Factbox-Who will get the Fed regulation job? Here are some of the
contenders
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[December 29, 2021] By
Pete Schroeder and Michelle Price
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - While President Joe
Biden said last month that he would renominate U.S. Federal Reserve
chair Jerome Powell, he left Washington guessing as to who would become
the Fed's new regulatory chief.
Speculation over who will get the role is once again ramping up, after
the Wall Street Journal on Tuesday reported that the White House was
considering Sarah Bloom Raskin, a former Fed governor and former
Treasury Department official, for the position.
Republican appointee Randal Quarles in October stepped down from that
powerful role overseeing the country's largest lenders, and is due to
leave the central bank by year end. Biden said that and other Fed picks
would be announced in early December.
Analysts and Washington insiders had seen fellow Fed governor Lael
Brainard as the leading candidate to replace Quarles because she opposed
his agenda to revisit rules created following the 2007-2009 global
financial crisis. However, she is stepping into the Fed Vice Chair role
that focuses on economic and monetary policy.
Progressives are pushing for a candidate who would take a tougher stance
on Wall Street, although it is unclear if they will get their way. Here
are the leading names in the mix, according to multiple analysts and
Washington insiders.
SARAH BLOOM RASKIN, FORMER OBAMA OFFICIAL
A former Fed governor and Treasury official, Raskin is supported by
progressives but could also get enough Senate votes to secure the
position, said Jaret Seiberg, an analyst at Cowen Washington Research
Group.
As a Fed governor from 2010 to 2014, Raskin slammed proprietary trading
as of “low or no real economic value” and pushed for a strict
interpretation of the “Volcker Rule,” a major post-crisis reform curbing
such speculative investments.
Former President Barack Obama later tapped Raskin to serve as deputy
Treasury secretary. She also spent time as the top financial regulator
for Maryland before joining the Fed.
However, Raskin recently took on a new role at Duke Law, where she has
taught since 2017. She will become faculty director of the law school's
Global Financial Markets Center next year. Raskin did not respond to
requests for comment.
RICHARD CORDRAY, FORMER CFPB HEAD
A former Ohio attorney general, Cordray served as the first director of
the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) from 2012 to 2017. Under
his leadership the agency took an aggressive stance going after abusive
mortgage and payday lenders, earning praise from progressives and
criticism from Republicans who said he was overstepping the agency's
statutory remit.
After leaving the agency, Cordray ran unsuccessfully for Ohio governor.
He currently runs the Education Department's student loan program.
Cordray did not respond to requests for comment.
NELLIE LIANG, TREASURY UNDER-SECRETARY
Currently Treasury under secretary for domestic finance and a former Fed
official, Liang was instrumental in building the post-crisis regulatory
framework. She spent decades at the Fed as a staffer, ultimately
becoming its first director of the Division of Financial Stability
following the financial crisis.
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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/File Photo
She left the central bank in 2017 to join the think tank Brookings Institution,
where she criticized Republican efforts to trim capital and liquidity
requirements for large banks, among other changes.
Liang had previously been nominated for a Fed board seat by former President
Donald Trump, but she withdrew in 2019 after Republicans blocked her nomination
over worries she would be too tough on Wall Street.
"We would expect her to tighten big bank oversight, but she also strikes us as
pragmatic, which may not work for progressives," Cowen Washington Research
Group's Seiberg wrote.
A spokesperson for Liang declined to comment.
RAPHAEL BOSTIC, ATLANTA FED PRESIDENT
With his appointment as President of the Atlanta Fed in 2017, Bostic became the
first Black person to hold a regional Fed president role. He has been outspoken
on racial diversity and economic inequality issues, both of which are key policy
priorities for the Biden administration.
An economist by training, Bostic previously held roles at the Fed in Washington,
where he won praise for his work on community lending rules, and at the
Department of Housing and Urban Development.
However, Bostic "represents a bit of an unknown regarding financial regulation,"
wrote Brian Gardner, chief Washington policy strategist at Stifel Financial
Corp.
In an interview on Bloomberg Television on Monday, Bostic said he had "no trips
to Washington" on his calendar and that any decision on such an appointment was
out of his hands.
A spokesperson for Bostic declined to comment.
MICHAEL HSU, MEHRSA BARADARAN
Currently Acting Comptroller of the Currency, Hsu previously led big bank
supervision at the Fed. As acting Comptroller, he has pushed Democratic
priorities, including climate change risk and has warned banks against
"over-confidence" coming out of the pandemic.
While he would be a good fit for Fed supervision, Washington insiders said, the
nominee to replace him as permanent Comptroller, Saule Omarova, may not secure
enough Senate votes after some moderate Democrats expressed concerns over her
academic work. That means the White House may need Hsu to stick around.
Baradaran, an academic and expert on financial inclusion, is loved by
progressives who pushed her for as Comptroller. But the White House passed her
over due to concerns among the industry and moderate lawmakers, some of whom
said she did not have sufficient experience in government.
A spokeswoman for Hsu declined to comment, and Baradaran did not immediately
respond to a request for comment.
(Reporting by Michelle Price; Editing by Alison Williams, Nick Zieminski and
Chizu Nomiyama)
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