Big U.S. bank CEOs to be grilled by Congress on consumer, social issues
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[September 19, 2022] By
Pete Schroeder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The chief executives
of JPMorgan, Bank of America, Citigroup, Wells Fargo and other major
U.S. retail banks will be grilled this week by lawmakers on a slew of
issues, from the state of the economy to their stances on hot-button
issues including abortion and fossil-fuel lending.
Payments fraud, boosting diversity, mergers and access to bank branches,
are also expected to feature when the CEOs appear before the House
Financial Services Committee and Senate Banking Committees on Wednesday
and Thursday, respectively, according bank officials, congressional
aides and lobbyists.
The line-up includes the CEOs of the four largest U.S. banks: JPMorgan's
Jamie Dimon, Bank of America's Brian Moynihan, Citi's Jane Fraser and
Wells Fargo's Charles Scharf. They will be joined by USBancorp CEO Andy
Cecere, PNC Financial CEO William Demchak, and Truist Financial CEO
William Rogers, who run the country's largest regional lenders.
While such hearings rarely result in legislative action, they are still
risky for CEOs, who will be forced to defend their banks on a number of
fronts when lawmakers are looking to boost their profiles ahead of
November elections.
During a similar hearing last year, Dimon was drawn into a fiery
exchange with Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren about overdraft fees.
Former Wells Fargo CEO Tim Sloan, meanwhile, resigned abruptly in March
2019 two weeks after stumbling during a House committee hearing about
the bank's progress in fixing its regulatory woes.
The hearing comes amid growing worries that Federal Reserve rate hikes
aimed at taming inflation could tip the country into a recession. In
June, Jamie Dimon said the U.S. economy was facing a "hurricane" but
could not predict how bad it would be.
Lawmakers are likely to quiz the CEOs about how consumers' finances are
holding up and how the lenders plan to assist Americans as borrowing
costs rise.
“We will continue to hold the nation's biggest banks accountable so that
Americans can keep more of their hard-earned money – at a time that they
need it most,” said Senate Banking Committee chair Senator Sherrod Brown
in a statement to Reuters.
The banks believe they have a positive story to tell about how well they
performed during the COVID-19 pandemic while helping distribute billions
of dollars of aid; their ongoing role in the broader economy; and their
efforts to boost pay for rank-and-file workers, promote racial equity in
the communities they serve, and boost staff diversity.
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JP Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon delivers a
speech during the inauguration of the new French headquarters of JP
Morgan bank in Paris, France June 29, 2021. Michel Euler/Pool via
REUTERS
That's a message the banks' executives, lobbyists, and trade groups
have conveyed during a marathon of private meetings with key
lawmakers over the past few weeks, the sources said.
"There's a lot for our banks to point to, to demonstrate how much
they've done to support consumers, small businesses, and the economy
throughout the pandemic and continuing today," said Lindsey Johnson,
CEO of the Consumer Bankers Association.
'WOKE' PUSHBACK
Since the 2007-2009 financial crisis, Democrats including Brown and
House Financial Services Committee chair Maxine Waters have taken a
tough stance on the banking industry and are expected to keep up the
pressure at the hearings.
In private letters, the committees have asked the CEOs to provide
details on their capital levels, bank branch locations, employee
wages, executive pay, efforts to reduce carbon emissions, stock
buybacks, fair lending, and abortion coverage, among other items,
according to a copies seen by Reuters.
But bank executives are also wary of growing criticism from
Republicans, traditionally allies who have pushed back against heavy
regulation, over what they see as Wall Street's increasingly liberal
leanings on environment and social issues.
Republicans at the state and federal level are cracking down on
banks for "boycotting" industries such as energy and guns, a
characterization banks dispute. Conservatives have also slammed
lenders for "woke" stances on other issues such as covering travel
costs for employees' out-of-state abortions.
"Americans deserve to hear how these banks will support their
customers through troubling economic headwinds ... instead of
far-left talking points," Patrick McHenry, the top Republican on the
House panel, said in a statement to Reuters.
While executives faced some critical questions from Republicans on
such issues last year, the pressure will be greater this time, said
analysts.
"The big banks really have fewer friends than they used to, there's
no doubt about it," said Brian Gardner, chief Washington policy
strategist at Stifel Financial Corp.
(Reporting by Pete Schroeder; editing by Michelle Price and Nick
Zieminski)
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