Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act: Law,
Explanation and Analysis provides comprehensive analysis of this
sweeping new banking and securities legislation. These historic reforms will
transform the way banks, hedge funds, credit rating agencies, broker-dealers,
investment advisers, accountants, public companies and other financial
institutions—and the attorneys who advise these entities—operate. Thus, a
comprehensive understanding of these changes will be vital to all participants
in the U.S. financial system. This definitive publication provides immediate
insight into the impact of the new law.
Written by the CCH editorial staff of banking and securities attorneys, the
1,600-plus page book explains every provision of this complex legislation,
providing over 600 pages of the analysis you need to understand the impact of
this historic legislation. Commentary includes discussion of the relevant
legislative history, including committee reports and floor remarks, detailed
citations to new and amended law sections, and editorial comments and caution
notes. This publication also features the full text of the legislation and
committee reports, tables of effective dates and statutes amended, and a
topical index.
The law includes these elements:
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Establishes a Financial Stability Oversight Council
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Establishes an orderly liquidation authority
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Creates a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
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Creates an Office of Financial Research
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Creates a Federal Insurance Office
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Eliminates the Office of Thrift Supervision
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National minimum underwriting standards for home mortgages
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Stricter oversight of credit rating agencies
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New capital standards for banks based on size and risk
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Requires affiliate structure for derivatives trading operations deemed risky
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Limits proprietary trading at the largest financial firms (the Volcker Rule)
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Regulates derivatives on exchanges or through clearing organizations
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Requires SEC registration of hedge funds and private equity funds
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Imposes retention requirements on securitized loans
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Promotes use of stricter state-level consumer protection laws
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Requires independent compensation committees
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Gives shareholders a non-binding “say-on-pay”
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Investor protection for seniors and underserved investors
Make sure you are prepared for this historic legislation with this
comprehensive and timely publication.