USA TODAY International Edition

Critics seek repeal of law blamed for bank failure

Measure lets midsize institutio­ns avoid Dodd- Frank rules

- Swapna Venugopal Ramaswamy

When Sen. Mike Crapo, R- Idaho, then- chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, introduced a banking bill that included easing requiremen­ts for some midsize banks more than five years ago, advocacy groups were quick to sound the alarm.

Among the provisions advocacy groups and many Democratic lawmakers worried about was one that would dramatical­ly reduce the number of banks that were subject to the stringent Dodd- Frank Act instituted in the aftermath of the Great Recession. That law was passed by the U. S. Congress in 2010 to prevent the excessive risk- taking that led to the financial crisis.

Still, Crapo’s bill became law and that provision, which raised the asset threshold for enhanced regulatory standards from $ 50 billion to $ 250 billion – thus leaving out banks that until then would have been operating under the DoddFrank rules – is being blamed for the failure of two banks over the weekend.

Santa Clara, California- based Silicon Valley Bank and the New York- based Signature Bank, which had more than $ 200 billion and $ 110 billion in assets, respective­ly, both collapsed and were taken over by federal regulators.

Congress must repeal the Trump- era law, which was supported by both Republican­s and Democrats, say advocates and some lawmakers.

“It’s a wake- up call,” Renita Marcellin, advocacy and legislativ­e director for Americans for Financial Reform, a financial reform group in Washington, D. C., told USA TODAY. “Congress should be thinking and starting to figure out how to repeal this law.”

The new law meant 25 of the 38 largest banks in the United States were no longer subject to stronger capital and liquidity rules, enhanced risk management standards, living- will requiremen­ts and some stress testing requiremen­ts, according to the Center for American Progress, a public policy research and advocacy organizati­on.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D- Mass., said “repealing” the legislatio­n, which rolled back critical parts of Dodd- Frank, should be “an immediate priority for Congress” in an Op- Ed for the New York Times.

“First, Congress, the White House and banking regulators should reverse the dangerous bank deregulati­on of the Trump era. Repealing the 2018 legislatio­n that weakened the rules for banks like S. V. B. must be an immediate priority

for Congress,” she wrote.

Proponents of the bill, including Republican lawmakers and the banking industry, saw the sweeping scope and regulatory costs imposed by the DoddFrank Act on smaller banks as “overregula­tion.”

“It addresses some of Dodd- Frank’s biggest burdens to ease the regulatory costs on these small banks – costs which are ultimately transferre­d on to consumers,” said Paul D. Ryan, thenHouse Speaker and Wisconsin Republican.

The changes in Dodd- Frank did not cause the failure of the banks, Thomas Hoenig, a distinguis­hed senior fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University and former president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas told USA TODAY.

“The amendments were a bipartisan action to ease some of the burden on smaller regional banks,” says Hoenig. “There was nothing in those changes that prevented the Fed Board of Governors from examining this bank, or questionin­g its growth rate, or criticizin­g its concentrat­ions.”

The bank’s management was incompeten­t and sales- oriented, he says.

“Nothing kept the regulators from seeing this, certainly not the changes to

Dodd- Frank,” says Hoenig. “The issue that needs focus is that the industry is not over- capitalize­d. That’s where the critics need to focus attention.”

On Monday, President Joe Biden said he would ask Congress and regulators to strengthen the requiremen­ts for small banks, such as Silicon Valley Bank.

The chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, Sen. Sherrod Brown, DOhio, who opposed the 2018 bill, has not said if he would support a similar move.

Asked about his plans, his office pointed to his record.

As then- Ranking Member of the Banking and Housing Committee in 2018, Brown took to the Senate floor six times to fight the bill’s passage and opposed the bill for weakening stress tests and capital requiremen­ts for banking institutio­ns.

As the bill was being debated in 2018, the Center for American Progress called it misguided and “a solution in search of a problem.”

“If enacted, the bill would make the U. S. financial system – and key regional economies – more vulnerable to another financial crisis, potentiall­y putting taxpayers back on the hook to bail out the same banks once again,” it warned.

“We want policymake­rs and members of Congress to not give into the bank lobbies,” says Marcellin. “It’s a reminder that we need to undo a lot of this stuff that happened during the Trump administra­tion because it’s coming back to haunt us.”

 ?? JEFF CHIU/ AP ?? Silicon Valley Bank had $ 200 billion in assets, which does not meet the threshold for the Dodd- Frank rules.
JEFF CHIU/ AP Silicon Valley Bank had $ 200 billion in assets, which does not meet the threshold for the Dodd- Frank rules.
 ?? ?? Marcellin
Marcellin
 ?? ANNA MONEYMAKER/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Sen. Sherrod Brown, D- Ohio, opposed the 2018 bill for weakening stress tests for banking institutio­ns.
ANNA MONEYMAKER/ GETTY IMAGES Sen. Sherrod Brown, D- Ohio, opposed the 2018 bill for weakening stress tests for banking institutio­ns.

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