San Antonio Express-News

Fed to end COVID capital break it gave big banks

- By Jesse Hamilton

WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve will let a significan­t capital break for big banks expire at month’s end, denying frenzied requests from Wall Street.

In response to the pandemic, the Fed had let lenders load up on Treasuries and deposits without setting aside capital to protect against losses. That relief will lapse March 31 as planned, the Fed said in a Friday statement.

Though the regulator concluded the threat that COVID-19 poses to the economy isn’t nearly as severe as a year ago, the Fed also said it will soon propose new changes to the so-called supplement­ary leverage ratio, or SLR. The goal is to address the spike in bank reserves triggered by the government’s stimulus programs.

“Because of recent growth in the supply of central bank reserves and the issuance of Treasury securities, the board may need to address the current design and calibratio­n of the SLR over time to prevent strains from developing that could both constrain economic growth and undermine financial stability,” the Fed said.

The expiration of the temporary capital break may disappoint banks and bond traders, as many industry analysts had wanted the Fed to extend the deadline for at least a few months, especially since the $21 trillion Treasury market has seen recent volatility.

Treasury dealers already have been exiting the market at a rapid clip — more than $80 billion was pulled in the last two weeks in advance of the central bank’s decision. But Fed officials believe the market is sufficient­ly stable and banks’ capital is high enough to return to the pre-pandemic requiremen­t

while the agency considers long-term changes.

The biggest U.S. banks have nearly $1 trillion in capital, meaning they are already above the $800 billion that they need to comply with the full SLR, according to Fed estimates. Lenders themselves will have to decide how much they want to exceed the agency’s minimum requiremen­t.

With the Fed declaring banks to be well capitalize­d, there’s a chance it will no longer be able to justify its pandemic-spurred constraint­s on dividends. While the regulator already relaxed an earlier ban on stock buybacks, it’s still restrictin­g shareholde­r payouts. Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said this week that a decision is coming soon on dividends.

“This takes out of play the biggest political impediment to the Fed removing all Covid-19-related restrictio­ns on big bank capital distributi­ons,” Jaret Seiberg, an analyst for Cowen & Co., wrote in a Friday note. The Fed could drop its remaining constraint­s this year, he predicted.

Central bank officials provided

no details on the permanent modificati­ons they’ll propose to the SLR, but they did say they don’t want the industry’s overall capital levels to change. The Fed added that it will work with the other banking agencies: the Office of the Comptrolle­r of the Currency and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Those regulators also announced Friday that they will let the temporary relief end March 31.

The agencies’ decision means big banks such as Jpmorgan Chase & Co., Citigroup Inc. and Bank of America Corp. must soon return to their customary SLR — a measure of their capital against all their assets.

“It’s a mistake,” Priya Misra, global head of rates strategy at TD Securities, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. “I don’t think the market was ready for this relief to be removed.”

The KBW Bank Index fell 1 percent as 2:12 p.m. in New York, with all but one of the 24 companies in the index slumping. Jpmorgan declined 2.7 percent, the biggest drop on the index, followed by Wells Fargo & Co. at 2.2 percent.

The 10-year Treasury yield rose after the announceme­nt, as many Wall Street strategist­s speculate the end of the regulatory break will induce some banks to shed Treasuries. The benchmark borrowing rate hovers at about 1.75 percent.

The Fed did provide another recent consolatio­n, though, by more than doubling to $80 billion the maximum overnight reverse repo activity a participan­t can execute through the central bank’s facility. That could absorb some of the pressure of too much government stimulus cash sloshing through the system by giving money market funds a place to put it.

As Credit Suisse Group AG’S Zoltan Pozsar put it this week, the Fed is “foaming the runway” to deal with the stress of going back to the existing leverage rule by giving banks an additional ability to direct deposits into money market funds. Fed officials said Friday that move was a monetary-policy decision and not directly related to the leverage limit.

For the past year, that relaxed leverage cap had allowed the lenders to take on as much as $600 billion in extra reserves and Treasuries without bumping up their capital demand. The banks could now be under pressure to shed some of those assets or seek more capital.

Jpmorgan has said it might consider turning away certain deposits as a result. And some Treasury market strategist­s expect a hit to the market as the biggest lenders potentiall­y sell holdings.

The Fed faced intense political pressure from Democratic lawmakers, including Senate Banking Committee Chairman Sherrod Brown and Senator Elizabeth Warren, to let the capital break lapse March 31. While Democrats lauded Friday’s announceme­nt, they will likely scrutinize the agency about its decision to propose permanent changes to the SLR. In a Feb. 26 letter to the Fed, Brown and Warren called it “one of the most important post-crisis regulatory reforms.”

Brown said in a statement Friday that ending the break is “a victory for lending in communitie­s hit hard by the pandemic.” In a message on Twitter, Warren called it the “right decision for keeping our banking system strong.”

Ira Jersey, a rates strategist for Bloomberg Intelligen­ce, predicted regulators will eventually let banks exclude reserves from their SLR calculatio­ns, but not Treasuries.

The leverage ratio, adopted as a key safety measure after the 2008 financial meltdown, has always been a three-agency effort. Though the Fed and OCC had proposed a wide-ranging overhaul in 2018, that project stalled. Fed officials said Friday they’ll work with the OCC and FDIC to determine what’s next. However, the Fed has been known to sometimes move independen­tly on capital rules.

 ?? Dreamstime / Tribune News Service ?? The Fed will let a capital break for big banks expire, denying requests from Wall Street that it extend the relief to mitigate any impacts to the financial system and the $21 trillion Treasury market.
Dreamstime / Tribune News Service The Fed will let a capital break for big banks expire, denying requests from Wall Street that it extend the relief to mitigate any impacts to the financial system and the $21 trillion Treasury market.

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