Wall Street in coronavirus contingency mode with staff,
visitors, regulators
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[February 29, 2020] By
Michelle Price and Imani Moise
WASHINGTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Big U.S.
banks have been rolling out contingency plans to respond to the global
coronavirus outbreak - requiring some staff to work from home,
implementing travel restrictions, and talking to regulators about
potential stresses.
The preparations come amid growing fears that the fast-spreading virus
which has infected around 83,000 people in more than 50 countries could
lead to a global recession. Stock markets have plunged, with the S&P 500
<.SPX> index dropping 11.5% this week, the worst showing since the 2008
financial crisis. [MKTS/GLOB]
Banks are not the only companies affected by the spread of the disease,
but their position as market intermediaries and custodians of critical
infrastructure has put the health of their employees, operations, and
balance sheets in the spotlight.
On Friday, U.S. presidential candidate and Massachusetts Senator
Elizabeth Warren sent a letter to the five largest U.S. banks asking how
they are preparing to mitigate the risks of the outbreak.
"As a globally systemic important bank, your institution and the
customers it serves could be impacted either directly through exposures
to areas where the virus has spread or indirectly through a change in
market conditions," she wrote.
Financial firms started dusting off long-standing contingency playbooks
several weeks ago when the virus was spreading through China, two
industry officials told Reuters.
Big U.S. banks are in daily contact with federal, state and local
regulators on a range of issues, sources said, but lately coronavirus
preparations have taken center stage. Discussions have centered around
how to keep markets, transactions and other banking functions operating
smoothly, as well as handling employee quarantines.
One major bank brought an epidemiologist into its regular risk
management gathering on Friday morning, a person who attended the
meeting told Reuters.
JPMorgan Chase & Co <JPM.N>, the largest U.S. bank by assets, told
employees on Thursday that it was restricting all but essential
international work travel due to the continued spread of the virus.
Citigroup Inc <C.N> has restricted business travel in all Asian
countries and Italy, and has asked employees who have visited affected
areas to work from home for 14 days, a person familiar with the matter
said. The bank has also imposed short-term restrictions on large
meetings that require international travel.
Earlier this week, Morgan Stanley <MS.N> and Goldman Sachs Group Inc <GS.N>
asked attendees of several conferences they are hosting in the coming
weeks to disclose if they or people they have close contact with have
traveled to mainland China, South Korea, parts of Italy and Japan.
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A Wall St. street sign is seen near the New York Stock Exchange
(NYSE) in New York City, U.S., March 7, 2019. REUTERS/Brendan
McDermid
Goldman Sachs asked them to skip the conferences if so. In Goldman's New York
headquarters, signs posted at check-in ask guests who recently traveled to China
or had close contact with someone who did to reschedule their meetings.
Several major banks in Hong Kong and Singapore, including HSBC Group Plc <HSBA.L>,
Morgan Stanley, and DBS Bank, have also restricted travel and are allowing staff
to work from home.
Citi has imposed tighter restrictions in affected countries, including
temperature checks and home-working, the person familiar with the matter said.
Many are also preparing workforces to work from home and dishing out hygiene
advice, urging staff to frequently wash their hands and use antiseptic wipes,
sources said. LONG PREPARED
Since the 9/11 terrorist attacks on in New York, Wall Street has developed
extensive contingency plans for dealing with large scale disruptions, including
pandemics.
They most recently deployed such plans during Hurricane Sandy in 2012 and
reviewed and updated them after that disaster, Kenneth Bentsen Jr., chief
executive of the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, which
leads industry continuity planning, told Reuters on Thursday.
If an outbreak of coronavirus hits New York, markets would likely continue to
function even if the floor of the New York Stock Exchange had to close. Stock
exchanges have said they have contingency plans.
Financial firms have back-up facilities in U.S. cities including Dallas, Tampa,
Chicago, and Phoenix from which they can continue trading and perform other
vital functions, although U.S. banks have yet to activate them, two sources
said. Some banks in Asia are already using secondary sites, they said.
Lenders are also considering splitting up critical teams into rotating shifts
and physically distancing staff from one another, the official said.
"It's something the industry regularly plans for," said Bentsen. "We're prepared
as we need to be."
(Additional reporting by Elizabeth Dilts and Matt Scuffham in New York; editing
by Lauren LaCapra and Rosalba O'Brien)
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