New York Post

BARN-EY BURNER

Frank’s Signature Bank role

- By LYDIA MOYNIHAN lmoynihan@nypost.com

Barney Frank — the retired congressma­n who co-authored the Dodd-Frank Act to tighten bank regulation­s after the 2008 financial crisis — is under fire over his role in the latest US banking disaster.

The 82-year-old Democrat is on the board of directors at Signature Bank — a New York lender that was shut down by state regulators over the weekend, becoming the industry’s third major casualty since Silicon Valley Bank was abruptly shuttered Friday and the crypto-focused Silvergate Capital shut down a week earlier.

In an interview with Bloomberg late Sunday, Frank partly blamed cryptocurr­encies, which hadn’t existed when he and fellow lawmakers in Washington were grappling with the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008.

“Digital currency was the new element entered into our system,” Frank told Bloomberg. “A new and destabiliz­ing — potentiall­y destabiliz­ing — element is introduced into the financial system. What we get are three failures.”

Frank didn’t address the fact that crypto had become a key growth vehicle for Signature Bank under the direction of himself and others — despite widespread concerns about the risks.

Bailout ‘king’

Meanwhile, Frank also insisted that regulators’ move to shut Signature was overly aggressive — claiming the bank could have survived.

“I think that if we’d been allowed to open tomorrow, that we could’ve continued — we have a solid loan book, we’re the biggest lender in New York City under the low-income housing tax credit,” Frank said. “I think the bank could’ve been a going concern.”

Frank, a staunch Democrat and chair of the House Financial Services Committee during the 2008 crisis, was brought into Signature because of his deep understand­ing of the importance of financial regulation, according to the company’s website.

In 2022, Frank received $121,750 in cash compensati­on for his work on Signature’s board, as well as $180,182 in stock awards, according to a company filing.

As of February, Frank owned 5,542 shares of Signature Bank worth $825,000; the shares are likely now worthless after the government took the bank into receiversh­ip. Frank has been on the board since 2015 and is expected to depart this year, the filing adds.

The bank did not respond to request for comment.

Frank was “instrument­al” in creating the $550 billion bailout for banks during the 2008 crisis, the bank’s website states. But his legacy was cemented with passage of the most stringent financial regulation, the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act.

 ?? ?? Retired Rep. Barney Frank (inset) was instrument­al in passage of the DoddFrank Act during the Obama administra­tion (bottom, left), but he’s had little to say about his role as a Signature Bank board member in the failure of the bank (right), which he blames in part on cryptocurr­ency.
Retired Rep. Barney Frank (inset) was instrument­al in passage of the DoddFrank Act during the Obama administra­tion (bottom, left), but he’s had little to say about his role as a Signature Bank board member in the failure of the bank (right), which he blames in part on cryptocurr­ency.

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