• About
  • Advertise
  • Newsroom
  • Contact Us
Wednesday, December 10, 2025
No Result
View All Result
NEWS ALERTS
GantNews.com
  • Home
  • Top Stories
  • News
    • Top Stories
    • A & E
    • Business News
    • Crime
    • Local News
    • Explore Jefferson
    • Features
    • Health News
      • Health & Wellness
    • Sports
      • Local Sports
  • Obituaries
  • Opinions
  • Classifieds
    • Real Estate
  • HOLIDAY GUIDE
  • Home
  • Top Stories
  • News
    • Top Stories
    • A & E
    • Business News
    • Crime
    • Local News
    • Explore Jefferson
    • Features
    • Health News
      • Health & Wellness
    • Sports
      • Local Sports
  • Obituaries
  • Opinions
  • Classifieds
    • Real Estate
  • HOLIDAY GUIDE
No Result
View All Result
GantNews.com
No Result
View All Result
ADVERTISEMENT
Home News Business News

Trump and Elizabeth Warren agree on one thing: Break up the banks

by CNN
Friday, April 7, 2017
in Business News
0
0

Elizabeth Warren is renewing her crusade to break up Wall Street banks and is allying herself with President Trump.

The progressive Massachusetts senator reintroduced a bill this week with three other senators, including Republican John McCain, to shrink big U.S. banks.

She wants to restore a Depression-era law, known as the Glass-Steagall Act, that would wall off commercial and investment banking. They argue that would make banking safer by keeping firms’ consumer businesses separate from the units that make riskier investments.

Warren, a member of the Senate Banking Committee, seized on comments by Gary Cohn, Trump’s chief economic adviser and former president of Goldman Sachs, who expressed support for the idea during a meeting with lawmakers this week. The meeting was first reported by Bloomberg News.

A White House spokeswoman said Cohn “was simply discussing the president’s previously stated position.”

The Trump administration first endorsed the idea in July at the Republican National Convention. But he has not yet laid out specifically what his policy recommendation would be.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin earlier signaled the administration’s willingness to fulfill Trump’s campaign promise for a modern version of the law, which was repealed in 1999 during the Clinton administration.

Even so, Mnuchin has cautioned that doing so could have some consequences including hampering banks ability to lend.

Tony Fratto, managing partner at consulting firm Hamilton Place Strategies and a former Bush administration official, said reinstating the Depression-era law “runs counter to the twin goals of financial stability and job growth.”

“It ignores both the lessons of the crisis and Dodd-Frank’s sweeping overhaul of our financial system,” he said.

Even former Federal Reserve Governor Daniel Tarullo, who had been the central bank’s regulatory point man, expressed doubt that a reinstatement of Glass-Steagall would be the right solution.

“I don’t think there’s any question that it would make supervision of those banks a less complicated affair,” Tarullo said this week. “But, as with other straightforward solutions, it probably underachieves in some respects and may have some costs in other respects.”

Some analysts, however, warned not to underestimate the political threat.

“At some point the market is going to have to accept that the Trump administration is serious about restoring the Glass-Steagall separation between commercial and investment banking,” wrote Jaret Seiberg, a policy analyst with Cowen & Co., in a note to clients.

Liberals have been pressing for a reinstatement of Glass-Steagall for nearly two decades, arguing it would prevent banks from putting taxpayers on the hook for their risky bets. It would also shrink Wall Street’s influence.

Congress tried to tackle the issue in the 2010 Dodd-Frank law with the so-called Volcker rule, which forced many banks to close their trading desks.

The Trump administration and policymakers have both signaled there is appetite to revise the Volcker rule given its complexity.

Still, striking a deal that appeals to both Republicans and Democrats might be tougher than it seems, according to Keefe, Bruyette & Wood’s policy analyst Brian Gardner, who pinned the odds against reinstatement of the law.

“We continue to believe that a return of some form of Glass-Steagall remains more of a headline risk rather than a real policy risk,” Gardner wrote in a note to clients.

U.S. unemployment drops to 4.5%, lowest in decade
Argentina's lesson for Trump: Tariffs made poverty worse

CNN

Next Post

U.S. unemployment drops to 4.5%, lowest in decade

Please login to join discussion
GantNews.com

© 2020 GantNews

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Newsroom
  • Contact Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Top Stories
  • News
    • Top Stories
    • A & E
    • Business News
    • Crime
    • Local News
    • Explore Jefferson
    • Features
    • Health News
      • Health & Wellness
    • Sports
      • Local Sports
  • Obituaries
  • Opinions
  • Classifieds
    • Real Estate
  • HOLIDAY GUIDE

© 2020 GantNews