Biden receives his weekly economic brief in the morning … Personal income and spending at 8:30 a.m. expected to drop 7 percent and 1 percent, respectively … Univ. of Michigan consumer sentiment at 10 a.m. expected to rise to 83.6 from 76.8 as stimulus payments hit FED TO EASE UP ON BANK PAYOUTS — Our Victoria Guida: "The Fed … said it would extend restrictions on dividend payments and stock buybacks by big banks until the middle of the year, at which point those curbs would be lifted for lenders that do well in the central bank's annual stress tests … "The announcement means the central bank will finally move, in the second half of the year, to using its new stress capital buffer framework, which was finalized in 2020. Under that regime, the stress tests are used to set large banks' capital requirements for the following year." WHAT'S UP WITH OCC? — Via American Bankers' Brendan Pederson: "Three new names have emerged in the race to be Biden's comptroller: - Sarah Bloom Raskin, former Fed governor, deputy treasury sec. - Kara Stein, former SEC commissioner - Raphael Bostic of the Atlanta Fed." Full American Banker story is here. INDUSTRY SEEMED TO LIKE THE NEW NAMES — A banking industry official emails MM: "Each of these potential nominees have played leading roles in running large government regulatory agencies, they have impressive resumes and their views are well-known. I imagine they would all receive strong bipartisan support and importantly send a strong signal to the rest of the world about the strength and long-term stability of American financial markets." WHAT THIS TELLS US — Basically that the industry really doesn't want UC Irvine's Mehrsa Baradaran. But MM hears Baradaran is still very much in the mix though it's puzzling the nomination has hung out there this long. INTEREST GROUPS PREPARE FOR TAX REFORM WAR — CNBC's Brian Schwartz: "Advocacy groups from across the political spectrum are preparing for an all-out war over … Biden's coming tax reform proposal, which is expected to include tax increases on wealthier families and corporations as part of his massive infrastructure plan. "It is shaping up to be the 'Super Bowl of tax reform,' according to one person who is planning to join the fight. This person, who declined to be named in order to speak freely, expects a 'protracted battle.'" MM REAL TALK — If Biden has any shot at gutting some of the Trump tax cuts, it will come in a reconciliation package given there won't be 60 votes for it in the Senate. And to get moderate Democrats like Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) it will have to be relatively limited to only the highest earners and only a modest bump to the top corporate rate. Manchin has suggested he is in favor of higher taxes on the wealthy to pay for infrastructure. But it's not going to be the same kind of bonanza for lobbyists that the debate over Trump's TCJA was. In fact it may be a much narrower battle over where the top and corporate rates wind up. CONGRESSIONAL RECKONING COMING FOR TECH — Our Cristiano Lima: "A congressional reckoning is coming for Silicon Valley, lawmakers said … to the CEOs of Facebook, Google and Twitter — who showed every sign of recognizing that Washington's talk of tougher rules for the tech industry might soon get real. "A marathon House hearing delved into the usual litany of criticisms about a host of online ills … But the session also featured dozens of exchanges between lawmakers and Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg, Google's Sundar Pichai and Twitter's Jack Dorsey about how to legislate on issues such as digital civil rights abuses and children's social media addictions." |
No comments:
Post a Comment