by clicking HERE.

Below is a listing of all the other significant regulatory-related events this coming week:

 

U.S. Congressional Hearings 

U.S. Senate

  • Tuesday, July 30, 10:00 a.m. – The Senate Finance Committee holds a hearing entitled “Tax Tools for Local Economic Development.”

 

  • Tuesday, July 30, 10:00 a.m. –  The Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Tourism, Trade, and Export Promotion Subcommittee holds a hearing on "Enabling Rural Businesses to Grow at Home While Competing Abroad."

 

 

  • Wednesday, July 31, TBD – The Senate Agriculture Committee is tentatively planning to hold a markup of Committee Chair Senator Debbie Stabenow’s (D-MI) draft crypto bill.

 

  • Wednesday, July 31, TBD – Senate Banking Committee Chair Sherrod Brown (D-OH) is floating the idea of voting to advance FDIC Chair-nominee Christy Goldsmith Romero’s nomination.  However, with the pending resignation of Senator Bob Menendez (D-NJ following his recent criminal conviction, the committee will be one Democratic vote shy, and at this point, it appears there are no committee Republicans known to support the nomination.  It is not clear if Menendez will show up or not.  Also likely to be included in the vote would be the advancement of the nominations of Caroline Crenshaw to be an SEC Commissioner and current CFTC Commissioner Kristin Johnson to be an Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, and Gordon Ito to be a member of the FSOC. 

House of Representatives

  • The House is out for the month of August.  No events are scheduled at this time.

 

 

US Regulatory Meetings & Events

Federal Reserve Board and Federal Reserve Banks

  • Tuesday & Wednesday, July 30 – 31 – The Federal Reserve Board’s Federal Open Market Committee meets for two days to discuss the economy and interest rates.  Fed Chair Jay Powell will hold a press conference at 2:00 p.m. on July 31.

 

U.S. Treasury Department

  • Tuesday, July 30, 9:00 a.m. – The Treasury Department holds a closed meeting of the Debt Management Advisory Committee to discuss topics related to the economy, financial markets, Treasury financing, and debt management, followed by a written report of its recommendations from the committee.

 

  • Thursday, August 1, 2:00 p.m. – The Treasury Department’s Advisory Committee on Risk-Sharing Mechanisms meets.  The agenda for the meeting includes: Presentations addressing the Federal Insurance Office's partnership with the National Science Foundation to establish a new Industry-University Cooperative Research Center to provide research, analysis, and thought leadership to improve the insurance sector's modeling and underwriting of terrorism and catastrophic cyber risks; Hear a presentation by FIO staff on the 2024 Report on the Effectiveness of the Terrorism Risk Insurance Program and the International Forum of Terrorism Risk (Re)Insurance Pools Conference hosted by FIO in April 2024; and Roundtable discussion by the members to provide industry insight on the effectiveness of TRIP, terrorism insurance market conditions, ideas for private market risk-sharing mechanisms that can offset losses arising from acts of terrorism, and the administration of TRIP.

 

Department of Commerce

 

Securities and Exchange Commission

  • Tuesday, July 30, 10:00 a.m. – The SEC holds its Small Business Capital Formation Advisory Committee meeting.  The Committee will continue its exploration of ways to expand access to early-stage capital raising and support underrepresented emerging fund managers, the Committee will explore recent changes to the SBIC program designed to increase access and diversify funding for small businesses, start-ups, and fund managers.  The full agenda can be accessed HERE.

 

  • Thursday, August 1, 2:00 p.m. – The SEC holds a Closed Meeting.

 

Commodities Futures Trading Commission

  • There are no significant events scheduled at this time.

 

FINRA

  • There are no significant events scheduled at this time.

 

  • Wednesday, July 30, 10:00 a.m. – The FDIC Board of Directors will hold an Open Session.  You can find the full agenda HERE, which includes proposed rulemakings on brokered deposits, parent companies of Industrial Banks, and several other items.

 

Office of the Comptroller of the Currency

 

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

  • There are no significant events scheduled at this time.

 

National Credit Union Administration

  • There are no significant events scheduled at this time.

 

Federal Trade Commission & Department of Justice Antitrust Division

 

 

 

Farm Credit Administration

  • There are no significant events scheduled at this time.

 

International Monetary Fund & World Bank

  • There are no significant events scheduled at this time.

 

North American Securities Administrators Association

  • There are no significant events scheduled at this time.

 

 

 

 

Trade Associations & Think Tank Events

Trade Associations

  • There are no significant events scheduled at this time.

 

Think Tanks and Other Events

  • Tuesday, July 30, 10:00 a.m. – Capitol Account holds an event on investment advisers’ rules sponsored by Charles Schwab. SEC Commissioner Mark Uyeda participates in a fireside chat, An industry panel discussion features Jon Beatty, Head of Advisor Services, Charles Schwab; Karen Barr, President, Investment Adviser Association; James J. Burns, CEO/President, JJ Burns & Company and Stephen Johnson, Chief Counsel Wealth & Asset Management Legal Group, Charles Schwab. Location: Capitol Visitor Center, room SVC 215. Pre-registration is required for people without congressional identification. Click here to sign up.

 

 

 

 

 

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