Trading tantrum? Fed officials' personal dealings stir controversy, call
for change
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[September 11, 2021] By
Jonnelle Marte, Howard Schneider and Ann Saphir
(Reuters) - Media reports this week that
two of the Federal Reserve's 12 regional bank presidents were active
traders has some of the central bank's most vocal critics questioning
the rules that allowed them to engage in the transactions in the first
place.
Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan and Boston Fed President Eric
Rosengren made frequent or substantial trades in 2020, the Wall Street
Journal and Bloomberg reported earlier this week. The trades occurred
during a year in which the central bank took major actions to shore up
the economy and swooning financial markets after they were broadsided by
the coronavirus pandemic.
While the trades were permitted under the Fed system's ethics
guidelines, their disclosure prompted some observers and a top lawmaker
to flag possible conflicts of interest.
"Forget about the individual trades," said Benjamin Dulchin, director of
the Fed Up Campaign at the Center for Popular Democracy, a group that
advocates for the Fed to focus more on the needs of American workers.
"The issue is that a president of a Fed bank - one of the handful of
people who ... set our country's monetary policy - so clearly has his
personal interests aligned with the success of our biggest
corporations."
On Thursday, Kaplan and Rosengren said in separate statements that their
trades complied with the Fed's ethics rules. They also said they would
change their investment practices to address "even the appearance of any
conflict of interest" and sell all individual stock holdings by Sept.
30, moving the proceeds into cash or passively invested index funds.
Both Kaplan and Rosengren said they would not trade on those accounts as
long as they are serving as Fed presidents.
The changes came after they both faced criticism for transactions made
last year, dealings that were first reported by the Wall Street Journal
this week. Each has since made his annual financial disclosures public.
The documents showed that Kaplan, for instance, bought and sold at least
$18 million in individual stocks in 2020, mostly tech stocks like Apple
Inc and Amazon.com Inc and energy stocks such as Marathon Petroleum
Corp. All of those transactions were reviewed by the Dallas Fed general
counsel, said Dallas Fed spokesman James Hoard.
Rosengren, who has publicly shared concerns about potential
over-valuation risks in the commercial real estate sector, held stakes
in four real estate investment trusts and made other investment trades,
as highlighted by a Bloomberg report.
"Regrettably, the appearance of such permissible personal investment
decisions has generated some questions, so I have made the decision to
divest these assets to underscore my commitment to Fed ethics
guidelines," Rosengren said in a statement on Thursday.
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Dallas Federal Reserve Bank President Robert Kaplan walks after the
True Economic Talks event in Mexico City, Mexico, July 14, 2017.
REUTERS/Edgard Garrido
CALLS FOR GREATER OVERSIGHT
Fed officials are subject to specific restrictions, such as not trading during
the “blackout period” around each Fed meeting when policy-sensitive information
is distributed, not holding stocks in banks or mutual funds concentrated in the
financial sector, and not reselling securities within 30 days of purchase.
But the Code of Conduct has broader language as well.
“An employee should avoid any situation that might give rise to an actual
conflict of interest or even the appearance of a conflict of interest,” the code
states. Those with access to market-moving information “should avoid engaging in
any financial transaction the timing of which could create the appearance of
acting on inside information concerning Federal Reserve deliberations and
actions.”
The financial disclosures did not look strikingly different from prior years.
But 2020 was a signature year for the Fed in which, by its own account, it
crossed "red lines" to ensure financial markets continued to function. In a
rapid-fire response to the then-unfolding pandemic, Fed policymakers in March
2020 slashed interest rates to near zero and rolled out programs meant to keep
the markets for Treasury bonds, mortgage-backed securities and corporate bonds
working smoothly.
The Fed's fast action was praised for helping to stave off a larger financial
market collapse, an achievement Fed officials say helped to minimize the hit to
the economy. But some criticized the Fed's moves for helping to boost asset
prices while not doing enough to support small businesses and households on Main
Street.
Some Fed-watchers say it may be time for the rules to be reviewed.
"This is more evidence that the oversight of the Federal Reserve regional bank
presidents is broken," said Aaron Klein, a senior fellow at the Brookings
Institution. "I don’t know if this is a failure to enforce the rules, or a
failure of the rules."
U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren, long one of Washington's most vocal critics of
the central bank's approach to financial regulation, said Fed officials should
not be allowed to trade.
"I've said it before and will say it again: Members of Congress and senior
government officials should not be allowed to trade or own stocks," Warren
posted on Twitter on Friday. "Period."
(Reporting by Jonnelle Marte in New York, Howard Schneider in Washington and Ann
Saphir in Berkeley, Calif.; Editing by Dan Burns and Matthew Lewis)
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