News and Press
Donate Now
Host an Event
Online Museum Store
Advanced Search
Home
JFK
Life of John F. Kennedy
Life of Jacqueline B. Kennedy
JFK in History
Historic Speeches
JFK Media Gallery
JFK50 Legacy Gallery
The Kennedy Family
JFK 50th Anniversary Website
Interactive Exhibits
Visit
Plan Your Trip
A Book Signing with Clint Hill
Admission and Museum Information
Virtual Museum Tour
Group Visits
School Visits
Walk-In Visitor Programs
Host an Event
Museum Store
Exhibits
Permanent Exhibits
Special Exhibits
Past Exhibits
Museum Artifacts
Interactive Exhibits
Research
About Our Collections
Search the Archives
Ready Reference
Research Guides
The Ernest Hemingway Collection
Research at the Kennedy Library
Archivally Speaking Blog
Education
Teachers
Students
Profile in Courage Essay Contest
Adults
Families
Events & Awards
Forums
Family Programs - Celebrate!
Profile in Courage Award
New Frontier Award
About Us
About the JFK Library
JFK Library Foundation
News and Press
Join and Support
Jobs, Internships & Volunteers
Social Networking
Contact Us
The Ernest Hemingway Collection
Privacy, Terms of Use, Accessibility
Forums
Family Programs - Celebrate!
Profile in Courage Award
Award Recipients
Committee
Criteria and Eligibility
How to Submit a Nomination
Online Nomination Form
About the Book
Profile in Courage Essay Contest
About the Lantern
New Frontier Award
Email
Print
Twitter
Facebook
Home
>
Events & Awards
>
Profile in Courage Award
>
Award Recipients
>
Brooksley Born (2009)
Brooksley Born
Carl Elliott, Sr. (1990)
Charles Weltner (1991)
Lowell Weicker, Jr. (1992)
James Florio (1993)
Henry Gonzalez (1994)
Michael Synar (1995)
Corkin Cherubini (1996)
Charles Price (1997)
Nickolas Murnion (1998)
Peacemakers of Northern Ireland (1998)
Russell Feingold (1999)
John McCain (1999)
Hilda Solis (2000)
Gerald Ford (2001)
John Lewis (2001)
Kofi Annan (2002)
Dean Koldenhoven (2002)
Public Servants of September 11 (2002)
Roy Barnes (2003)
David Beasley (2003)
Dan Ponder, Jr. (2003)
Paul Muegge (2004)
Sima Samar (2004)
Cindy Watson (2004)
Joseph Darby (2005)
Shirley Franklin (2005)
Bill Ratliff (2005)
Viktor Yushchenko (2005)
Alberto Mora (2006)
John Murtha (2006)
Doris Voitier (2007)
Bill White (2007)
Debra Bowen (2008)
Jennifer Brunner (2008)
William Winter (2008)
Edward M. Kennedy (2009)
Sheila Bair (2009)
Brooksley Born (2009)
Leymah Gbowee and the Women of Liberia (2009)
Karen Bass, David Cogdill, Darrell Steinberg and Michael Villines (2010)
Elizabeth Redenbaugh (2011)
Wael Ghonim and the People of Egypt (2011)
David Baker, Michael Streit, Marsha Ternus (2012)
Robert Ford (2012)
Background
Award Announcement
Acceptance Speech
Remarks by Caroline Kennedy
Acceptance Speech
I would like to thank the John F. Kennedy Library Foundation for this wonderful and unanticipated honor. John F. Kennedy has been one of my heroes for more than 50 years, and to receive an award for courage in his name is truly thrilling and truly humbling.
I would also like to thank a number of colleagues who served with me at the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission. Their assistance and support at the CFTC was invaluable and indeed essential to my efforts.
I would like to recognize my spouse Alex Bennett and our children, whose love and confidence in me have always sustained me.
When I spoke out a decade ago about the dangers posed by the rapidly growing and unregulated over-the-counter derivatives market, I did not do so in expectation of award or praise. On the contrary, I was aware that powerful interests in the financial community were opposed to any examination of that market. Yet I spoke out because I felt a duty to let the public, the Congress and the other financial regulators know that that market endangered our financial stability and to make every effort I could to address that problem.
My voice was not popular. The financial markets had been expanding, innovation was thriving, and the country was prosperous. The financial services industry argued that markets had proven themselves to be self-regulating and that the role of government in market oversight and regulation should be reduced or eliminated.
All of us have now paid a large price for that fallacious argument. We are in the midst of the most significant financial crisis since the Great Depression, and regulatory gaps including the failure to regulate over-the-counter derivatives have played an important role in the crisis.
It is now critically important to identify and eliminate these regulatory gaps and to strengthen our financial regulatory structure. Without significant regulatory reform, our financial system will be exposed to continuing dangers and repeated crises.
No federal or state regulator has market oversight responsibilities or regulatory powers governing the over-the-counter derivatives market or indeed has even sufficient information to understand the market’s operations. The market is totally opaque and is now popularly referred to as “the dark market.” It is enormous -- the reported size of the market as of last June exceeded $680 trillion dollars of notional value, more than ten times the amount of the gross national product of all the countries in the world.
While over-the-counter derivatives have been justified as vehicles to manage financial risk, they have in practice spread and multiplied risk throughout the economy and caused great financial harm. They include the credit default swaps disastrously sold by AIG and many of the toxic assets held by our biggest banks. Warren Buffett has dubbed them “financial weapons of mass destruction.”
We now have a unique opportunity -- a narrow window of time -- to fashion and implement a comprehensive regulatory scheme for these instruments. Existing U.S. laws governing the futures and options markets provide a model for regulating the closely related instruments traded in the over-the-counter derivatives market. The new regulatory scheme should provide that the instruments must be traded on regulated derivatives exchanges and cleared by regulated derivatives clearing houses to the extent feasible. This would allow government oversight and enforcement efforts, insure price discovery, openness and transparency, reduce leverage and speculation, and limit counterparty risk. If any residual over-the-counter market is to be permitted, it must also be subject to robust federal regulation.
These measures would go far toward bringing this enormous and dangerous market under control. They must be adopted and implemented if we hope to avoid future financial crises caused by this market. Special interests in the financial services industry are beginning to advocate a return to business as usual and to argue against any need for serious reform. We have to muster the political will to overcome these special interests. If we fail now to take the remedial steps needed to close the regulatory gap, we will be haunted by our failure for years to come.
Thank you.
Remarks of Brooksley Born on accepting the 2009 Profile in Courage Award, May 18, 2009.
As Prepared for Delivery