Posts Tagged ‘House Financial Services Committee’
Posted by Larry Doyle on May 3rd, 2012 7:29 AM |
The financial regulatory landscape is poised to change and, as far as I am concerned, not necessarily for the better.
Will you be merely a spectator or do you care to participate in the legislative process that WILL impact most of you? Are you an investment adviser? Are you an investor with funds managed by an investment adviser?
If you fall into either of those camps, I exhort you to get involved. I encourage you to become part of the process and the solution and not merely a bystander. How so? Let’s navigate. (more…)
Tags: Committee Chairman Spencer Bachus, concerns about FINRA, David Tittsworth IAA, financial regulation, FINRA, FINRA kangaroo court, FINRA oversight of RIAs, get involved, House Financial Services Committee, how does FINRA lose 8 hours worth of testimony, HR 4624, investing in America, Investment Adviser Association, Investment Adviser Oversight Act of 2012, Larry Doyle, Mark Mensack, Mark Mensack case, oversight of RIAs, regulation of RIAs, Sense on Cents, Spencer Bachus, Wall Street arbitration
Posted in FINRA, General | 4 Comments »
Posted by Larry Doyle on November 21st, 2011 5:10 PM |
A week ago, I wrote Sense on Cents Calls Out Congress to Pass H. R. 1148 Outlawing Congressional Insider Trading.
In the midst of writing my commentary, I highlighted that:
I called my Congressman Jim Himes (D-CT) this afternoon and informed his spokesman of my initiative here at Sense on Cents. I let him know that Jim’s name will be published at Sense on Cents as supporting this legislation or not.
I got his spokesman’s attention and let him know how great the blogosphere was at spreading this type of information. He fully understood. (more…)
Tags: Congress insider trading, Congressional insider trading, Congressman Jim Himes, Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, FINRA, formation of FINRA, H.R. 1148, Himes Pushes to End Congressional Insider Trading, house Committee on Financial Services, House Financial Services Committee, insider trading in Washington, Jim Himes, Mary Schapiro, POGO, project on Government Oversight, STOCK Act, Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge Act, what does Finra do?
Posted in General | 14 Comments »
Posted by Larry Doyle on December 10th, 2010 6:46 AM |
I detest those people and organizations paying mere lip service to issues needing real transparency and accountability.
I love having the voice provided by Sense on Cents so I can highlight a wide array of these issues and so people can more effectively navigate the economic landscape. I also love being able to ask the hard questions and call out those whom I think are not serving the public interest.
What else do I love? I love when a voice far stronger than my own echoes my thoughts, shares my opinion, and blasts away in pursuit of real truth, transparency, and integrity along our economic landscape.
With only a few exceptions, the media as a whole has shown itself unwilling to truly take the gloves off and go after the aforementioned ‘lip serving’ individuals and institutions. Independent watchdogs in pursuit of good government are far more aggressive.
On this note and against this backdrop, I have to admit my adrenaline picked up yesterday. How so? Let’s navigate as I was informed of the following: (more…)
Tags: Amerivet Securities, Darrel Issa, Dodd-Frank financial reform, FINRA Accountability and transparency, FINRA Board of Governors, FINRA Madoff family, FINRA Madoff relationship, FINRA's board, GAO, Government Accountability Office, House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, House Financial Services Committee, how is Wall Street regulated, issues inside FINRA, Larry Doyle, Mary Schapiro, POGO, POGO letter to FINRA, project on Government Oversight, regulation of Wall Street, Richard Ketchum, SEC, Senate Committee on Banking Housing and Urban Affairs, Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, Sense on Cents, Spencer Bachus, Wall Street collapse, what is Finra, who is Danielle Brian, who is on FINRA's board, who is POGO ?, who regulates Wall Street, will FINRA oversee hedge funds and investment advisers
Posted in FINRA, General | 7 Comments »
Posted by Larry Doyle on October 30th, 2010 9:56 AM |

The Wall Street-Washington incest MUST end.
This coming Tuesday, America has a chance to ring that bell, expose that incest, cleanse the system, and deliver the message loud and clear. The peal of that bell must emanate from the 4th District in the state of Massachusetts.
You do not need to read Sense on Cents to appreciate that many politicians from both sides of the aisle have badly forsaken our nation’s future with misguided and ill-advised policies over the last few decades. Many of these politicians now look to save their skins– if not their souls– by professing a newly found religion with an anti-Wall Street mantel. America, and the residents of the 4th District in Massachusetts, should not be so easily hoodwinked. These politicians, especially Barney Frank, must be held accountable and sent home.
I implore the voters of the 4th District to think long and hard and appreciate that their longstanding elected representative Barney Frank embraced the people and the policies which continue to crush our nation. Which people? What policies? Those which were centered in America’s great financial sinkhole known as Fannie Mae then led by its former CEO Franklin Raines. During my own career on Wall Street, I witnessed Barney’s bear hug of Fannie and Franklin from up close. Do not forget Barney’s desire to ‘roll the dice’ with sub-prime mortgage financing.
Many media outlets will look the other way in holding Barney accountable; I have no interest in that. (more…)
Tags: 4th District in Massachusetts, Barney Frank campaign, Barney Frank election, barney Frank reelection bid, Barney frank relationship with Fannie Mae, barney frank roll the dice, Barney frank Sean Bielat race, Barney Frank vs Sean Bielat, can Sean Bielat beat Barney Frank, Chris Dodd, Dodd-Frank, Dodd-Frank Financial reform Act, enron on steroids, fannie mae franklin raines barney frank relationship, FINRA POGO, holding Barney frank accountable, House Financial Services Committee, I want to roll the dice Barney Frank, POGO letter on FINRA, political and financial reform, private profit social loss, Retire Barney, roll the dice, Sean Bielat campaign, will barney Frank win reelection n
Posted in General | 13 Comments »
Posted by Larry Doyle on June 22nd, 2010 1:28 PM |
FINRA can talk about transparency and integrity all it wants. We all know talk is cheap. FINRA’s board and executives need to show America how they truly define and embrace transparency and integrity. How so?
FINRA is scheduled to hold its first Annual Meeting in almost three years on August 2nd. In anticipation of that meeting, FINRA member firm Amerivet Securities has submitted seven proposals to be included in the FINRA proxy materials. The FINRA board and executives owe their member firms, and ultimately America, the opportunity to address and then receive complete answers on each of these proposals. (more…)
Tags: Amerivet Securities complaint vs FINRA, attorneys for Amerivet, Fed chair Bernanke, FINRA 2009 Year in Review, FINRA annual meeting, Finra Annual report, FINRA Board of Governors, Finra compensation, Finra conflict of interests, FINRA executives, FINRA investment policies, FINRA Kanjorski Dodd Schumer Issa Frank Obama, FINRA proxy materials, FINRA relationship with Bernie Madoff, FINRA say on pay, FINRA transparency and integrity, FINRA website, Harry Markopolos says FINRA in bed with the industry, House Financial Services Committee, Jonathan Cuneo Richard Greenfield, Lt. Col. Elton Johnson, merger forming FINRA, Obama, President Obama, Rick Ketchum, SEC Chair Schapiro, Treasury Secretary Geithner
Posted in FINRA, General | 10 Comments »
Posted by Larry Doyle on December 31st, 2009 11:34 AM |
Blank checks are the antithesis of good public policy.
America can not allow the passage of time to lessen the outrage over the Obama administration’s Christmas Eve bonus to the financial sinkholes known as Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. Platitudes and posturing aside, the American taxpayer is being set up as never before.
A blank check may serve to cover a host of past financial and legislative failures promoted by the likes of Barney Frank, Chris Dodd, John Kerry et al, but who is monitoring and verifying the legitimate and proper use of these funds? Are we to blindly trust Treasury Secretary Geithner, White House economic adviser Larry Summers, and their respective staffs in this process? Are you kidding me? America needs to voice its outrage long and hard. In that spirit, I called yesterday to Audit Freddie and Fannie.
In the same vein, I am heartened by initiatives launched yesterday by Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-OH), and Reps. Scott Garrett (R-NJ) and Spencer Bachus (R-AL) to pursue an investigation of this blank check.
The Wall Street Journal reports, Lawmakers Want Probe Into Treasury Aid for Fannie, Freddie: >>> (more…)
Tags: audit Freddie and fannie, Barney Frank, Chris Dodd, Dennis Kucinich, Freddie and fannie's blank check, House Financial Services Committee, House Oversight and Government Reform panel, I want to roll the dice, John Kerry, Larry Summers, Scott Garrett, Spencer Bachus, sub-prime lending comment by Barney Frank, Tim Geithner, toxic assets on Wall Street, transferring losses from Wall Street to taxpayers, trust but verify
Posted in Barney Frank, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Larry Summers, Tim Geithner | 9 Comments »
Posted by Larry Doyle on November 5th, 2009 1:03 PM |
How did Wall Street lead the United States economy into the ditch?
The pure ‘originate to distribute’ model employed on Wall Street spelled the death knell for Wall Street and our economy.
I addressed how firms won under that originate to distribute model in a commentary from November 12, 2008, “The Wall Street Model Is Broken….and Won’t Soon Be Fixed!!”:
At the turn of the century, the Wall Street model was a pure “originate to distribute” model with little to no residual risk on behalf of the originators or underwriters. When there is no residual risk, those who “WIN” are the players that can purely process the most volume. Well, how does one get volume? Lower the credit standards, put fewer restrictions on borrowers, little to no covenants (NINA Loans: no income, no asset check). WOW!!! What were we thinking?? Well, Wall St. felt, “let’s worry about it tomorrow or maybe not at all because we are making too much money today.”
Tomorrow has arrived and Wall Street must now deal with the concept of retaining risk in their loan originations. The topic of ‘risk retention’ has been bandied about over the course of the year, but it was ratcheted up dramatically in a recent meeting of the House Financial Services Committee and U.S. Treasury on October 27th.
What came out of that meeting has potentially dramatic implications for the entire spectrum of loan origination, securitization, and distribution businesses on Wall Street and their subsequent impact on Main Street. Let’s navigate. (more…)
Tags: 12th Street Capital risk Retention in Securitization, asset securitization, banking regulators, House Financial Services Committee, impact of risk retention, Obama's Financial Reform Plan, originate to distribute model, originating and underwriting on Wall Street, originating underwriting securitizing, originations, risk retention, SEC, securitizations, U.S. Treasury Department, Wall Street, Wall Street business model
Posted in 12th Street Capital, General, Risk, Wall Street | No Comments »
Trust Tim Geithner, Larry Summers, Barney Frank?
Posted by Larry Doyle on December 31st, 2009 11:34 AM |
Blank checks are the antithesis of good public policy.
America can not allow the passage of time to lessen the outrage over the Obama administration’s Christmas Eve bonus to the financial sinkholes known as Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. Platitudes and posturing aside, the American taxpayer is being set up as never before.
A blank check may serve to cover a host of past financial and legislative failures promoted by the likes of Barney Frank, Chris Dodd, John Kerry et al, but who is monitoring and verifying the legitimate and proper use of these funds? Are we to blindly trust Treasury Secretary Geithner, White House economic adviser Larry Summers, and their respective staffs in this process? Are you kidding me? America needs to voice its outrage long and hard. In that spirit, I called yesterday to Audit Freddie and Fannie.
In the same vein, I am heartened by initiatives launched yesterday by Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-OH), and Reps. Scott Garrett (R-NJ) and Spencer Bachus (R-AL) to pursue an investigation of this blank check.
The Wall Street Journal reports, Lawmakers Want Probe Into Treasury Aid for Fannie, Freddie: >>> (more…)
Tags: audit Freddie and fannie, Barney Frank, Chris Dodd, Dennis Kucinich, Freddie and fannie's blank check, House Financial Services Committee, House Oversight and Government Reform panel, I want to roll the dice, John Kerry, Larry Summers, Scott Garrett, Spencer Bachus, sub-prime lending comment by Barney Frank, Tim Geithner, toxic assets on Wall Street, transferring losses from Wall Street to taxpayers, trust but verify
Posted in Barney Frank, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Larry Summers, Tim Geithner | 9 Comments »