The move officially starts a long regulatory chain that could end
with breaking up the banks. Nearly a decade after the financial
crisis, it underscored how the debate about banks being "too big to
fail" continues to rage in Washington and exasperate on Wall Street.
The banks failed for reasons ranging from the way liquidity would be
housed and shuffled among domestic and foreign subsidiaries to the
manner in which executives would communicate problems as they arose
during a crisis.
Wednesday's announcement was the first time the two major banking
regulators, the Federal Reserve and the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, issued joint determinations flunking banks' plans,
commonly called "living wills."
If the five, which also included Bank of America Corp, State Street
Corp and Bank of New York Mellon Corp., do not correct serious
"deficiencies" in their plans by October, they could face stricter
regulations, like higher capital requirements or limits on business
activities, regulators said.
Accomplishing that task may not be easy: criticized banks have five
months to reassess and rewrite wide swaths of their resolution plans
to regulators' satisfaction. At the same time, compliance
departments will also be focused on regulatory stress tests, whose
results will be released before October.
If the deficiencies persist for two years, then the banks will have
to divest their assets. They have until July 2017 to address more
minor "shortcomings."
The regulators' report coincided with the start of banks' earnings
reporting period and bank shares rallied. Shares of JP Morgan,
Citigroup and Bank of America all closed up more than 3 percent and
Wells Fargo shares were up 2.87 percent.
The requirement for a living will was part of the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street reform legislation passed in the wake of the 2007-2009
financial crisis, when the U.S. government spent billions of dollars
on bailouts to keep big banks from failing and wrecking the U.S.
economy.
The plans are separate from the Fed's stress tests, where banks
demonstrate stability by showing how they would withstand economic
shocks in hypothetical scenarios.
"The FDIC and Federal Reserve are committed to carrying out the
statutory mandate that systemically important financial institutions
demonstrate a clear path to an orderly failure under bankruptcy at
no cost to taxpayers," FDIC Chairman Martin Gruenberg said in a
statement. "Today's action is a significant step toward achieving
that goal."
But the agency's vice chairman, Thomas Hoenig, who was a voting
member of the Federal Open Market Committee during the crisis, said
the plans show that no firm is "capable of being resolved in an
orderly fashion through bankruptcy."
"The goal to end 'too big to fail' and protect the American taxpayer
by ending bailouts remains just that: only a goal," he said.
The three remaining large, systemically important banks, which the
U.S. government considers "too big to fail," did not fare much
better in their evaluations, but sidestepped potential sanctions
because they were not given joint determinations.
The regulators continue to assess plans for four foreign banks
labeled "systemically important" - Barclays PLC, Credit Suisse Group
, Deutsche Bank AG , and UBS Group AG.
The FDIC alone determined the plan submitted by Goldman Sachs was
not credible, while the Federal Reserve Board on its own found
Morgan Stanley's plan not credible. Citigroup's living will did
pass, but regulators noted it had "shortcomings."
Goldman Sachs said in a statement it has made "significant progress"
and Morgan Stanley said resolution planning is one of its "highest
priorities."
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Citigroup will work to address the shortcomings, Chief Executive
Michael Corbat said in a statement.
'KEY VULNERABILITIES'
The deficiencies across the five banks largely revolved around
liquidity, governance and operations.
While JPMorgan has "made notable progress in a range of areas," the
regulators said it "has key vulnerabilities," including an inability
to estimate the liquidity needed and available for funding
bankruptcy resolution and insufficient resources for winding down
derivatives.
On a conference call on JPMorgan's earnings, bank executives
expressed disappointment with the determination and Chief Executive
Officer Jamie Dimon said the bank has "tons of liquidity."
"It's more about reporting, legal entities and things like that," he
said. "And if other firms can satisfy that I’d be surprised if we
can’t.”
The agencies said Wells Fargo's living will "exhibited a lack of
governance and certain operational capabilities."
By October it must demonstrate a "robust process to ensure quality
control and accuracy" in its plan and lay out legally how different
lines of business can be restructured and its regional units can be
separated.
Wells, State Street and Bank of New York all said in statements they
will work to address the deficiencies by the October 1 deadline.
Bank of America did not comment.
The determinations raised debate about how living wills can help
banks survive a financial catastrophe.
Proponents of stronger financial regulation welcomed them, with
Senator Sherrod Brown of Ohio, the most powerful Democrat on the
Senate Banking Committee, saying they were "an important step in the
effort to protect Americans from being on the hook for the failures
of ‘too big to fail’ banks in the future."
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton said regulators
need to break big banks apart if they don't fix their living will
problems over time. Her rival, Bernie Sanders, pointed out on
Twitter that many big banks have only gotten bigger since they were
bailed out during the financial crisis.
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, though, said the process "is broken."
"Contradictory outcomes through different tools such as stress tests
and living wills harm the ability of regulators to achieve financial
stability and for market participants to understand what regulators
are doing," said David Hirschmann, head of the business group's
capital markets center.
(Reporting by Lisa Lambert; Additional reporting by David Henry,
Olivia Oran, Dan Freed and Lauren LaCapra in New York; Editing by
Chizu Nomiyama and Nick Zieminski)
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