Bangkok Post

A US Federal Reserve bank president resigns over a leak to a Wall Street analyst.

Lacker will not face charges, says lawyer

- JASON LANGE HOWARD SCHNEIDER

WASHINGTON: Richmond Federal Reserve president Jeffrey Lacker abruptly left the US central bank on Tuesday after admitting that a conversati­on he had with a Wall Street analyst in 2012 may have disclosed confidenti­al informatio­n about Fed policy options.

The 2012 leak had triggered a criminal i nvestigati­on after research firm Medley Global Advisors LLC told its clients the details of a key Fed meeting a day before the Fed released its own record of the discussion.

At the Fed’s September 2012 policy meeting, officials laid the groundwork for the massive bond-buying stimulus they were to roll out later that year. Early knowledge of that discussion could have given some traders an unfair edge.

Lacker who had previously announced he would retire in October, said on Tuesday that he decided to make his departure effective immediatel­y.

It was not clear if Lacker was pushed out of his post. The Richmond Fed said in a statement that it took “appropriat­e actions” after learning the outcome of government investigat­ions into the leak.

Lacker’s lawyer said he would not be facing charges. The Fed’s inspector general, Mark Bialek, said in a separate statement that he was closing an investigat­ion into the leak.

“I crossed the line,” Lacker said in a statement, saying he never intended “to reveal confidenti­al informatio­n” and that he may have broken rules against giving people an edge in business.

Lacker admitted to talking to an analyst from Medley in October 2012, but did not say he provided her with details about the Fed’s policy options, which aimed to boost the economy following the 2007-09 financial crisis.

Lacker said it was the Medley analyst who brought up confidenti­al Fed informatio­n.

“I should have declined to comment and perhaps have ended the phone call. Instead, I did not refuse or express my inability to comment and the interview continued,” Lacker said.

In addition, Lacker said he had not fully disclosed details about his discussion with the Medley analyst when he was interviewe­d by a Fed lawyer later in 2012. But he said he did disclose further details in a 2015 interview with the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion.

Lacker gave no reason for the time gap between the 2015 interview and his statement on Tuesday.

The Medley report triggered furor in the US Congress and became a source of friction between the Fed and lawmakers, leading to a criminal investigat­ion.

“This developmen­t could hurt the Fed politicall­y,” said Roberto Perli, an economist at Cornerston­e Macro.

In May 2015, the chair of the House of Representa­tives Financial Services Committee, Jeb Hensarling, a Texas Republican who has called for stricter Congressio­nal oversight of the central bank, subpoenaed Fed documents and communicat­ions related to the leak.

Lacker, one of the US central bank’s most reliable proponents of interest rate increases, had led the Richmond Fed since 2004.

During his tenure, he became known for his dissenting votes on policy. He voted against several Fed policy decisions in 2006 because he favoured interest rate increases, while in 2009 he opposed Fed purchases of mortgage-backed securities, which were part of its bond-buying stimulus programme.

Days before his conversati­on with the Medley analyst, Lacker voted against increasing asset purchases at the Fed’s September 2012 meeting.

Lacker said his interview in 2015 with the FBI also involved the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York, the Office of the Inspector General of the Federal Reserve Board and the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

The Richmond Fed is one of 12 regional reserve banks that are part of the US central bank. They process payments and help regulate banks, while their presidents take turns as members of the Fed committee that sets interest rates.

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