The Oklahoman

Critics, supporters see Biden’s nominee reining in fintech

- Caitlin Reilly CQ-Roll Call TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

Saule Omarova, a Cornell law professor nominated to lead the Office of the Comptrolle­r of the Currency, is viewed by supporters and critics alike as a regulator who could rein in the financial technology industry.

Her supporters see potential to set rules for a technology that they say poses increasing risk to the financial system.

Her critics, including many in the fintech sector, say she would stifle innovation that technology is bringing to financial institutio­ns.

“She clearly is concerned about risk migrating to the financial system from the unregulate­d parts of the financial system: payday lenders, fintech and stablecoin,” said Senate Banking Chairman Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio.

Mick Mulvaney – the former House Republican member and White House chief of staff during the Trump administra­tion, now on the board of advisers for the Chamber of Digital Commerce – said in a statement that Omarova’s confirmation would have a “chilling effect” on innovation.

Omarova has written extensivel­y about fintech, warning that the speed and opacity it brings to the financial industry could circumvent public oversight and pose a risk to the stability of the whole system. If confirmed, she would lead the agency that charters and oversees national banks.

Her supporters say she would take over the OCC at a critical juncture, when the fintech industry is poised to bring unregulate­d risk into the banking industry.

They liken the dynamic to the banking sector’s growing involvemen­t in derivative­s markets ahead of the 2007-08 financial crisis, another focus of Omarova’s scholarshi­p.

“She knew the risks that financial institutio­ns can pose to housing and to our whole economic system. She warned in those early days about what in fact did happen in 2008,” said Brown.

The OCC, an agency within the Treasury Department, charters, sets standards and supervises national banks. Most relevant to the fintech industry, the comptrolle­r determines what regulation­s fintech companies offering services similar to banks face.

“I think that she will be vigilant in figuring out what those rules they should live under (are),” Brown said in an interview.

Omarova’s arrival at the agency would come amid a larger crackdown on cryptocurr­encies and fintech by the Biden administra­tion. Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Gary Gensler has said the exchanges where cryptocurr­encies trade should be subject to stricter regulation­s. Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen has pushed for better enforcemen­t of cryptocurr­ency tax obligation­s.

‘Shadow banking’

During the Trump administra­tion, the OCC issued a few rules friendly to fintech companies, including creating a special charter for fintech companies offering some banking services and a rule making it easier for banks to partner with fintech companies on loans. The special charter faces legal challenges, and Congress nullified the lending rule this year.

For the most part, the OCC has taken a wait-and-see approach toward fintech, said Cornell Law School professor Robert Hockett, Omarova’s colleague and frequent collaborat­or.

“I would call it a holding pattern, a holding pattern with a slight tilt in favor of allowing more shadow banking and allowing more speculativ­e investing over the last, say, five years or so,” Hockett said in an interview. “I think that if Saule does end up getting confirmed by the Senate and taking the office, we will see a really significant change. I think it’ll happen really rapidly.”

Hockett said Omarova’s work studying derivative­s and the banking industry is most relevant to understand­ing the approach she would bring to the agency.

She made a name for herself with a 2009 paper that examined how decades of OCC decisions paved the way for banks to get involved in derivative­s in the lead-up to the financial crisis, with disastrous results.

The agency gradually expanded the activities permissibl­e for financial institutio­ns to take on under “the business of banking,” eventually allowing them to trade in highly speculativ­e derivative­s, Hockett said. “What she had documented in connection with derivative­s is what she sees happening, or at least is worried is happening … all over again, but with fintech instead of derivative­s.”

Fintech, particular­ly stablecoin­s and cryptocurr­ency exchanges, is emerging as the latest “shadow banking” realm, Hockett said. The term, coined by economist Paul McCulley in 2007, refers to activity that replicates traditiona­l bank functions without the correspond­ing regulation.

“I think her top two concerns in order of priority are, A, de facto shadow banking in yet another realm. Basically a resurgence of shadow banking in the crypto space,” Hockett said. “Then concern No. 2 is the possibilit­y of bank investment­s in junk assets: really, really hyper-speculativ­e, highly suspect assets.”

“As it happens, those are the two things that actually fall within the jurisdicti­on of the OCC,” he said. The regulator polices the boundary between banking and nonbanking activities, and it oversees the types of assets banks are allowed to keep in their investment portfolios.

Omarova would likely pause proposed mergers between banks and fintech companies to allow time for a closer examinatio­n, he said. The agency also would proceed with rules to rein in crypto investment­s by banks and banking activities by fintech companies.

“She would probably initiate the rule-making process that would ultimately culminate in specific regulatory provisions that state that the circumstan­ces under which, or the conditions under which, fintech investment­s can be made by banks, and fintech companies, could be permitted to do things that might look kind of like banking,” Hockett said.

‘Extraordin­ary and radical’

Criticism of Omarova’s nomination has focused on her work co-authored with Hockett that proposes restructur­ing the Federal Reserve system to play a more active role in the financial and banking system, including by replacing retail banking services with individual bank accounts at the Fed.

Sen. Patrick J. Toomey, R-Pa., ranking member of the Senate Banking Committee, in a floor speech this month said those ideas make Omarova the most “radical choice for any regulatory spot in our federal government.”

“There’s a lot that’s extraordin­ary and radical here – but maybe the heart of it is that Ms. Omarova doesn’t just want tightened regulation of banks. What she wants to, and I quote – this is her words – ‘effectively end banking as we know it,’ ” Toomey said. “She clearly has an aversion to anything like freemarket capitalism.”

Toomey’s criticism targets ideas – individual bank accounts at the Fed, a national investment authority to fund infrastruc­ture projects – that wouldn’t be part of Omarova’s work at the OCC. Still, critics say her attitude toward banks and the private sector doesn’t bode well for fintech.

 ?? COURTESY SENATE COMMITTEE ON BANKING, HOUSING, AND URBAN AFFAIRS VIA TNS ?? If confirmed, Saule Omarova would arrive at the Office of the Comptrolle­r of the Currency amid a larger crackdown on cryptocurr­encies and fintech by the Biden administra­tion.
COURTESY SENATE COMMITTEE ON BANKING, HOUSING, AND URBAN AFFAIRS VIA TNS If confirmed, Saule Omarova would arrive at the Office of the Comptrolle­r of the Currency amid a larger crackdown on cryptocurr­encies and fintech by the Biden administra­tion.

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