The Borneo Post

Tarullo: Keep strong bank capital rules

-

WASHINGTON: Federal Reserve Governor Daniel Tarullo, the central bank’s point man for banking regulation, called for keeping ‘strong’ capital rules in place but acknowledg­ed the socalled Volcker rule may be too complex.

The remarks from Tarullo, 64, who is due to step down on Wednesday after eight years, come as the Trump administra­tion prepares a major overhaul of financial regulation, including the 2010 DoddFrank financial reforms adopted after the financial crisis in 2008.

Tarullo’s departure also creates a third vacancy at the central bank to be filled by Trump, who has sharply criticised the Fed and begun slashing regulation­s generally.

“As proposals for regulatory change swirl about, it is crucial that the strong capital regime be maintained, especially as it applies to the most systemical­ly important banks,” Tarullo said in prepared remarks released Tuesday for an address at Princeton University.

According to Tarullo, DoddFrank ‘enhanced’ capital requiremen­ts put in place after the crisis, when Washington sought to ensure that major financial institutio­ns were on more solid footing.

“Neither regulators nor legislator­s should agree to changes that would effectivel­y weaken that regime, whether directly or indirectly.

It would be tragic if the lessons of the financial crisis were forgotten so quickly,” he said.

On the other hand, Tarullo acknowledg­ed that there was room

As proposals for regulatory change swirl about, it is crucial that the strong capital regime be maintained, especially as it applies to the most systemical­ly important banks. Daniel Tarullo, Federal Reserve Governor

for modifying Dodd-Frank without risking destabilis­ing the financial system.

The law may unnecessar­ily impose a stricter set regulation­s on smaller banks, he said, by declaring those with US$ 50 billion or more in assets to be “systemical­ly important.” The so- called Volcker rule – a proposal named for former Fed Chair Paul Volcker to prevent banks from engaging risky trading with their own funds – could be simplified to reduce the resources banks need to comply.

“The Volcker rule applies to a much broader group of banks than is necessary to achieve its purpose,” Tarullo said.

But Tarullo dismissed the idea – promoted by Trump – that burdensome regulation­s were preventing banks from lending, citing growing credit and record bank profits in 2016.

“It would seem a substantia­l overreach to claim that the new regulatory system is broadly hamstringi­ng either the banking industry or the economy,” Tarullo said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia