Business & Economy

On The Money — Fed puts strict limits on trades by top officials

The Hill illustration/Madeline Monroe/AP photos

Happy Friday and welcome to On The Money, your nightly guide to everything affecting your bills, bank account and bottom line. Subscribe here: digital-release.thehill.com/newsletter-signup. 

Today’s Big Deal: The Federal Reserve just cracked down on a series of trading scandals and lawmakers are debating new trading rules for Congress. We’ll also look at Biden steering the U.S. away from a shutdown and the potential financial implications of a Russia sanction bill.  

But first, there’s a new app meant to help folks who depend on insulin pumps. 

For The Hill, we’re Sylvan Lane, Aris Folley and Karl Evers-Hillstrom.  Reach us at slane@digital-release.thehill.com or @SylvanLane, afolley@digital-release.thehill.com or @ArisFolley and kevers@digital-release.thehill.com or @KarlMEvers. 

Let’s get to it.

 

Fed releases strict trading rules for top officials  

The Federal Reserve on Friday finalized strict new investment rules for top policymakers months after three top bank officials resigned under fire over financial trades.  

The Fed first outlined its new investment rules in October after financial records revealed heavy trading conducted by three of the top officials responsible for setting interest rates and overseeing the bank’s emergency lending programs during the pandemic. 

Sylvan has more here. 

FAMILY FINANCES

Congressional stock trading ban must include spouses, lawmakers say 

Any bill to prevent lawmakers from trading stocks must apply to their immediate family members, Reps. Abigail Spanberger (D-Va.) and Chip Roy (R-Texas), the authors of a stock trading ban proposal, said Friday. 

Several stock trading proposals circulating through Congress omit lawmakers’ spouses and dependent children, and Democratic leaders have warmed to the idea of a bill that extends a stock trading ban to senior congressional staffers but not spouses.  

“It would defy logic to say you’re not going to include your immediate family, because I think everybody would see that for what it is,” Roy said during an event hosted by Issue One, the National Taxpayers Union and the Project on Government Oversight. 

Read more from Karl here. 

SHUTDOWN AVERTED

Biden signs bill to extend funding, avoid government shutdown 

President Biden on Friday signed a bill to keep the government funded into March ahead of a midnight deadline that would have led to a shutdown. 

The bill funds the government through March 11 at current levels, giving lawmakers another three weeks to negotiate a larger spending deal to keep the government funded through the rest of the fiscal year that ends in September.

The House passed the stopgap measure earlier this week, and the Senate followed by approving the bill on Thursday with a 65-27 vote. 

The Hill’s Brett Samuels has more here. 

 

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NOT SO SWIFT

White House: Kicking Russia out of SWIFT unlikely to be in initial sanctions package 

The White House said on Friday that removing Russia from the SWIFT international banking system, if it decides to invade Ukraine, is not part of the first sanctions package the Biden administration would impose. 

“All options remain on the table. But it’s probably not going to be the case that you’ll see SWIFT in the initial roll out package,” Daleep Singh, a deputy national security adviser, told reporters. 

Singh defended the decision to not kick Russia out of SWIFT when asked about previous comments that the administration would impose the maximum sanctions at the get go.

“I can assure you the measures that we have prepared, the severity of those measures, and the institutions that we would impose them upon, and the immediacy of those sanctions are among the most severe financial sanctions that have ever been contemplated,” he said. 

Read more here from The Hill’s Alex Gangitano. 

Good to Know 

Almost 4 million American children fell into poverty last month after the expanded child tax credit (CTC) expired, according to a study released Thursday by the Center on Poverty and Social Policy at Columbia University. 

The lapse of monthly CTC payments in January pushed 3.7 million children below the poverty line, according to federal data analyzed by the Columbia researchers. The child poverty rate rose from 12.1 percent in December to 17 percent in January — an increase of 41 percent. 

Here’s what else have our eye on: 

 

That’s it for today. Thanks for reading and check out The Hill’s Finance page for the latest news and coverage. We’ll see you Monday.