Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Varren slams oowell for weak regula•ion, oversigh• of rua

- Tribune News Service Bloomberg News

Senator Elizabeth Warren blasted Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell for “an astonishin­g list of failures” that contribute­d to the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank in a letter to the Fed chief Wednesday.

“SVB and Signature accumulate­d risk and made dangerous decisions about how to manage that risk,” Warren said. “They did so in part because of greed and incompeten­ce – but were allowed to do so under faulty supervisio­n and in a weakened regulatory environmen­t that you helped to create.”

“You owe the public an explanatio­n,” she added.

The letter, which detailed several efforts to weaken regulation­s put in place following the financial crisis and lax supervisio­n by the Fed, asked Powell to respond to 11 questions related to the central bank’s oversight by March 29.

Warren, a Massachuse­tts Democrat, also asked

Powell to recuse himself from an internal investigat­ion the Fed is conducting into its regulation and supervisio­n of SVB. The results of the review, which is being led by Vice Chair Michael

Barr, will be made public by May 1, the Fed said Monday. A bipartisan group of lawmakers are instead calling for an independen­t investigat­ion of what went wrong.

SVB’S failure on Friday, followed by Signature

Bank’s shuttering over the weekend, set off a global market rout amid fears of broader financial-market contagion.

‘Aided and abetted’

The Fed and other regulators announced emergency measures to help contain the budding crisis, including a new loan program from the central bank that will make is easier for banks to borrow to meet deposit withdrawal demand.

In her letter, Warren also said Powell supported a 2018 law that exempted mid-sized banks like SVB from the same stringent oversight requiremen­ts faced by the biggest banks, a change that she and some other progressiv­es have said contribute­d to SVB’S demise. Testifying about the bill at the time, Powell said the Fed would still have the ability to regulate mid-size banks if warranted, and that gave them “the tools that we need.”

Warren, who opposed Powell’s renominati­on in 2022 over his regulatory views, also criticized him for leading efforts to weaken or eliminate guardrails that would have applied to SVB, including stronger liquidity requiremen­ts. And she said Powell was also to blame for supervisor­y failures by the San Francisco Fed, which regulated SVB along with state regulators.

“Make no mistake: your decisions aided and abetted this bank failure, and you bear your share of responsibi­lity for it,” she wrote.

SVB Chief Executive Officer Greg Becker held a spot on the San Francisco Fed’s board as a Class A director, a tier made up of representa­tives from district banks.

Warren called this an “egregious conflict of interest” and asked Powell whether it had any impact on the regional bank’s oversight of SVB.

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