The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Threats to our financial stability remain

In the first systemwide all-clear since the financial crisis, the Federal Reserve announced last week that all of the nation’s big banks are healthy.

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Hold the applause. The banks are certainly healthier now than they were in 2011, when the Fed began annual “stress tests” to assess their ability to withstand financial and economic downturns. But to the extent they are healthy, credit belongs in large part to banking reforms enacted after the crisis. And it is precisely those reforms that are now in the cross hairs of the Trump administra­tion.

The reforms were aimed at improving lending standards, restrictin­g trading practices and strengthen­ing capital requiremen­ts. Better loan standards and less trading have kept banks away from the reckless practices that precipitat­ed the crash, while more capital helps to ensure that the banks can absorb any losses that may occur.

A more stable financial system and greater protection against economical­ly ruinous booms and busts have resulted.

But these vital measures are all under attack by the Trump administra­tion and the Republican-controlled Congress. The stated rationale, expressed most recently in a report by the Treasury Department, is that regulation has impeded bank lending and, by extension, economic growth.

That’s wrong. Bank lending has expanded at a decent pace in recent years; economic growth has suffered largely from Congress’s failure to provide fiscal support. What the banks and their enablers in the administra­tion and Congress want is a return to the days when excessive risk-taking led to outsize profits. They want to turn back the clock by rolling back the rules.

History tells us that things won’t end well if that happens. Deregulati­on led to the financial crash in 2008. It’s safe to assume that repeating the mistake will lead to the same result.

Knee-jerk deregulati­on is not the only threat to financial stability. It’s entirely possible that the system is more fragile than the Fed’s stress tests indicate. By the Fed’s calculatio­ns, capital held by the nation’s eight largest banks was nearly 14 percent of assets, weighted by risk, at the end of 2016.

Alternativ­e calculatio­ns of capital, including those that use internatio­nal accounting rules rather than American accounting principles, put the capital cushion much lower, at 6.3 percent. The difference is largely attributab­le to regulators’ differing assessment of the risks posed by derivative­s, the complex instrument­s that blew up in the financial crisis and that still are a major part of the holdings of big American banks.

The passing grades on the Fed’s stress tests pave the way for banks to pay their largest dividends in almost a decade. The hands-down winners will be shareholde­rs and bank executives, who could see their stock-based compensati­on packages expand further.

But without continued bank regulation, and heightened vigilance of derivative­s in particular, the good fortune of bank investors and bank executives is all too likely to come at the expense of most Americans, who do not share in bank profits but suffer severe and often irreversib­le setbacks when deregulati­on leads to a bust.

It has happened before.

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