Analysis: U.S. Fed's Powell faces political test on bank capital relief
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[March 18, 2021] By
Pete Schroeder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - An esoteric bank
capital rule has become an unlikely political hot potato for U.S.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, as the Republican appointee enters
the final 12 months of his term under the administration of Democratic
President Joe Biden, analysts said.
On March 31, an emergency pandemic regulatory relief measure that for
the past year has allowed Wall Street banks to hold less capital against
certain assets as a cushion against potential losses is due to expire.
The industry has been lobbying the Fed to extend the relief, arguing the
rule is fundamentally flawed and reprising it could stall the U.S.
economic recovery. But powerful Democrats, already angry with Powell for
granting Wall Street several regulatory breaks under the Trump
administration, are pressuring him to deny another industry giveaway.
Whether to extend the relief has become the first major political test
for Powell under the Biden administration as, like his predecessors, he
is expected to seek re-nomination.
Appearing to yield to the industry could put a second term in jeopardy
for Powell, who was appointed Fed chair by former Republican President
Donald Trump, because anti-Wall Street progressives control the Senate
Banking Committee, which vets Fed nominees, and hold sway over White
House financial nominees, analysts said.
"Powell [is] in a politically precarious position," said Isaac Boltansky,
director of policy research at Washington-based Compass Point Research &
Trading. "This decision will leave someone politically important unhappy
with him."
The Fed, an independent agency, declined to comment. When asked about
the rule at a Wednesday press briefing, Powell said the central bank
would announce "something" in coming days.
Regulators introduced the supplementary leverage ratio following the
decade-ago financial crisis as an extra safeguard. It requires big banks
to hold an additional layer of capital against assets, regardless of
their risk.
In April 2020, after a meltdown in the Treasury market and as
cash-strapped bank customers rushed to draw down credit lines, the Fed
temporarily exempted banks' holdings of U.S. Treasuries and deposits
held with the central bank from the rule.
Wall Street lobby groups say if the Fed doesn't extend the relief, banks
may have to be pickier about accepting deposits, pull back from lending,
or buy less Treasury debt. That could spark another bout of Treasury
market turmoil and reduce overall credit in the system, setting back the
recovery.
The Bank Policy Institute, which represents JPMorgan Chase & Co and
Goldman Sachs Group Inc, among others, said this month that returning to
the normal rules could create "an incentive for banks to reduce
low-risk, balance-sheet-intensive activities." It said the Fed should
extend the relief indefinitely and pursue a broader overhaul of its
rules.
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Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell testifies before the Senate
Banking Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S.,
December 1, 2020. Susan Walsh/Pool via REUTERS
Progressives, including Senators Elizabeth Warren and Sherrod Brown, who now
heads the Senate Banking Committee, say banks are cynically seizing an
opportunity to ease more rules.
They point out that big banks have enough capital to buy back shares and issue
dividends - activities that the Fed must approve based on banks' capital
reserves - and they have warned Powell in published letters not to "weaken one
of the most important post-crisis regulatory reforms."
MAYHEM FEAR
Some analysts agree banks are overplaying the risks.
Credit Suisse analyst Zoltan Pozsar wrote on Tuesday that the overwhelming
majority of the exempt assets are held by banks' operating subsidiaries, not by
the bank holding companies, to which the Fed granted the relief.
And while regulators granted similar optional relief to those subsidiaries, most
failed to make use of it because there were strings attached. That means any
expiration could have a muted impact, wrote Pozsar. "Neither the Fed nor the
market should fear mayhem if the exemption expires," he wrote.
Under Powell's leadership, the Fed has revised and eliminated bank rules arguing
they were overly burdensome. The changes drew the ire of progressive Democrats
and advocacy groups, who say they increase risks and hurt consumers.
Powell - who was originally appointed to the Fed's Board of Governors as a
moderate Republican by Democratic President Barack Obama in 2012 and would serve
out the rest of his term until 2028 if he is not renamed to a second term as Fed
chair - has won bipartisan support for his swift handling of the economic
crisis. But siding with Wall Street would hand ammunition to progressives who
want a Democrat in a position with such singular power to steer the U.S.
economy, especially if Powell fails to persuade the board's longstanding
Democratic governor Lael Brainard to back the move.
She voted for the relief in April, but has dissented against several rule
changes she said were too generous to Wall Street, and her votes are closely
tracked by progressives.
The Fed may in theory be independent, but it is acutely aware of the dynamics,
said Ed Mills, a policy analyst with Raymond James.
"Does the Fed want one of their first policy decisions of Senator Brown’s
chairmanship to be one that Brown considers a 'grave error'?" he said.
(Reporting by Pete Schroeder; additional reporting by Howard Schneider; editing
by Michelle Price and Leslie Adler)
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