Yellen: Financial rules
have made economy stronger, changes should be 'modest'
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[August 26, 2017]
By Howard Schneider, Jonathan Spicer and Pete Schroeder
JACKSON HOLE, Wyo. (Reuters) - Reforms put
in place after the 2007 to 2009 crisis have strengthened the financial
system without impeding economic growth and any changes to these rules
should remain modest, Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen said Friday in
her fullest defense yet of the regulations enacted after the Great
Recession.
"The balance of research suggests that the core reforms we have put in
place have substantially boosted resilience without unduly limiting
credit availability or economic growth," the Fed chair said at an annual
central bank research conference.
Yellen's remarks amount to a broad defense of the existing regulatory
framework, and an implicit rebuke of President Donald Trump's desire to
drastically lighten the oversight of the financial sector in a bid to
boost the economy.
They also may amount to her parting view on financial rules, as Trump
considers whether to renominate Yellen to another four-year term as head
of the central bank, with her current term expiring in February.
"She is sort of putting a stake in the ground here in terms of this
regulation issue, which is the one sort of sticking point between her
and Trump right now," said Phil Orlando, chief equity market strategist
at Federated Investors in New York.
Yellen acknowledged some possible changes to individual regulations may
be warranted, specifically mentioning possible relaxation of the Volcker
rule limit on banks' equity trading, and further relaxation of rules
that apply to medium-sized and smaller banks. Steps may be needed, she
agreed, to improve liquidity in parts of the bond market, though that
system remained "robust."
But she also defended several financial rules that have come under
scrutiny by top Trump administration officials and leading Republicans
in Congress. Specifically, Yellen defended the annual stress testing of
large banks, allowing regulators to assign stricter oversight to firms
critical to the financial system, and permitting regulators to step in
and wind down failing financial institutions.
Republicans have long argued that the raft of new financial rules put in
place as part of the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial reform law are hindering
lending and the overall economy. An intense partisan divide in Congress
will likely hinder any broad legislative rewrite of existing rules, but
the Trump administration is slowly replacing regulators who drafted the
initial post-crisis rules with new officials much more sympathetic to a
lighter regulatory touch.
[to top of second column] |
Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen testifies before a Senate
Banking Committee hearing on the 'Semiannual Monetary Policy Report
to the Congress' on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S. July 13, 2017.
REUTERS/Carlos Barria/File Photo
Trump's nominee as vice chair of the Fed for regulatory issues, Randal Quarles,
has been an advocate of such changes. And Gary Cohn, Trump's top economic
adviser and a reported favorite to replace Yellen, would also likely pursue more
aggressive deregulation.
Overall, Yellen said, "any adjustment to the regulatory framework should be
modest and preserve the increase in resilience" in a financial system she said
is now better able to weather future shocks.
She did not mention monetary policy in her prepared remarks, disappointing some
investors who had hoped she might offer hints on the Fed's path on interest
rates.
U.S. stocks rose and the dollar fell, while Treasury yields dipped slightly.
Yellen said she and other current Fed members are not averse to revisiting how
different regulations are working in practice, "and considering appropriate
adjustments."
But she cautioned against putting the events of a decade ago too far in the rear
view mirror."Already, for some, memories of this experience may be fading -
memories of just how costly the financial crisis was," she told an audience of
Fed staff and central bank colleagues from around the world.
The stability of the current system guards against a repeat, she said, while
outside analysts have noted that it could also free central bankers to leave
interest rates lower instead of worrying about the impact of those low rates on
financial markets.
"The Federal Reserve is committed to evaluating where reforms are working and
where improvements are needed to most efficiently maintain a resilient financial
system," she said.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider and Jonathan Spicer; Additional reporting by Pete
Schroeder in Washington; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
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