U.S. Fed is reviewing capital rules, plans 2023 climate tests -new regulation chief

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WASHINGTON, Sept 7 (Reuters) – The U.S. Federal Reserve is conducting a “holistic” review of bank capital requirements, plans to perform an analysis of lenders’ climate change financial risks next year, and might impose tougher rules on large regional lenders, its new regulatory chief said on Wednesday.

In his first speech since joining the Fed in July as Vice Chair of Supervision, Michael Barr outlined an ambitious agenda that could spell a shake-up for big lenders which enjoyed a lighter touch, including easing of some capital rules, under the central bank’s previous Republican leadership.

Barr said the capital framework was due for a review to ensure the rules were keeping up with emerging new risks.

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“Success in financial regulation and supervision does not mean standing still because finance does not stand still,” Barr told an audience at Washington think tank the Brookings Institution.

“We are looking holistically at our capital tools to understand how they are supporting the resilience of the financial system, individually and in combination,” adding the review could inform adjustments to annual bank “stress tests,” the supplementary leverage ratio and the countercyclical capital buffer, three key capital levers.

Barr also said the central bank planned to launch a pilot “scenario analysis” next year to assess climate-related financial risks facing lenders, a hotly awaited exercise that over the long-term could change who banks do business with. Barr said next year’s test would not, however, dictate capital or who banks can lend to.

The Fed is also exploring how easily large regional lenders, which have grown dramatically following a series of mergers and acquisitions in recent years, could be wound down in the event of a crisis and potential policy changes for such lenders, said Barr.

Barr’s role gives him extensive powers to oversee the country’s largest lenders, and the industry and analysts had been waiting anxiously for insight into how he plans to use them.

Nominated by Democratic President Joe Biden, Barr had been widely expected to take a much more aggressive stance on Wall Street than his Republican predecessor Randal Quarles.

As a former senior Treasury Department official, Barr helped craft the 2010 Dodd-Frank law that created the Fed Supervision role and imposed a host of new rules on lenders in the wake of the 2007-09 financial crisis.

Still, Barr sought to reassure the industry that the Fed would work to minimize unintended consequences and avoid excess compliance costs.

“Barr came across as pragmatic and someone the banks can work with,” wrote Jaret Seiberg of Cowen Washington Research Group. “That doesn’t mean capital and M&A regimes won’t become tougher, but it does suggest less of a risk for unintended consequences.”

Bank investors took the speech in their stride. The KBW Regional Bank index (.KRX) continued to gain ground after the news. It last traded up 1.7%.

“Anytime you’re talking about more regulation it’s a net negative for profits. But this is all still very light on details,” said Jason Ware, chief investment officer for Albion Financial Group, which owns shares of JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley.

CRYPTO RISKS

With Barr in place, all the major financial regulatory agencies are now filled with Biden picks, meaning other joint reform efforts that involve the Fed can also be accelerated.

“Having Barr allows the Biden bank regulatory agenda to kick into high gear,” said Todd Phillips, director of financial regulation at the Center for American Progress, a liberal think tank.

Barr said his to-do list also includes stepping up scrutiny of banks’ cryptocurrency businesses, based on the principle that the same types of risk are subject to the same regulation.

“Banks engaged in crypto-related activities need to have appropriate measures in place to manage novel risks associated with those activities and to ensure compliance with all relevant laws,” he said.

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Reporting by Pete Schroeder; Additional reporting by Megan Davies and Sinead Carew; Editing by Michelle Price, Chizu Nomiyama, Andrea Ricci and Aurora Ellis

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

source: reuters.com