Fed exploring ways to speed up bank oversight, strengthen stress tests

Federal Reserve Vice Chair for Supervision Michael Barr said Tuesday that the central bank is looking to be more agile in regulating banks before and during financial crises.

The Federal Reserve is exploring ways to move more swiftly when regulators identify issues at banks in the wake of a crisis that roiled the banking sector this spring.

Federal Reserve Vice Chair for Supervision Michael Barr said Tuesday in a panel discussion at the New York Fed that the central bank is looking for ways to be more nimble in its regulatory approach to the banking system before and during financial crises.

"We’re not an institution that moves quickly on supervisory issues," Barr said. "We tend to have a culture that makes it difficult for the institution to act quickly with respect to supervision" because the Fed tends to be a consensus-driven institution with policymakers looking to ensure they have sufficient evidence for decisions and consider due process issues facing firms, he explained.

Barr said he would like to see the Fed act more quickly on potential regulatory issues when the industry isn’t in the midst of turmoil and noted, "We’re great in a crisis."

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He added that while the Fed can stress test banks to see how they would handle a variety of adverse scenarios, a broader "reverse stress test" could be useful to see scenarios that may cause a bank to fail.

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Barr explained, "Instead of thinking of a stressful scenario and then seeing how it would play through on, say, the balance sheet of a firm, you look at a bank and you say, well, what would it take to break this institution? What are the different ways this institution could die, or a piece of it, a significant piece of it?"

"We’re beginning to do that kind of thinking. I’d say we’re pretty nascent in it," Barr added.

Although neither Barr nor New York Fed President John Williams offered a comment on the economic outlook or monetary policy during the panel, Barr said that the banking system is strong and the issues that hit the global financial system this year appear to be limited to the firms that became distressed.

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The U.S. banking system experienced three of the four largest bank failures in its history this spring as a trio of large regional banks collapsed. 

Their exposure to interest rate risk as the Fed hiked rates to tamp down inflation combined with large amounts of uninsured deposits in excess of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation’s $250,000 insurance threshold caused a bank run that resulted in their demise

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First Republic Bank, which failed and was acquired by JPMorgan Chase in early May, ranks as the second-largest bank failure trailing only Washington Mutual in 2008. 

Its collapse was preceded in March by the failures of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB), which was purchased by First Citizens Bank, and Signature Bank, a lender that was acquired by New York Community Bank. The failures of SVB and Signature Bank rank as the third- and fourth-largest bank failures, respectively.

Reuters contributed to this report.

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