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Writer's pictureRitik Agrawal

US FED FLOATS MAJOR CHANGES TO BANK STRESS TESTS IN LIGHT OF LEGAL RULINGS

Nisha Chakraborty

Shyambazar Law College 

US Federal Reserve Proposes Major Reforms to Bank Stress Tests Following Legal Developments

Recent changes in legal judgments and the pressure from the financial industry have led the U.S. Federal Reserve (Fed) to make new improvements to its annual bank stress tests. These changes call for increased transparency, a more predictable business environment, and an effort to meet legal and industry requirements, and are indicative of a monumental change in how the largest financial institutions will be regulated.

Background on Stress Tests

Stress tests involving the Fed, which were developed as the key element of a supervisory framework following the 2007-2009 financial crisis, remain the main instrument for regulating the activities of financial institutions. It measures the ability of hypothetical economic shocks to identify probable losses, revenue effects, and capital adequacy. The outcomes determine the amount of capital that banking institutions should retain to prevent their operations from compromising financial integrity.

However, the current framework has been criticized for being poorly developed and having unpredictable results vexing the banking sector as they argued that these tests are detrimental to economic growth and lending. 

Proposed Changes

On December 23, 2024, the Fed outlined several proposed reforms to address these concerns:

1. Increased Model Transparency: The Fed will make public the models employed to forecast banks’ losses and revenues under stressful situations. More clarity, thus, makes it possible for stakeholders to understand well why capital requirements are necessary.

2. Scenario Collaboration: Before the set economic scenarios are adopted the involved banks and other stakeholders may be allowed to give their input on the same.

3. Result Averaging: In their bid to curb flitting capital requirements over the course of the calendar year, the Fed suggests a two-year moving average. This change was initiated in the hope of enhancing the predictability as relates to regulations in the banking sub-sector.

4. Legal Compliance: The reforms also indicate that the Fed needed to conform to some recent legal judgments, for example, the U.S. Supreme Court decision to set aside the Chevron deference, under which, courts had to defer to regulatory agencies’ interpretations of ambiguous statutes. It has led agencies such as the Fed to check that their processes afford the enhanced legal standards with the decision.

The proposed changes were said to be making the stress testing structure better without changing significantly the capital standards. This was said by a Federal Reserve spokesperson. 

Legal and Industry Pressure

The Fed’s action arises at a time when it is under intense legal pressure and a future lawsuit from industry groups, including the Bank Policy Institute (BPI), and the American Bankers Association (ABA). These organizations have long claimed that the structures of the current stress tests lead to arbitrary and high capital requirements which they say slows lending and economic growth.

The problem is that according to the Administrative Procedure Act, the Fed’s stress tests contain major new regulatory measures that do not provide enough public notice or opportunity to comment. Essential changes that are proposed in the industry have been applauded by the leaders of the industry but they also are still very cautious. BPI president, Greg Baer said that these alterations are positive but warned that additional changes are still required to balance and clarify the equity markets. 

Some of the Conclusions for the Banking Sector

The proposed changes are expected to have a mixed impact on the banking sector:

       I.          Positive Outcomes: Increased clarity and efficiency in implementation could lead to efficient appropriation of capital for implementation by the banks hence easing the cost of capital for borrowers. Another advantage of collaborative scenario development would probably be the more realistic stress test scenarios.

      II.          Potential Risks: Some scholars argue that pooling scores across two years might slow down the capturing of fast-changing economic features, which might negate the purpose of the tests in pinpointing emerging threats.

He also discussed that some analysts also pointed out that the legal and regulatory adjustments prove the tenuous line the Fed walks between supervision and development. 

Next Steps

The Federal Reserve will invite the public to comment on these proposed changes in early 2025. Others who can give any feedback include the banks and any group or individual with interest in the industry. For the 2025 stress test cycle, the Fed wants to address timely solutions like the stabilization of test results’ variability.

With the changes in the legal regulation of the financial markets, a strong link between legal decisions, professional associations, and nurturing the Fed’s policies will define the future development of financial regulation. The banking industry, particularly, that operates in the current rather unpredictable economic climate, will have to incorporate these changes while being legal and robust. 

Conclusion

The proposed reforms by the Federal Reserve are considered an important positive step to improving the framework of stress testing and making the process more standard, more transparent, and legal. The specific remaining modifications are awaited in the US, the financial industry will decide in the next months on changes in US banking regulation and services.

References

1.      "What Is the U.S. Federal Reserve? - Council on Foreign Relations." 15 Aug. 2024, https://www.cfr.org/backgrounder/what-us-federal-reserve.

2.      "Lessons from the Crisis Stress Tests - Federal Reserve Board." 26 Mar. 2010, https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/tarullo20100326a.htm.

3.      "Monthly Bank Regulatory Report (December 2024) - Gibson Dunn." https://www.gibsondunn.com/monthly-bank-regulatory-report-december-2024/.

4.      "Federal Reserve Faces Lawsuit from Big Banks, Business Groups: What to ...." 24 Dec. 2024, https://www.newsweek.com/federal-reserve-lawsuit-stress-test-bank-2005760.

5.      "The Fed is weighing ‘significant changes’ to its annual stress tests ...." 24 Dec. 2024, https://finance.yahoo.com/news/fed-weighing-significant-changes-annual-153750643.html.

 

 

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