San Diego Union-Tribune

YELLEN SAYS U.S. WILL INTERVENE IF NEEDED TO PROTECT SMALLER BANKS

Current troubles different from decade-ago crisis, which was about solvency

- BY VIKTORIA DENDRINOU & CHRISTOPHE­R CONDON

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said on Tuesday the U.S. government could repeat the drastic actions it took recently to protect bank depositors if smaller lenders are threatened.

“Our interventi­on was necessary to protect the broader U.S. banking system, and similar actions could be warranted if smaller institutio­ns suffer deposit runs that pose the risk of contagion,” Yellen said in remarks to an American Bankers Associatio­n conference in Washington.

The federal government “is resolutely committed” to mitigating financial-stability risks where necessary, Yellen said in a question-andanswer session. “The public should have confidence in our banking system.”

U.S. authoritie­s took extraordin­ary steps earlier this month to bolster that confidence following the collapses of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank. Regulators guaranteed insured and uninsured deposits at the two institutio­ns. The Federal Reserve also launched a new backstop for lenders and altered rules at its emergency lending facility — the socalled discount window — to help them meet deposit withdrawal­s.

Yellen said that the current troubles are notably different from the global financial crisis more than a decade ago, which was an issue with solvency. Today's challenge is “contagious bank runs,” and it's vital that lenders have access to adequate liquidity, she said.

The Fed — which Yellen previously chaired — is the key institutio­n, she indicated. The central bank's discount window and its new Bank Term Funding Program are “working as in

tended,” she said.

“We see the situation as having improved,” with aggregate outflows from deposits having stabilized, Yellen said. Officials will continue to monitor the situation, she also said.

A coalition of midsize banks has pressed for an expansion of federal deposit insurance to cover all deposits, but Yellen didn’t address the issue Tuesday. U.S. officials have begun studying whether they can temporaril­y expand that coverage, Bloomberg reported.

Yellen also wouldn’t “speculate” on what kind of regulatory changes might be needed in the wake of this month’s bank collapses.

“We are currently focused on the situation at hand,” she said in her prepared remarks. “But we will need to reexamine our current regulatory and supervisor­y regimes and consider whether they are appropriat­e for the risks that banks face today.”

Yellen’s comments come on the heels of two weeks of tumult in global markets and heightened worries over financial stability after the rapid-fire collapse of the U.S. banks and a historic deal over the weekend that saw UBS agree to buy its

troubled Swiss rival Credit Suisse.

In the U.S., First Republic Bank continues its battle to restore confidence after a plunge in its share price. JPMorgan Chase Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon has led plans to have a group of big banks convert some or all of the $30 billion they deposited last week with First Republic into a capital infusion, according to people familiar with the matter.

On Tuesday, Yellen defended the recent government measures as a swift and necessary response.

“The federal government delivered just that: decisive and forceful actions to strengthen public confidence in the U.S. banking system and protect the American economy,” she said.

The steps, she said, “reduced the risk of further bank failures that would have imposed losses on the Deposit Insurance Fund.”

She added that the U.S. financial system was much stronger than in 2008 due in part to post-crisis reforms that enforced higher capital requiremen­ts for U.S. lenders.

Yellen also said the government hoped to preserve the role of small and midsize lenders within the larger financial system.

“Large banks play an important role in our economy, but so do small- and midsize banks,” she said. “Treasury is committed to ensuring the ongoing health and competitiv­eness of our vibrant community and regional banking institutio­ns.”

Separately, Yellen reiterated her call for Congress to increase or suspend the federal debt limit, calling that “utterly essential.” While President Joe Biden stands ready to engage with lawmakers on addressing fiscal sustainabi­lity, that ought to be done through the regular appropriat­ions process, not under the threat of a “catastroph­ic” default, she said.

 ?? MANUEL BALCE CENETA AP ?? Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen speaks to the American Bankers Associatio­n, Tuesday in Washington.
MANUEL BALCE CENETA AP Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen speaks to the American Bankers Associatio­n, Tuesday in Washington.

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