Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Fed wants to loosen rules on bank investment­s

- By Christophe­r Rugaber

WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve approved a proposal Thursday to loosen a financial-crisis era rule that prevents banks from investing in venture capital funds.

The proposal would affect the so-called Volcker Rule, which was created after the 2008 financial meltdown. The rule bars banks from trading with government­insured deposits in an effort to prevent the kind of excesses that led to the financial crisis and Great Recession. Thursday’s proposal would clarify several aspects of the rule and follows a previous loosening of the Volcker Rule last fall.

The draft rule would exempt venture capital funds from the Volcker Rule’s provision that bars banks from investing in hedge or private equity funds.

The proposal was approved by the Fed’s governors on a 4-1 vote, with Fed Chairman Jerome Powell supporting the change.

Fed Gov. Lael Brainard opposed the proposal, arguing that it would “weaken core protection­s in the Volcker rule and enable banking firms again to engage in high-risk activities.”

The Fed argues that banks can already make direct investment­s in startup companies and that the rule change would simply allow them to do it indirectly through a venture capital fund.

Powell said Thursday that regulators have six years’ experience with the Volcker Rule, and “we have learned that a simpler, clearer approach to implementi­ng the rule makes it easier for both banks and regulators.”

At a news conference Wednesday, Powell said the changes are “consistent with safety and soundness and absolutely consistent with the spirit of the Volcker Rule.”

But Brainard argued that the changes would allow banks to invest in riskier credit funds, which pool money to provide long-term loans.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States