Home
Đăng nhập
Đăng ký
Nội dung học
Loading...
What is Dodd-Frank? | CNBC Explains - Video học tiếng Anh
Luyện nghe
Luyện nghe
/
Video
/
CNBC International
/
What is Dodd-Frank? | CNBC Explains
What is Dodd-Frank? | CNBC Explains
Chọn chế độ học:
Xem phụ đề
Chọn từ
Viết lại từ
Highlight:
3000 Oxford Words
4000 IELTS Words
5000 Oxford Words
3000 Common Words
1000 TOEIC Words
5000 TOEFL Words
Phụ đề (55)
0:03
It’s 2009… and people are furious.
0:07
The world is trying to dig itself out of the worst global recession since World War 2.
0:12
Millions have lost their jobs. Banks are folding like a pack of cards. And there’s a new
0:17
U.S. President in town trying to figure out what to do about it all.
0:21
You see, all this pain can be traced back to banks and more specifically, the risky
0:25
behaviors that triggered the subprime mortgage and global financial crisis.
0:30
That’s where the Dodd Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act - more
0:35
commonly known as Dodd Frank – comes in.
0:38
The law was first proposed by the Obama administration in June 2009 – and after a series of revisions
0:44
from Senator Chris Dodd and Representative Barney Frank (yes, that’s where the name
0:49
comes from) – President Obama signed it into law in 2010 with almost no Republican
0:55
support.
0:56
So what’s inside Dodd Frank – and how is it supposed to prevent something like the
0:59
financial crisis from happening again?
1:02
Well, it’s a long and complex piece of legislation – we’re talking hundreds of pages long
1:07
- that brought about the most significant changes to financial regulation in the U.S.
1:12
since the reform that followed the Great Depression.
1:15
So how is Dodd-Frank supposed to protect you and me? We’ve brought in a few experts to
1:20
explain.
1:25
Dodd-Frank created a new council made up of bigwigs from the Treasury Secretary, Fed,
1:28
SEC and more… Its goal is to keep banks, hedge funds and companies from becoming “too
1:35
big to fail.” It does that by making firms keep more money on hand and they even have
1:40
the power to break up companies that are a ‘grave threat’ to financial stability.
1:48
Agencies like Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s evaluate how risky an individual, company
1:53
or even government is to lend to. So in theory, a bad rating warns investors that these debtors
1:59
may not pay back their loan. But during the financial crisis we learned a lot of risky
2:03
debt was being given good ratings. Now these agencies are monitored- and unreliable ratings
2:09
could mean they lose their standing.
2:12
The Fed’s emergency loans during the financial crisis raised a lot of eyebrows, which is
2:20
why Dodd-Frank gave the government new power to audit these loans. Now the government has
2:24
authority to audit the Fed again in the future, and all emergency loans must be approved by
2:30
the Treasury.
2:32
There are many types of derivatives - ones that help keep the economy stable and ones
2:38
that did the complete opposite. One of the more controversial of these is the credit
2:43
default swap.
2:44
Here’s how it works. Say you’re giving a company a big loan. It’s a great deal
2:49
if you get all that money back, but what happens if the company goes bankrupt? That’s where
2:54
a credit default swap comes in. It’s your insurance.
2:57
But before Dodd-Frank, swaps weren’t regulated. And the sellers of the credit default swaps
3:02
didn’t actually have enough money to pay out if the worst happened.
3:05
Now thanks to Dodd-Frank, these insurance-type products are more heavily supervised.
3:12
When you deposit your money into a bank, you expect for it to be kept safe and sound. But
3:18
before Dodd-Frank, banks could use your money to trade for their own personal gain. Now,
3:27
they have to get out of that business – unless you specifically ask them to trade on your
3:32
behalf.
3:35
So do all these new rules mean we’ll never see something like the financial crisis again?
3:40
The jury’s still out on that one.
3:41
Supporters of the Bill say it has improved regulation and has made the US financial systems
3:46
more stable. But critics see Dodd Frank as the Obamacare for the economy and argue it
3:51
leaves American’s with fewer choices, higher costs and less freedom.
3:56
So what does the future hold for an act which regulators, even after five years, have only
4:00
competed two-thirds of?
4:03
Dodd-Frank was never popular with Republicans, so it’s likely with a Republican president
4:07
and Congress… Some if not all could be pulled… leaving its future
4:13
an uncertain one.