Chicago Sun-Times

Fed caps dividends for big banks until Sept. 30, halts buybacks

- BY KEN SWEET AP Business Writer

NEW YORK — A worst-case scenario for the U.S. economy ravaged by the coronaviru­s pandemic would cause the nation’s 34 largest banks to collective­ly lose roughly $700 billion, the Federal Reserve said Thursday.

To bolster the banks ahead such a potentiall­y damaging recession, the Fed ordered them to suspend buybacks of their own stock and to cap dividend payouts until Sept. 30.

The move comes as the central bank unveiled its latest “stress tests,” which are designed to test the resiliency of the nation’s largest banks. The annual tests change every year, and passing the tests is a requiremen­t for the banks to start buying back shares or paying out dividends.

Typically the Fed’s testing parameters are hypothetic­al, such as an internatio­nal debt crisis or a deep recession. But this year, the Fed based its tests around a very real, and ongoing scenario — the coronaviru­s pandemic. In the most dire of tests, the U.S. unemployme­nt rate — which stood at 13.3% in May — would peak at 19.5%.

The Fed tested the banks using an economic model simulating a quick downturn and quick recovery, often called a “V-shaped” recession, as well as a slower U-shaped recovery. In the V-shaped scenario, the U.S. economy would contract 31.5% on an annualized basis, only to recover through 2020 and 2021.

The Fed’s worst-case scenario, a doubledip recession, would have caused roughly a quarter of all the biggest banks to breach their minimum capital requiremen­ts. This scenario would show the U.S. economy contractin­g by 37.5% on an annualized basis and start to recover through the summer, but a second outbreak of infections would cause the U.S. economy to slip back into recession.

While their losses would be astronomic­al, all the banks survive under the Fed’s tests.

The Fed said it was taking actions to “ensure large banks remain resilient” in the face of the pandemic, including stopping the banks from buying back their own shares at least until Sept. 30. Some banks were already doing this, but those voluntary limits would come to an end in the next two weeks.

The Fed is also barring banks from increasing their dividends, and banks will be further limited in their dividend payments based on recent income.

“Today’s actions by the board to preserve the high levels of capital in the U.S. banking system are an acknowledg­ement of both the strength of our largest banks as well as the high degree of uncertaint­y we face,” said Federal Reserve Vice Chair Randal Quarles, in a statement.

The Fed’s actions comes even as Chair Jerome Powell has noted in recent weeks that U.S. banks are generally in much better shape than they were in the 2007-2008 financial crisis, when they were saddled with hundreds of billions of dollars in bad housing debt.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/AP ?? Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell has said recently that U.S. banks are generally in much better shape than they were in the 2007-2008 financial crisis.
ALEX BRANDON/AP Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell has said recently that U.S. banks are generally in much better shape than they were in the 2007-2008 financial crisis.

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