Federal Reserve vice chair for supervision Randal Quarles plays
a key role in Trump's pledge to spur economic growth by easing
post-financial crisis regulations, and his proposals will likely
be challenged by Democratic lawmakers.
Quarles will appear before the House Financial Services
Committee on Tuesday and the Senate Banking Committee on
Thursday, giving lawmakers their first opportunity to quiz the
Fed official since he took office in October.
But Quarles, a former Wall Street lawyer and U.S. Treasury
official, will likely strike a measured tone, with the Fed
looking to avoid political friction under the chairmanship of
Jerome Powell.
Quarles will warn of the need to retain key post-crisis reforms
that have made the financial system safer, while also arguing
that some can be simplified without creating new risks,
according to written testimony submitted on Monday.
"We are mindful that, just as there is a strong public interest
in the safety and soundness of the financial system, there is a
strong public interest in the efficiency of the financial
system," he said in the prepared remarks.
The so-called stress tests that analyze how a bank would cope
with market shocks should be put out to public comment, Quarles
will say. Banks have long complained the tests are too opaque.
He will also propose easing liquidity requirements for big banks
that are not global, as part of a broader effort to tailor rules
to firms' size and risk profile.
During his six months in office, Quarles has already proposed
easing other aspects of annual bank stress tests and begun work
to simplify the so-called Volcker Rule banning banks from making
profit-seeking trades on their own account.
Last week, the Fed also proposed simplifying capital rules by
making them more sensitive to firms' business models, a move
that could potentially ease the capital burden for some banks.
(Reporting by Katanga Johnson; Editing by Michelle Price and
Meredith Mazzilli)
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