Obama proposes tough limits on largest banks
By Michael D. Shear and Binyamin Appelbaum
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, January 22, 2010
President Obama expanded his new offensive on Wall Street on Thursday, proposing rules that would impede the growth of the largest banks and bar them from making what he called "reckless" investments.
The proposal comes as the administration is shifting from its year-long effort to save financial firms toward a new willingness to confront them with explicit prohibitions on activities that fueled the economic crisis. In essence, Obama is now aiming to force the firms to choose between the federal benefits that come with being a bank and the unbridled pursuit of profits.
After opposing proposals such as hard limits on executive bonuses, the administration is embracing a tougher line -- more evidence that Obama has the industry in his sights as he seeks to show Middle America that he feels its economic pain.
Obama's plan would bar banks from making investments that are not intended to benefit customers, including the creation of proprietary investment funds solely to benefit employees and shareholders. New limits also would make it difficult for the largest banks to become any bigger, effectively stopping domestic expansion at well-known companies such as Bank of America and J.P. Morgan Chase.
(More here.)
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, January 22, 2010
President Obama expanded his new offensive on Wall Street on Thursday, proposing rules that would impede the growth of the largest banks and bar them from making what he called "reckless" investments.
The proposal comes as the administration is shifting from its year-long effort to save financial firms toward a new willingness to confront them with explicit prohibitions on activities that fueled the economic crisis. In essence, Obama is now aiming to force the firms to choose between the federal benefits that come with being a bank and the unbridled pursuit of profits.
After opposing proposals such as hard limits on executive bonuses, the administration is embracing a tougher line -- more evidence that Obama has the industry in his sights as he seeks to show Middle America that he feels its economic pain.
Obama's plan would bar banks from making investments that are not intended to benefit customers, including the creation of proprietary investment funds solely to benefit employees and shareholders. New limits also would make it difficult for the largest banks to become any bigger, effectively stopping domestic expansion at well-known companies such as Bank of America and J.P. Morgan Chase.
(More here.)
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