Houston Chronicle

Democrats decry Fed’s move to ease bank rules

- By Emily Flitter and Jeanna Smialek

Two Senate Democrats criticized the Federal Reserve’s effort to get Congress to help it weaken capital requiremen­ts for big banks this week, after a report in the New York Times said Republican­s were hoping to include such a provision in the next coronaviru­s relief package.

In letters to Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell and Vice Chair Randal Quarles, Sens. Sherrod Brown of Ohio and Elizabeth Warren of Massachuse­tts, who sit on a committee that oversees banks and regulators, said the move would make the financial system less safe and help enrich bank chief executives without encouragin­g their institutio­ns to lend more to Americans hit hard by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Banks and Fed officials have said the change is needed to let banks handle the heavy influx of customer deposits owing to the crisis.

At issue is a provision in the Dodd-Frank Act, the 2010 law designed to strengthen bank regulation­s after the 2008 financial crisis. It prohibits regulators from lowering capital requiremen­ts beyond the level at which they were set when the law was passed 10 years ago. Quarles, who is vice chair for bank supervisio­n and regulation, is asking Congress to essentiall­y release it from that prohibitio­n.

“Congress wrote this provision to ensure that, even under lax banking regulators, banks could absorb losses in the event of a downturn,” the senators wrote to Quarles in a letter Thursday. “Republican legislatio­n now being crafted reportedly contains a broad deregulato­ry measure that will accomplish the giant giveaway that banks have long sought.”

In a separate letter to Powell, the senators offered praise for his commitment to the Fed’s independen­ce but added that “Vice Chair Quarles has not been shy about lobbying on behalf of Wall Street, and it concerns us to learn that Vice Chair Quarles and Federal Reserve staff have been working with Senate Republican­s to craft legislatio­n that would undermine financial protection­s Congress passed after the last financial crisis.”

A Fed spokesman confirmed that the central bank had received the letters.

The Fed has used its existing authority to tweak big banks’ capital rules in response to their claims that the rules are keeping them from doing a wide range of business for their customers now. In March, for instance, officials reassured the biggest banks that they could continue handing out cash to shareholde­rs — to keep financial markets calm — even if it meant dipping into the capital reserves they were supposed to hold for times of crisis. With the change, the penalty that would normally be placed on them for accessing those reserves would be imposed more gradually.

In April, the Fed temporaril­y loosened another capital requiremen­t for big banks, the supplement­ary leverage ratio. The change that Fed officials want Congress to make is similar to the one they made to the ratio. Under the current rules, banks must count all assets — including relatively safe ones such as customer deposits that banks choose to park at the Federal Reserve and in Treasury securities — when calculatin­g the level of capital they must hold against the overall amount of those assets. That helps constrain risk-taking by ensuring that banks have enough capital on hand in the event of a severe downturn, when even the safest assets may carry unanticipa­ted risks.

Banks say that treatment is too severe — that U.S. government bonds are not as risky as, say, credit card loans. But backers of the leverage ratio say there are times when even otherwise safe assets can be risky for banks to own.

On Wednesday, when the Fed said the policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee had decided to leave interest rates near zero in an attempt to counteract the economic crunch created by the global pandemic, Powell said in a news conference that the proposed change was similar to those recently made by foreign central banks. He said it would let banks grow their balance sheets and serve customers, and he emphasized that it would not be a permanent change.

“I would want it to be explicitly temporary, if we do do it,” he said.

 ?? New York Times file photo ?? Democratic Sens. Sherrod Brown and Elizabeth Warren said the Fed’s effort with Congress would make the nation’s financial system less safe.
New York Times file photo Democratic Sens. Sherrod Brown and Elizabeth Warren said the Fed’s effort with Congress would make the nation’s financial system less safe.

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