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                                                                                            Updated January 4, 2021

Introduction to Financial Services: The Regulatory Framework


This In Focus provides a brief introduction to the federal
agencies that regulate U.S. financial markets. For more
detail, see CRS Report R44918, Who Regulates Whom?  An
Overview of the U.S. Financial Regulatory Framework, by
Marc  Labonte.
The   Financial S     stem
Financial firms match the available funds of savers and
investors with borrowers and others seeking to raise funds
in exchange for future payouts. The products, instruments,
and markets used to facilitate this matching are myriad, and
they are overseen by a complex system of regulators. The
financial system is often divided into banking, insurance,
and securities markets. Securities are financial contracts
that pledge to make payments from the issuer to the holder
and generally are traded on markets. Contracts take the
form of debt (a borrower and creditor relationship) and
equity (an ownership relationship).
Financial activity is inherently risky, but without risk-
taking, businesses could not expand or innovate and
households would be unable to purchase durable goods,
education, and housing that could not be financed out of
current income. Financial regulation aims to balance the
benefits of finance with the risks that it poses.
The   Financial Regulatory Framework
Table 1 lists the federal financial regulators and whom they
regulate. It categorizes those regulators as follows:

    *   Depository  regulators-regulate institutions
        (commercial  banks, thrifts (savings associations),
        and credit unions) that accept customer deposits;

    *   Securities markets regulators-regulate
        securities products, markets, and market
        participants. For regulatory purposes, securities
        markets can be divided into derivatives (whose
        value is based on an underlying commodity,
        financial indicator, or financial instrument) and
        other types of securities;

    *   Government-sponsored enterprise (GSE)
        regulators-Congress   created GSEs as privately
        owned  institutions with limited missions and
        charters to support the mortgage and agricultural
        credit markets. It also created dedicated regulators
        exclusively to oversee the GSEs, some of which
        were consolidated by the Housing and Economic
        Recovery  Act of 2008 (P.L. 110-289).

    *   Consumer   protection regulator-the  Dodd-
        Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
        Protection Act in 2010 (Dodd-Frank Act; P.L.
        111-203)  consolidated and expanded jurisdiction


        over various consumer protection laws for certain
        financial products in a newly created agency, the
        Consumer   Financial Protection Bureau.

These regulators regulate financial institutions, markets,
and products using licensing, registration, rulemaking,
supervisory, enforcement, and resolution powers. Financial
regulation aims to achieve diverse goals, which vary from
regulator to regulator: market efficiency and integrity,
consumer  and investor protections, capital formation or
access to credit, taxpayer protection, illicit activity
prevention, and financial stability. Different types of
regulation-prudential (safety and soundness), disclosure,
standard setting, competition, and price and rate
regulations-are used to achieve these goals.
Other entities that play a role in financial regulation are
self-regulatory organizations, interagency bodies, state
regulators, and international regulatory fora. Federal
regulators generally play a secondary role in insurance
markets, where state regulation predominates.
Regulatory Fragmentation
The financial regulatory system is fragmented, with
multiple overlapping regulators and a dual state-federal
regulatory system. The system evolved piecemeal, as
Congress responded to emerging issues, punctuated by
major changes in response to historical financial crises. The
2007-2009  financial crisis also led to changes to the
regulatory system. To address the fragmented nature of the
system, the Dodd-Frank Act created the Financial Stability
Oversight Council (FSOC), a council of regulators and
experts chaired by the Treasury Secretary.
In practice, regulatory jurisdiction over institutions is
typically based on charter type, not function. This means
that a similar activity being conducted by two different
types of firms can be regulated differently by different
regulators. Financial firms may be subject to more than one
regulator because they may engage in multiple financial
activities. For example, a firm may be overseen by an
institution regulator and by an activity regulator when it
engages in a regulated activity and by a market regulator
when  it participates in a regulated market.
Drawbacks  to the fragmented regulatory system are the
potential for jurisdictional gaps, which may cause
regulatory myopia, and overlaps, which may cause
redundant regulation. These gaps and overlaps could be
exploited by financial firms to elude regulation or benefit
from a race to the bottom in regulatory standards between
competing regulators. Advantages to the fragmented system
include more specialized and knowledgeable regulators. In
addition, overlapping regulators could reduce the likelihood
of blind spots or group think in regulation.


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