FinReg Roundup
Hoenig Awarded Truman Medal, Arguments That Might Justify Fair-Access Laws, Why Risk-Weighted Capital Misleads, a Bipartisan Idea to Reform Securities Laws, and More
First, congratulations to Thomas Hoenig, the 2024 recipient of the Truman Medal for Economic Policy. Watch his acceptance speech:
Also, be sure to catch up on the latest work from FinRegRag’s authors:
FinRegRag
Why Risk-Weighted Capital Regulation Misleads by Steph Miller and Thomas Hoenig.
Four Arguments that Might Justify “Fair-Access” Laws: Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3 by Brian Knight.
Briefs Supporting the SEC Climate-Change Disclosure Rules Commit Serious Errors: Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3.
Bipartisan Securities Reform: Merger of the Public and Private Offerings by Andrew Vollmer.
Bringing Back the Corridor Operating System With Positive Interest On Reserves by Steph Miller.
The Effects of Monetary Policy Under the Current Floor Operating System by Steph Miller.
From the Fed’s Corridor to the Floor Operating System... & Back? by Steph Miller.
ChatGPT 4.0 on Simple, Higher Regulatory Capital Requirements by Steph Miller.
FinRegRant
Episode 7: More Basel III Endgame. Thomas Hoenig and Brian Knight react to Vice Chair Michael Barr's speech on the Basel III Endgame proposal.
Episode 8: Andrew Vollmer on SEC Climate Disclosure Rules. Andrew Vollmer and Brian Knight discuss the challenge to the SEC’s climate-change disclosure rules in the Eighth Circuit.