New-look U.S. bank 'stress tests' may leave analysts
guessing
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[June 24, 2020] By
David Henry and Pete Schroeder
NEW YORK/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. bank
analysts have cleared their diaries on Thursday ahead of a long evening
poring over results of the Federal Reserve's bank health checks, which
have been upended this year by the coronavirus pandemic.
Since 2009, toward the end of the financial crisis, the U.S. central
bank has tested a snapshot of big bank balance sheets against an extreme
hypothetical economic shock to assess their risk of losses, capital
strength and capital requirements.
This year, analysts, investors and bankers are flying blind after the
economic crisis triggered by the outbreak of novel coronavirus coincided
with a new regulatory tweak to rip up the Fed's "stress test" playbook.
"Inevitably, there will be some surprises in the results," said Gerard
Cassidy, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets, adding that the tests were
"a major event" due to the changes.
The uncertainty has been reflected in unusual volatility in options on
bank securities in the last three months, according to Goldman Sachs
research published on June 15.
The Fed will release results of the test, which was devised before the
pandemic, on Thursday after markets close. The Fed is expected to
provide guidance on how banks would fare if the current economic slump
worsens.
But it will hold back information on each bank's capital requirements,
and lenders will not be able to announce their plans for capital
distributions, such as dividends, until Monday evening.
This year, the Fed will not outrightly "pass" or "fail" banks, making
the results even more ambiguous for analysts and investors trying to
calculate where each bank stands.
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Federal Reserve Board building on Constitution Avenue is pictured in
Washington, U.S., March 19, 2019. REUTERS/Leah Millis/File Photo
One item analysts say they will focus on is the impact of a new "stress capital
buffer" the Fed introduced to better align lenders' capital requirements with
their risk profiles.
The big unknown is how much that new buffer raises each banks' overall capital
requirement: the closer that requirement gets to the bank's actual capital
level, the greater the chance it must cut distributions. Dividend limits are
calculated as a percentage of the past four quarters of income, which has been
declining due to pandemic-related loan losses.
The Fed will not release final buffer data for several weeks, but analysts
believe they can figure it out Thursday night using a formula in the new buffer
rule, and other data the Fed will provide on how badly the tests dented banks'
overall cushion.
For now, analysts expect most banks to be okay because of the strong buffers
that were built up over the past decade, but it remains unclear how badly losses
on loans to struggling consumers and companies could alter that calculation in
coming months.
"Bank specific results will not be disclosed, so estimating capital plans will
be challenged," Brian Kleinhanzl, an analyst with Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, wrote
on Friday. "Dividend cuts can still not be ruled out."
(Reporting by David Henry in New York and Pete Schroeder in Washington; Editing
by Paul Simao)
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