Wall Street and Fed fly blind as coronavirus upends
annual stress tests
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[June 01, 2020] By
Pete Schroeder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. financial
regulators, banks and their investors will get their first glimpse into
the health of the nation's banking system as it confronts soaring
corporate and consumer defaults in the economic crisis sparked by the
novel coronavirus.
And no-one, including the U.S. Federal Reserve which sets the annual
bank "stress test" exams, has a clue what to expect.
“That is the $100,000 question. Actually, it’s much bigger than that and
I am sure the Fed is working hard to get it right. We’re curious, and we
don’t have clarity," said Kevin Fromer, CEO of the Financial Services
Forum, which represents the biggest banks in the U.S.
That could mean banks may be on the hook for billions more in capital
than they had anticipated, which could ultimately force them to slash
dividends, slim down their balance sheets or reduce lending.
Since the 2009 financial crisis, the Fed has tested annually a snapshot
of big bank balance sheets against an extreme hypothetical economic
shock. The results ultimately dictate how much capital banks can dish
out to shareholders.
This year, however, the real life economic blow dealt by the pandemic
has by several measures exceeded the doomsday scenario the Fed unveiled
in February, leading some banks to grumble it may as well scrap the
tests this year.
Instead, the Fed told banks after they had handed in their exam papers
in April that it was adding an extra test to reflect the rapid
deterioration of economic conditions in recent months.
That eleventh-hour change combined with other tweaks the Fed passed last
year has thrown the stress test playbook out the window.
"Unnecessarily increasing bank capital could serve to limit bank balance
sheets at exactly the wrong time, likely chilling economic recovery,"
the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association wrote in a
note on Friday in which it urged the Fed to stick to its original plan.
While the banking sector has so far proved resilient, some Fed officials
worry it will come under greater stress as mass unemployment leads to
more corporate and consumer debt defaults, according to minutes from the
Fed's April meeting.
The country's largest four lenders - JPMorgan Chase & Co <JPM.N>, Wells
Fargo & Co <WFC.N>, Bank of America Corp <BAC.N>, and Citigroup Inc <C.N>
- combined put aside $20 billion to cover expected loan losses in the
first quarter alone. Those lenders, alongside Goldman Sachs Group Inc <GS.N>
and Morgan Stanley <MS.N>, are among the 34 banks to best tested this
year.
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A man wears a protective mask as he walks past the New York Stock
Exchange on the corner of Wall and Broad streets during the
coronavirus outbreak in New York City, New York, U.S., March 13,
2020./File Photo
Banks say they are in the dark about the potential outcome because the Fed
hasn't provided any details on how the extra analysis will work or which factors
it plans to probe.
Some analysts expect the central bank to adjust for more job losses, which has
already blown through the 10% level outlined in its February scenario, and to
significantly raise lenders' potential loan loss rates from the roughly 6% of
previous years.
Nellie Liang, a former Fed official who is now a senior fellow at Brookings
Institution, said the central bank will likely also probe banks' exposures to
struggling sectors like hotels.
"From a credibility standpoint, they need to be very severe, not just try to
catch up with what's already happened," said Tim Clark, another former Fed
official who helped build the stress tests and now works with the advocacy group
Better Markets.
Regulatory changes to the tests agreed before the pandemic have created another
unknown. This year the Fed will integrate the stress test results with other
capital rules so as to better tailor banks' overall capital level to their
business mix.
Analysts at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods and Evercore ISI have said they expect the
tests to result overall in less excess capital which may force banks to cut
dividends. While the Fed declined to comment, some officials have said lenders
should be prepared for that outcome, according to the April minutes.
But with pressure from the government and lawmakers to keep banks lending, some
analysts are leaning the other way. Goldman Sachs said in a note last week that
while the Fed could order higher bank capital, it may actually lower
requirements "given the extra-ordinary demands on balance sheets."
(Reporting by Pete Schroeder; editing by Michelle Price and Edward Tobin)
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