US regulators at odds over whether to issue new draft of bank capital
hikes
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[June 20, 2024] By
Pete Schroeder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. bank regulators are arguing over the path
forward for rules easing bank capital hikes, with some wanting to allow
additional feedback from Wall Street after the industry vigorously
pushed back, said five people familiar with the matter.
The Federal Reserve, which is leading the project, is considering
reproposing the "Basel endgame" rule, while the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency (OCC) do not want to go that route, the people said.
All three have spent the past few months poring over dozens of comments
criticizing its July 2023 proposal and considering changes. Once the
agencies have agreed to a revamped draft, they have to decide whether to
finalize the rules and have them take effect, or repropose them,
allowing for a second round of feedback.
A reproposal that includes significant changes can add months to an
already lengthy and complex process.
Fed officials believe that reissuing the proposal and allowing Wall
Street banks which have said the rules will hurt lending and the economy
to comment on changes to the draft would reduce the risk they sue to
overturn the final version, said three of the sources.
But FDIC and OCC officials believe there is no legal need to repropose
the rule and that doing so just months ahead of the Presidential
election could endanger the project, one person said. They worry
presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump could hand
control of the agencies to Republicans who oppose the rule should he
regain the White House.
The sources, which include industry and regulatory officials, asked not
be identified discussing the private talks.
"Reproposing takes time," said Todd Phillips, a banking law professor at
Georgia State University and former FDIC attorney who generally favors
stricter rules. "Reproposing Basel now imperils it from ever being
finalized."
The debate over how to proceed is important, as typically the three
regulators prioritize operating in lockstep to provide banks with
consistent rules.
The Basel proposal implements international capital standards agreed by
the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision following the global
financial crisis. The European Union on Tuesday said it will delay a
core element of its Basel reforms by one year to January 2026
FLUSH WITH CASH?
Reuters reported in March that the agencies planned significant changes,
while the Wall Street Journal reported last month that they might halve
the capital impact but were undecided on whether to repropose. Details
on officials' thinking and the reason for the impasse are reported here
for the first time.
Spokespeople for the three agencies declined to comment.
"If a reproposal ends up being appropriate, we'll do that," Vice Chair
for Supervision Michael Barr told lawmakers in May.
The question of whether or not to repropose Basel is central to its
ultimate strength and durability. As originally proposed nearly a year
ago, Basel would hike bank capital by around 16%. Regulators say extra
capital will guard against unforeseen risks, while Wall Street banks say
it would force them to overhaul their businesses and reduce lending.
[to top of second column] |
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Chairman Martin Gruenberg
testifies at a House Financial Services Committee hearing on the
response to the recent bank failures of Silicon Valley Bank and
Signature Bank, on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., March 29, 2023.
REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
The industry has won major concessions that could push the capital
figure into the single digits, according to three sources, but banks
are still pushing hard for a reproposal which would give them
another opportunity to ease it further.
Wall Street banks have threatened to sue if the agencies do not
repropose, alleging they violated a federal law which requires
agencies to justify new rules and allow time for, and fully
consider, public feedback.
Banks say they are already flush with cash and that the agencies
have not provided an economic reason for the rule.
Fed officials believe reproposing would help address that complaint
but FDIC and OCC officials believe banks' claims are invalid and
that there is no legal need to repropose, three sources said. The
Fed also plans to publish a quantitative impact study analyzing the
potential impact of the plan.
The agencies have agreed to soften how banks calculate potential
losses from operational risks, which is the costliest plank of the
proposal, and how they gauge credit risk, three of the sources said.
They are still debating how far they should ease more stringent
rules for modeling market risk, with the FDIC and OCC pressing to
preserve the rule's original language, two of the people said.
FDIC DRAMA
Turmoil at the FDIC where a damning investigation found widespread
misconduct is also a potentially complicating factor for the Basel
negotiations. Succumbing to mounting political pressure, FDIC Chair
Martin Gruenberg last month said he will step down once the Senate
confirms his successor.
Long a Wall Street critic, Gruenberg is the least sympathetic to
bank complaints and has pushed for regulators to take a tough line,
according to three sources. He strongly opposes reproposing the
draft, one source said.
Some analysts and industry executives speculate he may now have an
even stronger incentive to push the Fed hard to finalize the new
draft.
A less experienced successor is unlikely to take on "the mighty
Fed," Ian Katz, managing director of Capital Alpha Partners, wrote
in a note last month.
Gruenberg did not provide comment for this story but said last month
regulators want to quickly complete the rule.
The Fed also has tricky internal politics to negotiate. Two
governors voted against proposing Basel originally, in a rare
display of dissent among the central bank's board. Both Barr and Fed
Chair Jerome Powell have said they want "broad consensus" on the
rule, but achieving that could mean pushing the OCC and FDIC to
repropose.
(Reporting by Pete Schroeder; editing by Michelle Price and Anna
Driver)
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