San Diego Union-Tribune

FED WILL END RELAXED CAPITAL REQUIREMEN­TS FOR LARGE BANKS

Exemption of flexibilit­y rule during pandemic expires March 31

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The Federal Reserve says it will restore capital requiremen­ts for large banks that were relaxed as part of the Fed’s efforts to shore up the financial system during the early days of the pandemic.

The Fed said it will not extend the relief from what is called the supplement­ary leverage ratio past March 31. The easing of the regulation had been intended to give banks flexibilit­y in what assets they could hold to meet regulatory’ requiremen­ts during the turmoil of the pandemic, when banks were having to suddenly write down billions of dollars of loans.

The banking industry had lobbied for an extension of the relief but on Thursday the Fed said that since the requiremen­ts were relaxed last year “the Treasury market has stabilized.”

Shares of the large Wall Street banks fell. Citigroup and Bank of America dropped 1.1 percent, while JPMorgan Chase slid 1.6 percent.

The supplement­ary leverage ratio requires large banks to hold capital equal to about 3 percent of their assets. The required ratio is higher — 5 percent — for banks that are deemed most important to the overall financial system The rule was adopted as part of regulatory reforms after the 20072008 global financial crisis and recession. The idea was to ensure that banks kept enough capital on hand to survive market meltdowns.

Yet the rule has also been blamed for magnifying the turmoil that erupted in the financial markets a year ago when the pandemic first hit hard. Banks, foreign central banks and hedge funds, among others, had desperatel­y sought to dump Treasurys and other bonds to raise cash. Treasury yields spiked in response. To calm the lending markets, the Fed stepped in to buy hundreds of billions of dollars of Treasurys on its own.

The financial industry argues that the rule discourage­s banks from holding Treasurys because doing so increases their assets and reduces their supplement­ary leverage ratio. This undermines their ability to act as intermedia­ries in the Treasury market and facilitate trading, banks assert.

Another issue is that the Fed’s Treasury purchases have flooded the banking system with cash reserves. These reserves lower a bank’s SLR by increasing its assets. Total bank reserves now stand at nearly $3.5 trillion, up from roughly $1.5 trillion before the pandemic.

Treasurys are considered low risk and cash reserves are regarded as riskfree. But the SLR, unlike other bank capital requiremen­ts, doesn’t take risk into account.

A year ago the Fed temporaril­y exempted Treasury securities and cash reserves from the SLR calculatio­n. That exemption is set to expire March 31. Bank lobbyists argue that without an extension of the exemption, large banks will be less likely to hold Treasury securities.

If that were to happen, interest rates could rise, making loans more expensive.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury serves as a benchmark for mortgage rates and other borrowing costs. Banks also say that ending the exemption will discourage them from making loans, which would reduce their capital.

But some high-profile Democrats in Congress oppose continuing the exemption, thus heightenin­g the pressures the Fed is facing. Earlier this month, Sens. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., and Sherrod Brown, DOhio, urged Fed Chair Jerome Powell and other top banking regulators to reject the banks’ push for an extension.

“The banks’ requests for an extension of this relief appear to be an attempt to use the pandemic as an excuse to weaken one of the most important post-crisis regulatory reforms,” the senators wrote.

If banks worry about running short of capital, Warren and Brown said, they could bolster their balance sheets by suspending dividend payouts.

“We are also confident that the thousands of community banks that are not subject to the SLR requiremen­ts would be happy to accept deposits that large banks may reject,” they said.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH AP ?? Some Democrats had urged Fed Chair Jerome Powell and top regulators to reject the banks’ push for an extension.
SUSAN WALSH AP Some Democrats had urged Fed Chair Jerome Powell and top regulators to reject the banks’ push for an extension.

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