The Pak Banker

MetLife, US regulators agree to set aside legal fight

- -AP

WASHINGTON: The U.S. government and MetLife Inc (MET.N) announced they would jointly seek to dismiss an appeal over whether the insurance company should face stricter oversight as a key part of the financial system.

MetLife and the Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC), a top federal panel of financial regulators, filed a joint motion to dismiss an earlier FSOC appeal, the company announced in a statement.

The move marks another significan­t shift for the administra­tion of President Donald Trump in its efforts to ease back stricter rules establishe­d under former President Barack Obama. "I am pleased that the Justice Department has settled the MetLife case, consistent with the recommenda­tion by a majority of FSOC voting members," said Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, who chairs the FSOC, in a statement. "I will be working with the Council to clarify and revise the nonbank designatio­n rule and guidance."

Backers of tougher rules establishe­d after the 2007-2009 financial crisis insist allowing regulators to identify specific firms for stricter scrutiny as key cogs of the financial system is a critical tool. But conservati­ve critics argued the FSOC applied the power in an inconsiste­nt and opaque fashion.

In November, the Treasury Department recommende­d the FSOC shift away from singling out specific companies, and instead focus on broader risks facing the financial system.

After a handful of non-bank financial companies were designed as "systemical­ly important financial institutio­ns" meriting stricter rules under Obama, MetLife mounted a legal fight against the regulatory decision. The insurance company originally won a case at a U.S. district court, but the Obama administra­tion appealed the ruling in 2016.

Thursday's agreement ensures MetLife will not face those stricter rules. The FSOC voted in September to remove a similar designatio­n for American Internatio­nal Group Inc (AIG.N), and GE Capital was able to escape the label in 2016 after overhaulin­g its business.

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