With passage of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act in 2010, President Barack Obama went a long way toward fulfilling his pledge to regulate oil trading and "increase transparency" in the market.
At a sprawling 848 pages, the law is hardly the "simple" one Obama had promised, and even the relevant sections -- which are a small fraction of the whole law -- aren't particularly comprehensible to the layman, either.
But experts told PolitiFact that portions of Title VII of Dodd-Frank -- the section dealing broadly with derivatives and a subset of derivatives called swaps -- address the issues Obama raised in the promise.
Traders of derivatives, as we have noted, enter into agreements to exchange cash or assets over a period of time based on the value of the underlying asset. Until Dodd-Frank, derivatives were traded outside regulated markets and are blamed by some for the Wall Street collapse of 2008.
Title VII of Dodd-Frank empowers the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, a federal agency, to regulate and expand transparency for such transactions. For instance, section 727 specifically requires all swaps to be reported to newly created entities called "swap data repositories." The law defines "swaps" broadly, in a way that would seem to encompass oil trading, experts said.
The law firm Morrison & Foerster LLP called Title VII a "comprehensive and far-reaching regulatory regime on derivatives."
However, the law also grants discretion to the CFTC to draw up specific regulations, and some of these have run into interference. In October 2012, a federal court threw out a key CFTC regulation on "position limits" -- caps on how many derivatives contracts a trader can hold. The rule would cover 28 commodities, including oil and natural gas. The commission is appealing the ruling.
We also need to mention a major caveat: Not everyone agrees that the policy changes undertaken by Dodd-Frank will actually fix the problems Obama claimed to be addressing. In fact, some experts see Obama's pledge as more of an attempt to to satisfy populist urges than to actually improve how financial markets work.
"There is no credible evidence that 'loopholes" in Commodity Futures Trading Commission regulations have ever contributed to the skyrocketing price of oil in world markets," said Lutz Kilian, a University of Michigan economist." The actual cause of the surge in oil prices has been strong global demand from emerging economies."
Ultimately, the Dodd-Frank law did address the issues Obama raised in his promise, but a key implementing regulation is stalled in court, and it's remains unclear how directly the new regulations will address the broader issue of oil prices. On balance, we rate this a Compromise.