Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Bankers in state say rules a burden

Group pressures D.C. lawmakers

- FRANK E. LOCKWOOD

WASHINGTON — Members of the Arkansas Community Bankers Associatio­n say they’re swamped with federal regulation­s put in place following the 2008 financial meltdown.

Stopping by Capitol Hill this week, they urged lawmakers to roll back some of the rules that were included in the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act.

The law has created an unreasonab­le and unnecessar­y burden for smaller banks, they said.

“We have to set up a committee just to deal with the regulation­s,” said Arkansas County Bank’s Stuttgart branch president, Gary Oltmann. “[We’re] just pushing paper instead of doing customer service.”

Member said the law also has taken away some of their discretion.

If a loan applicant doesn’t meet the federal requiremen­ts, the loan must be denied even if the lender considers it a good risk, they said.

‘“Some people are not even getting credit that could get credit before and deserve it,” said Martin Carpenter, chairman of FNBC Bank in Ash Flat. “In my opinion … the restrictio­ns that it put on the commu-

nity banks is part of the reason that our economy hasn’t recovered as well as it should. People haven’t been able to borrow money.”

The bankers are asking for greater flexibilit­y.

“What we actually hope for is just some relief, fewer regulation­s and the ability to wait on our customers [and] make loans,” said Bennie Ryburn III of Commercial Bank and Trust in Monticello.

The new requiremen­ts slow the process for both lenders and borrowers, said Milton Smith, president of First National Bank of Lawrence County in Walnut Ridge.

Smith was one of 100 community bankers who were invited to the White House this week to met with President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence.

“We need [regulatory] relief. I mean, it’s incredible the burdens that have come down on us in the past … 10 years,” Smith said.

During the White House visit, Trump described DoddFrank as “out of control” and Pence promised that changes lie ahead. “Dodd-Frank’s days are numbered,” the vice president said.

The bankers’ trip to Washington coincided with debate on the Creating Hope and Opportunit­y for Investors, Consumers and Entreprene­urs Act, called the Financial Choice Act, which supporters say would reduce the regulatory burden on banks of all sizes.

The House Financial Services Committee passed the legislatio­n Thursday along party lines over opposition from Democrats.

Republican leaders haven’t said when the entire House will take up the 600-page bill.

U.S. Rep. French Hill, a former Little Rock banker who serves on the committee, supported the legislatio­n.

“We want to have an opportunit­y to right-size the financial regulatory system so that consumers and entreprene­urs and businesses have more access to capital and that our community banks are able to maintain their competitiv­eness with the big global institutio­ns,” the Republican lawmaker said.

Chris Padgett, the Arkansas bankers associatio­n’s executive director, said he’s glad the legislatio­n advanced.

“It’s a positive move. We don’t love everything in it but, for the most part, it will help community banks,” he said in a telephone interview Friday.

While the bill has elements favored by community banks, it also would roll back some of the restrictio­ns on the Wall Street giants, Padgett noted.

When it comes to assets, the nation’s four largest banks tower over the competitio­n. JPMorgan Chase & Co. tops the list with $2.55 trillion; Bank of America Corp. follows with $2.25 trillion, Wells Fargo & Co. has $1.95 trillion and Citigroup Inc. has $1.82 trillion as of March 31, according to ycharts. com.

The failure of one of the big banks could have far-reaching consequenc­es, Padgett siad.

“When an institutio­n like that has trouble or it files for bankruptcy, they’re systemical­ly risky. It can hamper the economy of the entire country,” Padgett said.

In comparison, the 117 community banks doing business in Arkansas had assets totaling less than $0.07 trillion, according to Independen­t Community Bankers of America, an industry trade group.

“The community banks, although there were some that failed, they really haven’t posed a risk to the national economy or the financial system,” said Carpenter, the Ash Flat banker.

Banks deemed “too big to fail” were blamed for the financial crisis, which jolted the markets and required government bailouts.

A Senate subcommitt­ee investigat­ion said the downturn “was not a natural disaster, but the result of high risk, complex financial products; undisclose­d conflicts of interest; and the failure of regulators, the credit rating agencies, and the market itself to rein in the excesses of Wall Street.”

Dodd-Frank, passed in 2010, was designed to prevent more government bailouts.

It requires banks to hold more capital in reserve and to have more assets that can be more easily liquidated. Large banks also must undergo periodic “stress tests,” examining whether they could withstand a crisis similar to the one in 2008.

The law signed by President Barack Obama also increased regulation­s on lenders large and small.

“There’s no reason why a $300 million bank from Stuttgart is regulated the same as a $1 trillion institutio­n. … That just doesn’t make sense,” Padgett said.

Supporters of Dodd-Frank say the law made the financial system stronger, though many supporters are open to revisions.

“It’s important to keep this in place,” Federal Reserve Board Chairman Janet Yellen said at a December press conference.

But she echoed the objections that the Arkansans have raised.

“It’s important to look for ways to relieve regulatory burden on community banks and smaller institutio­ns, to tailor regulation so that it’s appropriat­e for the systemic risk profile of the particular institutio­ns,” she said.

Community bankers and their larger competitor­s will work to shape the final legislatio­n.

Going up against trilliondo­llar financial institutio­ns is a challenge, Padgett said, especially when those companies have dozens of lobbyists working on their behalf.

“For us to get a seat at the table and a voice is very difficult,” he said. “We are the small man on the totem pole.”

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