We have an exemption for the commercial entities, but hopefully, we do not for the financial entities.
If we let it go, it is going to pull down everything else. That was the central lesson of AIG.
The more transparency we bring, it lowers risk as well to the public.
Congress should avoid any bright-line exemption that runs the risk of creating the next regulatory loophole.
History demonstrates that bright-line statutory exemptions or exclusions granted at one point in time can have unintended consequences.
[w]e now face a new set of challenges as the nation continues to recover from last year's failure of the financial system and the financial ...
I think Congress does want one agency.
In 2008 the financial regulatory system failed the American public. We must now do all we can to ensure that it does not happen again.
The financial crisis only highlights this in dramatically revealing how unregulated OTC derivatives and their dealers actually can heighten ...
Giving the Federal Reserve certain authority in financial markets has the potential of setting up multiple regulators overseeing markets and...
I think it is a red herring, with all respect to Chairman Kelliher.