New bank regulation proposals are 'ham-fisted': Meredith Whitney

The CEOs of the United States' largest banks including JPMorgan Chase (JPM), Citigroup (C), Wells Fargo (WFC), and Goldman Sachs (GS) are testifying before the Senate Banking Committee on Wednesday. The CEOs are arguing that new proposed banking regulations would hurt the US economy. Banking analyst Meredith Whitney of Meredith Whitney Advisory Group, tells Yahoo Finance's Jennifer Schonberger that the CEOs have "made their case very clear" that the proposed regulations are "ham-fisted."

Whitney says the proposals will "hurt the consumer," adding that she is surprised how politicized the hearing has been given the impact these proposals could have lawmakers' constituents.

When it comes to housing, Whitney expects the sector will continue to feel pain next year, because "what now is a demand-supply imbalance is going to invert and it will be a supply-demand imbalance."

Whitney spoke more about her outlook for housing at Yahoo Finance Invest earlier this year, a conversation you can watch here.

For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live.

Video Transcript

JENNIFER SCHONBERGER: The CEOs of the nation's largest banks are testifying right behind me, making their case against the proposed capital requirements, saying it would hurt lending, it would hurt the economy, and it would increase inflation. Here for reaction, I would like to bring in Meredith Whitney, CEO of Meredith Whitney Advisory Group. You were just down there in the hearing and listening, your reaction.

MEREDITH WHITNEY: It's a very expensive meeting, right? And it's probably a misallocation of time for these guys, but they show up on the Hill every year to do this event. And look, they've made their case very clear. This has taken 10 years-- 10 years in the making and it's absolutely ham fisted.

I'll quote Jamie Dimon who said that planning-- sorry, proposing and then studying later is a very dangerous strategy. And what they mean by that is they're asking these questions about what Basel III Endgame increase capital will do to lending, specifically lending to small businesses and low-income consumers. And it's bad, right, because as you drive more banking out of the regulated banking system and into the non-regulated banking system that isn't required to invest in community-- in the community Reinvestment Act, you have more of that going to predatory lenders. And lending will just become that much more expensive.

And I think that's what you've seen over the last 10 years, 12 years. Whereas, these guys used to dominate the mortgage industry and now 70% of the mortgage industry is done outside of the banking system. So that's just one example.