Austin American-Statesman

Fed: Streamline annual stress tests for large banks

- By Martin Crutsinger

The Federal Reserve has proposed streamlini­ng the annual stress tests that it conducts to see if the nation’s largest financial firms can survive a severe recession.

Randal Quarles, selected by President Donald Trump to be the Fed’s vice chairman for financial supervisio­n, said Tuesday the changes were being put forward in an effort to ensure the central bank’s regulatory measures are as “simple and transparen­t” as possible.

The proposal would cut the number of capital-related requiremen­ts large banks must meet from the current 24 to 14. The Fed will consider putting it into effect after a 60-day comment period ends.

The proposal is the first major rules change for big banks that the Fed has considered since Trump took office vowing to eliminate regulation­s seen as burdensome.

The proposed rules change is “a good example of how our work can be done more efficientl­y and effectivel­y, and in a way that bolsters the resiliency of the financial system,” Quarles said in a statement.

The Fed said the proposed change would introduce a “stress capital buffer” which would integrate the results from the annual stress tests with the Fed’s other capital requiremen­ts for banks.

Currently, bank holding companies with more than $50 billion in total assets undergo an annual stress test run by the Fed to determine whether they would be able to survive a severe economic downturn. The stress tests began in 2009, the year after the worst financial crisis in seven decades plunged the country into the most severe economic downturn since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

A Democratic-controlled Congress passed the Dodd-Frank Act in 2010 in an effort to overhaul banking regulation­s and prevent a future financial crisis. Trump campaigned in 2016 on a pledge to roll back the act, which he called a disaster.

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