UPDATE 2-U.S. officials aim to force financial pay reforms
* Fed to propose new bank pay guidelines in coming months
* Treasury's Geithner: Pay practices helped cause crisis
* Congress could also legislate compensation reform (Adds Dodd, Blankfein; details about reform proposals)
WASHINGTON, May 13 (Reuters) - U.S. officials are looking at ways to force reforms in financial industry pay practices to discourage excessive risk-taking, which is considered to have sown the seeds of the current credit crisis.
The Federal Reserve said on Wednesday it is looking at what regulatory steps could be taken to discourage bank practices that foster a dangerous level of risk-taking and plans to issue proposals in the next few months.
"The Federal Reserve intends to use its supervisory and regulatory authority to promote bank holding companies' conformity with executive and employee compensation practices that do not create incentives for behavior that puts the firm and financial system at risk," a Fed spokeswoman said. "We are working on proposals in this area that may be issued in the next few months."
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner told Reuters Television on Friday the administration is working with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to seek industry-wide compensation reform.
"This crisis was caused in part by the fact that compensation practices just got way divorced from reality," Geithner said. "So it is very important that the financial industry change those compensation practices so they are no longer providing strong incentives for excessive short-term risk taking." Continued...
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