Don’t miss to read out the impact of US elections 2020 on financial regulations

Acuity Knowledge Partners
5 min readApr 7, 2021

Published on December 23, 2020 by Bijaya Das and Nishanth Neeli

Regulations were made more stringent after the global financial crisis in efforts to stabilise the financial system. Under the Trump administration, however, there was a constant push to roll back a number of rules and regulations in place during the Obama administration. President Trump revoked many regulations, some of which are outlined below i:

  • Dodd-Frank Act: The Trump administration’s attempt to relax the rules around the Dodd-Frank Act weakened banking regulations. The Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer Protection Act of 2018 removed mandatory oversight measures such as quarterly reporting that were in place to ensure banks engage in transparent and safe lending, investing and leverage activities. This put investors’ assets at risk. This bill rolled back regulations for banks with less than USD250bn in assets under management and other regulations for banks with less than USD10bn in assets.
  • Privatisation of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac: For many years, the profits of these two giant government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) were transferred to the federal government. President Trump was working to release them from government conservatorship and build private capital for them, and is looking to execute this change before his exit from the White House.
  • Fiduciary rule rollback: The rule of the Department of Labor that forced financial advisers and brokers handling retirement and 401(k) accounts to act as “fiduciaries” was revoked. The SEC replaced this rule with Regulation Best Interest (Reg BI).
  • Paris Agreement: Known for his “America first” policy, President Trump withdrew the US’s participation in the Paris Agreement citing that its terms are not favourable to US tax payers, corporations or economy.

Under the Biden administration, we expect a slightly tougher regulatory environment, to combat economic inequality and social injustice. While President Trump can be regarded as a populist whose intention was to deregulate policies to support and favour business, President-elect Biden is an institutionalist and a centrist focused on re-regulating reforms and policies.

Financial regulatory priorities under the Biden administration and their impact

Financial regulationScopeLikely impact under the Biden administration

Dodd-Frank reforms are here to stay

Dodd-Frank was legislation passed after the global financial crisis

Consumer protection will be a top priority

It tightened regulations on banks and financial institutions to protect consumers and reduce systemic risk

  • Rewrite certain rules around payday lending to underwrite loans only to consumers who can repay them
  • Focus on regulations impacting minority consumers, such as fair housing, fair lending and overdraft fees ii
  • Janet Yellen iiiis picked as Treasury Secretary; she believes tighter regulations help the financial system to be better prepared for an economic downturn

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, created by the Dodd-Frank financial reform law, protects consumers from financial abuse

Changes expected from SEC-related regulations iv

ESG-related policies

  • Currently, there is a lack of consistency, standardisation and regulatory framework around ESG policies, frustrating for investors
  • The SEC, under the Biden administration, is likely to implement mandatory ESG disclosure standards and more aggressively enforce environmental regulations for all companies v
  • It will look at ESG disclosures such as climate and risk disclosures, corporate governance, worker pay, worker treatment, diversity and healthcare policies
  • Biden has chosen John Kerry, who had signed the Paris Climate Agreement as Special Presidential Envoy for Climate Change
  • Biden’s agenda is to rejoin the agreement and build global climate leadership with Kerry

Likely push towards public markets

  • The SEC has been aggressive in expanding the pool of private markets, making it easier to raise money
  • The Democrats will try to pull companies that have remained private for years into the public markets
  • They believe that once a company is big enough, it should be a public company and should not go through endless rounds of fundraising to stay private

Regulation Best Interest (Reg BI)

  • Reg BI enforcement is expected to be tougher under Biden, and the administration may attempt to revisit the rule and its standard of conduct
  • They believe that when workers are saving for retirement, the financial advisors they consult are legally obligated to put their clients’ interests first rather than prioritising their self-interest

Shareholder Proposal Rule

Cryptocurrencies under the purview of the CFTC

  • The financial team under the Biden administration says cryptocurrencies including Bitcoin need regulations to grow and protect investors from market manipulation
  • The view is to consider initial coin offerings as securities and place them under the regulatory purview of the CFTC and SEC vi

Housing finance reform

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac — acted as private companies until 2008, when the government seized control, as they failed during the housing crisis and the subsequent Great Recession

  • Biden is likely to reverse Trump’s plan to privatise them
  • He believes releasing the GSEs from government control will result in higher mortgage rates for home buyers
  • The conservatorship has helped smaller lenders to survive along with large competitors.
  • The MBS market has been very liquid, favouring borrowers
  • However, Biden’s plans may prove difficult to achieve if he is unable to replace Mark Calabria, the Trump-appointed director of the FHFA and the regulator that oversees the GSEs vii

While President-elect Biden has confirmed that his tenure is not a third Obama term, he plans to move the administration to a “rules-based” environment from Trump’s “principles-based” approach. The agenda is to ensure that consumers have a voice and the system is one in which everyone plays and abides by the rules. With tighter regulations, coupled with his vast experience in international affairs, Biden’s tenure may prove promising for US and world economics.

How Acuity Knowledge Partners can help

Acuity Knowledge Partners is a pioneer in investment services offering spanning across the globe. We understand our clients’ products and corresponding regulations associated with them. Our experts with extensive knowledge of global regulations keep a track of the ever changing regulatory framework driven by any key events like the US election and provide assistance to the clients for implementing these changes into the relevant platforms for effective monitoring and due-diligence.

Our investment services include equity research, index analysis, and specialized solutions. We also master in areas like pre-trade and post-trade surveillance, interpreting and coding of client IMA’s and reporting of regulatory restrictions.

Originally published at https://www.acuitykp.com.

About the Authors

Bijaya, Delivery Lead, is an investment compliance specialist with 7 years of experience primarily in post trade monitoring and performance reporting. She has worked for various firms including State Street, Northern Trust and Ernst & Young. At Acuity Knowledge Partners she is working as a supervisor supporting post trade compliance services. She has done her PGDBM in Finance from Jain University, Bangalore.

Nishanth Neeli, Delivery Lead, has over 7 years of experience in investment compliance with a prior working experience at Goldman Sachs. At Acuity Knowledge Partners he is responsible for process supervisory, coding and post trade management support of Investment Compliance Services. Nishanth has done his Masters in Actuarial Science from Bharatidasan University.

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Acuity Knowledge Partners

We write about financial industry trends, the impact of regulatory changes and opinions on industry inflection points. https://bit.ly/3NaJ4Et