East Bay Times

Yellen readies big changes for Treasury

- By Alan Rappeport

WASHINGTON >> Two years ago, Janet Yellen co-signed a letter to Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin urging him not to move forward with plans to relax oversight of big financial firms, warning that doing so could threaten the stability of America’s financial system.

The plea by Yellen, who was joined by Ben Bernanke, another former Fed chair, and former Treasury secretarie­s Jacob J. Lew and Timothy F. Geithner, went unheeded. Under Mnuchin’s direction, the Financial Stability Oversight Council pressed ahead with plans to stop designatin­g large, nonbank financial institutio­ns like insurers and asset managers as a threat to the financial system, chipping away at a key pillar of the post-financial crisis regulatory era.

Now Yellen, who was nominated by Presidente­lect Joe Biden to be Treasury secretary, is poised to restore some of the Trump administra­tion’s regulatory rollbacks if she wins Senate confirmati­on.

Her confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Finance Committee on Tuesday is expected to focus largely on Yellen’s plans to revive a pandemic-stricken economy. But she will also be under pressure to show Democrats and progressiv­e groups that she is ready to end what they view as Mnuchin’s coddling of Wall Street.

In recent weeks, Yellen and Wally Adeyemo, Biden’s nominee for Treasury’s deputy secretary, have been on a virtual listening tour of industry groups across Washington. According to people who participat­ed in those sessions, the two have emphasized the need to create “equitable growth,” using the tools of the Treasury Department to combat climate change and rebuild regulatory institutio­ns like the FSOC.

“There’s an emphasis on working people, racial justice and inequality, and that’s a good place to start,” said Lisa Donner, executive director of Americans for Financial Reform, an advocacy group that met with Yellen this month. “But reversing things that the current Treasury Department has done is not enough.”

Americans for Financial Reform, a left-leaning organizati­on that has spent the past four years largely shut out of the Treasury Department, wants Yellen to set a new direction for the FSOC, which has the power to subject big financial firms to stricter oversight. It was created by the 2010 Dodd Frank law to prevent a repeat of what happened in the run-up to the financial crisis, when firms like the insurance giant AIG made risky bets outside of regulators’ reach and then needed to be bailed out by taxpayers.

Its power has been winnowed under the Trump administra­tion, which released AIG and three other financial firms from stricter oversight.

Americans for Financial Reform has urged Yellen and transition officials to harness FSOC’s power to designate climate change as a “systemic risk” and create tools to limit leverage at hedge funds, which are only lightly regulated.

Yellen likely has a new regulatory approach in mind. She called last year for a “new Dodd-Frank,” arguing at a Brookings Institutio­n event that existing laws were insufficie­nt for dealing with problems in the “shadow” banking sector that emerged when the pandemic caused severe market turmoil.

The former Fed chair has also demonstrat­ed that she is willing to punish banks for misdeeds when warranted. In 2018, on Yellen’s last day on the job, the Fed required Wells Fargo to replace four members of its 16-person board for failing to properly oversee the bank amid a fraud scandal.

But Yellen’s experience at the Federal Reserve and her understand­ing of the banking system have eased concerns among some in the financial sector who might otherwise be wary that an incoming Democratic administra­tion will quickly roll out onerous new rules. In meetings with financial services groups, Yellen has indicated that helping to craft and oversee the Biden administra­tion’s economic relief efforts will initially be her top priority.

“She’s extremely knowledgea­ble about the banking system; she’s familiar with the strength and the role of the large banks, including the positive role that they have played over the last year,” said Kevin Fromer, chief executive of the Financial Services Forum, a lobbying group that also met with Yellen this month.

Yellen will have to recuse herself from Treasury matters involving certain financial institutio­ns as a result of an ethics agreement she signed when disclosing paid speeches that she gave to major corporatio­ns and Wall Street banks since leaving the Federal Reserve in 2018. According to her financial disclosure, which was released on New Year’s Eve, Yellen earned more than $7 million in speaking fees from firms such as Goldman Sachs, Citigroup and Citadel.

Jeff Hauser, the director of the Revolving Door Project, called on Yellen to release the contents of her speeches. But he said that they were less troubling than some of the consulting work that Biden’s other nominees have done in recent years for firms such as Blackstone, a giant asset manager run by Stephen Schwarzman, and the data-mining company Palantir.

The Biden transition team has declined to make videos or transcript­s of the speeches public, noting that she was usually participat­ing in unscripted discussion­s about the economy.

 ??  ?? Incoming Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen plans to restore some regulatory rollbacks.
Incoming Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen plans to restore some regulatory rollbacks.

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