Dayton Daily News

Yellen: Rules rollbacks raise risks

- By Jim Puzzangher­a

Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen told senators Thursday that the risk of another financial crisis would increase if some Trump administra­tion proposals to roll back regulation­s were enacted.

In her second straight day of Capitol Hill testimony, she walked back her statement last month that she didn’t expect another financial crisis “in our lifetimes.”

“I think we can never be confident there won’t be another financial crisis,” Yellen told members of the Senate Banking Committee.

The U.S. has “done a great deal” since the 2008 crisis to strengthen the financial system, she said. That includes forcing banks to hold more capital to cover potential losses as part of the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial regulatory overhaul law.

“It is important that we maintain the improvemen­ts that have been put in place that mitigate the risk and the potential damage,” Yellen said.

President Donald Trump has promised to dismantle Dodd-Frank, which Republican­s have said has been too burdensome for banks.

In a report last month ordered by Trump, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin proposed sweeping regulatory reductions, including changes that would reduce capital requiremen­ts for the biggest banks. Yellen said she would not favor reducing those capital requiremen­ts.

Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, pressed her on whether adopting the Treasury report recommenda­tions “would more likely result in a potential financial crisis.”

“Well, some of them, yes,” Yellen said.

She said that she agreed with “a lot of things in the Treasury report” that are similar to Fed efforts to tailor regulation­s so they are not so burdensome for smaller banks.

The Republican-controlled House voted last month along party lines to repeal many of the Dodd-Frank regulation­s.

Senate Banking Committee Chairman Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, is working with Brown, the panel’s top Democrat, on legislatio­n to make changes to Dodd-Frank that could focus more on small and midsized banks than Wall Street.

Also at Thursday’s hearing, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., pushed Yellen to remove Wells Fargo & Co. board members who presided over the bank when it opened millions of accounts without customers’ authorizat­ion.

Yellen said she could not discuss confidenti­al informatio­n about the Fed’s supervisio­n of the bank. She indicated no decision has been made on the board’s fate as the Fed continued to look into the matter.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States