The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
U.S. regulators lift strict oversight of Prudential
WASHINGTON — A group of federal regulators on Wednesday lifted the strict government oversight imposed on big insurer Prudential Financial Inc. It was the last financial company still carrying the label that subjected it to special restrictions stemming from the 2008 financial crisis.
The unanimous decision by the Financial Stability Oversight Council closed the books on its actions tagging selected big financial companies as potential threats. It was the latest example in the Trump administration’s push to unwind Obama-era regulatory requirements aimed at averting another financial meltdown.
The council tagged Prudential in 2013 as a “systemically important” institution, one so big and interconnected that it would threaten the financial system’s stability if it collapsed. The action put Prudential under special supervision by the Federal Reserve.
The council is led by Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and includes Fed Chairman Jerome Powell and Jay Clayton, chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission. Those officials and six of the other seven members were appointed by President Donald Trump.
The council was created and empowered by the 2010 DoddFrank law to cast eyes across the financial system to watch for potential threats. It also was empowered to collar some large financial companies with tighter scrutiny to avert a “too-big-to-fail” situation — when the government is forced to rescue them to head off a broader economic collapse.
Prudential, based in Newark, N.J., is the biggest life insurance company in the U.S., with operations around the world. It runs retirement and investment management businesses, with $1.4 trillion in assets under management, as well as individual life and group insurance coverage. For 2017, the company reported net income of $7.86 billion.