House Advances Financial Modernization for 21st Century
Washington, DC,
October 19, 2000
House Advances Financial Modernization for 21st Century (October 19, 2000)
“The Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000” (H.R. 4541) provides a streamlined regulatory process for the U.S. futures industry, allows U.S. futures exchanges to trade single stock futures instruments, and provides legal certainty for the $90 trillion financial derivatives industry that has become critical to the operation of American finance and industry. [UPDATE: the final form of the bill was passed as H.R. 5660, and incorporated with other legislation as Public Law 106-554] London's futures exchange will take the unprecedented step of trading single stock futures on American companies — without competition — unless federal regulation of U.S. futures exchanges is modernized. "Our action today balances the capital and investment needs of American businesses at the point they intersect with the need to manage economic risk in a global environment," said House Agriculture Committee Chairman Larry Combest (R-Texas), whose committee's jurisdiction over Commodity Exchange Act (CEA) is established from the 150-year-old agricultural futures markets. "This bill modernizes the federal regulatory system to ensure that domestic financial service providers can compete in the global marketplace." "H.R. 4541 is an important piece of legislation and has a number of components that will improve the business environment for the derivatives portion of our nation's financial services industry," said Charlie Stenholm (D-TX), the Committee's Ranking Minority Member. Three main reforms are the centerpiece of H.R. 4541: Legal certainty to the vast, multi-trillion-dollar derivatives markets, but with certainty that only highly-sophisticated, deep-pocketed companies and individuals may participate in these markets.
### |