The Fed backpedals and unveils a scaled-back proposal for bank capital requirements

In This Article:

The Federal Reserve unveiled plans that would massively scale back a proposal to raise capital requirements for banks after politicians and the banking industry pushed back on the initial plan, warning it could restrict lending and hurt the economy.

The new proposal would increase capital levels for big banks like JPMorgan Chase (JPM) and Bank of America (BAC) by 9% in aggregate, down by half from the original plan from more than a year ago, which set the capital increase to around 19% for those institutions.

Banks with assets between $100 billion and $250 billion, which were initially subject to the stricter standards of the largest banks, would also no longer be subject to the increases — other than the requirement to recognize unrealized gains and losses of their securities portfolios in regulatory capital. This a major reversal following the string of regional bank failures last year that was touched off by Silicon Valley Bank.

“Capital has costs too," Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michael Barr said Tuesday at an event in Washington hosted by the Brookings Institution. "As compared to debt, capital is a more expensive source of funding to the bank. Thus, higher capital requirements can raise the cost of funding to a bank, and the bank can pass higher costs on to households, businesses, and clients engaged in a range of financial activities.”

Read more: How do banks make money?

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell testifies during the House Financial Services Committee hearing on July 10, 2024. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images) · (Tom Williams via Getty Images)

Barr defended the change to largely exclude banks with assets between $100 billion and $250 billion from the capital requirements of the largest banks — but for the unrealized losses on securities in capital requirements. He said he felt that addressed the heart of the issue seen with Silicon Valley Bank, a bank that failed because of poor interest rate risk management.

He also emphasized that the backpedaling for the capital requirements for the smaller subset of banks stemmed from their feeling that extra capital wouldn’t impact their safety.

“Do we really need them to go through all of the process of creating new systems to comply with this new capital rule when there's no capital impact on how safe they are,” Barr said. “That didn't seem like a trade-off worth making.”

The new version of this plan, known as Basel III endgame, comes after months of anticipation after Fed Chair Jerome Powell said as far back as March that the central bank sought "broad material changes" to the initial proposal and was looking to secure a consensus from the Federal Reserve board.

When it was first released more than a year ago, the capital plan was met with immediate disagreement and division among Fed officials, who questioned whether the plan could actually do more harm than good in its initial form.