Fed's Bowman calls for external review of Silicon Valley Bank oversight
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[May 12, 2023] By
Pete Schroeder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Federal Reserve Governor Michelle Bowman said
Friday that the central bank should hire an outside party to further
examine the events that led to the abrupt failure of Silicon Valley
Bank, arguing in a rare Fed insider's critique that it is a necessary
supplement to its own internal review.
In prepared remarks, Bowman also cautioned against using recent turmoil
in the banking sector as "pretext" for aggressive new banking rules,
calling the current system "fundamentally strong."
Speaking at a conference in Germany, Bowman argued an independent review
was necessary to ensure the Fed holds itself accountable for
shortcomings overseeing the bank before its March collapse, and comes
after Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michael Barr already published the
central bank's own autopsy.
"I believe that the Federal Reserve should engage an independent third
party to prepare a report to supplement the limited internal review to
fully understand the failure of SVB. This would be a logical next step
in holding ourselves accountable and would help to eliminate the doubts
that may naturally accompany any self-assessment prepared and reviewed
by a single member of the Board of Governors," she said.
Bowman also warned against any aggressive broad push for stricter bank
rules in the wake of recent failures, arguing tough rules are already in
place and regulators should take a more targeted approach.
"We should avoid using these bank failures as a pretext to push for
other, unrelated changes to banking regulation," she said.
"The unique nature and business models of the banks that recently
failed, in my view, do not justify imposing new, overly complex
regulatory and supervisory expectations on a broad range of banks," she
added.
The remarks from Bowman, who was appointed to the Fed by former
President Donald Trump, are a rare criticism of internal work by a
colleague at a body that strives to pursue policy via consensus. Barr
was nominated for the central bank's top regulatory post by President
Joe Biden.
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Customers line up outside of the Silicon
Valley Bank headquarters in Santa Clara, California, U.S. March 13,
2023. REUTERS/Brittany Hosea-Small
The comments also are the latest indication that while Fed Chairman
Jerome Powell has forged and held a consensus on monetary policy
among his fellow Board members - even through a year of grueling
rate hikes - keeping that cohesion has proven a difficult order when
it comes to the Fed's banking oversight portfolio.
In the same speech, Bowman said the Fed will probably need to raise
interest rates further if inflation stays high.
Bowman said an external review would allow for a fuller
understanding of what drove the bank's failure and how to address
shortcomings.
Barr's review, published at the end of April, found that Fed
supervisors failed to fully appreciate SVB's problems and did not
escalate identified shortcomings promptly. Barr said improving the
speed and force of Fed bank supervision would be a top priority, and
he has previously indicated he would pursue tougher rules on
regional banks.
Bowman said an external review should also be broader than Barr's,
and should examine the weekend immediately after SVB failed, when
regulators failed to find a buyer for the bank and ultimately stood
behind all depositors at it and New York-based Signature Bank in a
bid to stave off broader contagion. She also said the review should
examine whether the Fed's operational tools to aid banks, such as
payment transfer systems and emergency lending facilities, are in
need of an update.
(Reporting by Pete Schroeder; editing by Diane Craft)
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