Fixing oversight culture may be biggest challenge in averting future
bank crises
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[September 20, 2023] By
Douglas Gillison
(Reuters) - As U.S. regulators start to overhaul the way they police
lenders after three banks failed this year, they will have to address
examiners' hesitancy to raise red flags, a deep-seated problem that has
plagued the system for years.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) this month released its
review into the demise of First Republic Bank, the third official
postmortem into the crisis which also felled Silicon Valley Bank (SVB)
and New York's Signature Bank.
Each failed following depositor runs. The postmortems on why bank
managers and regulators were not able to avert disaster reveal a common
theme: Federal Reserve and FDIC examiners tasked with ensuring banks
follow rules and remain sound spotted major problems but acted too
slowly.
Federal Reserve examiners spotted "foundational" issues with SVB's
liquidity risk management in 2021 but were still drafting a disciplinary
action the day it died, the Fed report found. Likewise, a 2019 FDIC
notice warning Signature Bank's board about liquidity planning problems
"remained outstanding" when it failed, according to the FDIC's review.
The FDIC has blamed staffing challenges and examiners' lack of urgency.
The Fed has cited deregulatory zeal under former Republican President
Donald Trump's administration and excessive efforts at consensus
building, as well as examiner hesitancy, for delaying action. Both
agencies have pledged to improve the speed and forcefulness of
supervision.
However, five former bank examiners and regulatory officials told
Reuters that cultural problems and structural obstacles have been
embedded in the supervisory system for decades and are unlikely to be
solved easily. Chiefly, examiners worry that confronting bank management
with problems will spark blowback and that their bosses may not support
them when that happens.
"Once you've detected the information; do you have the courage to do
something?" said Charles Calomiris, a professor at Columbia Business
School and former official at the Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency (OCC), noting examiners worry that raising red flags will "make
everybody angry."
The OCC, a third U.S. bank regulator, did not respond to a request for
comment.
'PUSHBACK'
Signature Bank's management was "generally dismissive" of examiners'
findings, the FDIC said. First Republic's examiners could have done more
to challenge management in 2021 but "would have likely encountered
pushback" because growth was strong and interest rates were low at the
time, the regulator also found.
"It can be challenging to take action on banks that are seemingly
healthy," said Michael Clements, a director at the Government
Accountability Office (GAO), which has been calling for more timely and
assertive action by bank supervisors for decades. "Managers will push
back on examiners."
The Fed declined to comment. An FDIC spokesman referred to Chair Martin
Gruenberg's previous comments that the problems identified at Signature
Bank are "an area of urgent focus."
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SVB (Silicon Valley Bank) logo is seen in this illustration taken
March 19, 2023. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
Examiners monitor banks and perform onsite supervision. They rate
their health on a range of metrics and can instruct them to correct
problems. But the work is with the rarest of exceptions strictly
confidential. That means there is often little public
accountability, even after something blows up.
One former supervisor in the Fed system who spoke on the condition
of anonymity said examiners need, more than anything, to feel that
their superiors back them. Under former Fed Vice Chair for
Supervision Randal Quarles, however, the committees overseeing
supervisory work raised the threshold for evidence required to
support examiners' concerns, the former supervisor said.
According to the SVB report, staff said that under Quarles, a Trump
appointee, they felt pressured to go easier on banks while meeting
"a higher burden of proof for a supervisory conclusion."
Quarles said that this is not true and that supervisors have "always
been fully supported" by Fed leadership. "I expressly encouraged
examiners to focus on liquidity risk and concentration of deposit
risk," he said in an email to Reuters.
Fed decision-making can be further slowed because lines of authority
are decentralized and encourage excessive consensus-building, the
former supervisor who spoke anonymously added, a point also
supported by the SVB review. It found that the need for consensus
between regional Fed banks and staff in Washington often slowed
processes.
"The problem with supervision at the Fed is that it is too obsessed
with process and not enough with actual risk," said Quarles.
TRIP WIRES
Michael Barr, Quarles' successor, publicly said in June that it can
be hard for examiners to confront bank management in good times, and
that Fed culture makes it difficult to act quickly. In May
testimony, he called for a "culture that empowers supervisors to act
in the face of uncertainty."
But how to get there remains an open question. Barr has floated
imposing additional capital requirements when supervisors detect
weak risk controls, providing an incentive for banks to act quickly.
Others say it may be more effective to take the problem of bearing
bad news out of the hands of supervisors by setting automatic
thresholds for enforcement action.
The GAO, for example, has in the past suggested supervisory "trip
wires" or "triggers" that would require banks to take "prompt
corrective action" based on factors other than capital, such as
asset quality or concentration.
"If you get to that point, you simply take more forceful action,
taking a little bit of discretion away," said Clements.
(Reporting by Douglas Gillison and Pete Schroeder; editing by
Michelle Price and Aurora Ellis)
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