Floor Statement

 

The Honorable Frank D. Lucas

Ranking Member, House Committee on Agriculture

 

RE: H.R. 4173, the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act

 

December 10, 2009

I thank the Chair.  I rise in opposition to H.R. 4173.  Regulatory reform of our financial system is needed.  However, rather than using this opportunity to enact meaningful reform that creates financial stability and encourages economic growth, the majority has constructed a massive piece of legislation that will restrict credit availability and does little to address the real problems in the financial industry. 

In addition to dramatically expanding the power of the Federal Reserve and establishing a “Credit Czar” who will have virtually unlimited authority to restrict consumer choices, this bill will create a permanent bailout slush fund for so-called “too big to fail” companies funded by a $150 billion tax on financial institutions.  This tax will reduce available capital for lending and will most certainly be passed down to consumers in the form of higher fees. 

As the Ranking Member of the Agriculture Committee, I also rise in opposition to Title III -- the OTC derivatives title -- that is currently in HR 4173.  This is the same title that was adopted by the Financial Services Committee.  I opposed this title in the committee, where I am also a member, because it makes it too costly for end-users to manage risk and unnecessarily ties up capital that could otherwise be used to create jobs and grow their businesses. 

However, Chairman Peterson and Chairman Frank will bring an amendment to the floor that will strike and replace this derivatives title.  This Peterson-Frank amendment is the product of negotiations between our two committees.  I prefer the version reported by the Agriculture Committee, but this compromise is significantly better than the current title and I support its inclusion.  But, I support its inclusion only if other secondary amendments from my friends on the other side of the aisle are defeated.

I would be remiss if I didn’t thank Chairman Peterson for working with Agriculture Committee Republicans in a process that started back in February when our committee reported out H.R. 977.  Chairman Peterson worked in good faith to address issues our members brought to the table, and we learned together the concerns of all of the participants in the over-the-counter derivative markets.  Although we were able to address some of these concerns, many still remain unresolved.  

We were able to improve areas most important to end-users -- the manufacturers, the energy companies and food processors that use swap agreements to manage price risk so they can provide consumers the lowest cost products.  End-users should not be regulated as though they are a major financial house residing on Wall Street.  They did not cause the financial collapse and they should not be regulated like they did. 

I would have preferred language that made clear that only those entities that can have a significant, adverse impact on the U.S. financial system be regulated as major swap participants.  Similarly, I don’t understand why market makers that only deal in cleared products need to have additional capital and margin requirements imposed on them by the federal government. 

Finally, we should not forget that new opportunities, innovative products and services, and ultimately economic growth are born from people willing and able to take risk and invest.  We should not attempt to regulate risk out of existence.  As it stands now, the Peterson-Frank amendment allows the appropriate financial regulator to closely monitor market trends and market participants who may generate too much risk for a healthy and robust financial system.  This amendment also gives the regulator the appropriate tools to reduce risk before it can negatively affect our economy.  The Peterson-Frank amendment isn’t perfect, but it is a marked improvement over other legislative efforts either proposed or considered.

 

###

Social Networks

YouTube FaceBook