press releases · October 23, 2025
Press Release
October 24, 2025
Federal Reserve Board requests comment on proposals to enhance the transparency and public accountability of its annual stress test
For release at 3:30 p.m. EDT
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Consistent with its prior statement, the Federal Reserve Board on Friday requested comment on proposals to enhance the transparency and public accountability of its annual stress test. The proposals seek comment on: the stress test models; changes to the framework that guides the design of the hypothetical scenarios; and the hypothetical scenarios for the upcoming 2026 stress test.
The Federal Reserve conducts stress tests to ensure that large banks are sufficiently capitalized and able to lend to households and businesses even in a severe recession. In December 2024, the Board announced it would modify the test in important respects to improve its resilience.
"In an effort to avoid litigation, the Board committed to make significant improvements in the transparency of the stress tests. These proposals take a necessary step toward fulfilling that commitment, and would promote due process," said Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle W. Bowman. "Regulated firms should be subject to clearly articulated and transparent rules. Capital requirements should not be set in a way that is shielded from meaningful public scrutiny. As vice chair for supervision, I am committed to providing transparency and accountability for both the Board and our supervised firms. This is essential for maintaining the value of our stress testing program, and for supervision and regulation more broadly."
The proposals request comment on several other elements, including an enhanced disclosure process for future stress test cycles, adjustments to the annual timeline to accommodate a comment period for scenarios, and enhancements to reporting forms to reduce burden and improve risk capture.
Annual stress test outcomes vary from year to year based on a number of factors including scenario design. Although historically, outcomes have varied significantly, resulting in volatility in capital requirements from year to year based on that design, in aggregate, the Board estimates that the proposed stress test model and scenario changes would not materially change capital requirements for firms subject to the supervisory stress test, across various stress scenarios and starting test conditions.
Comments on the 2026 scenarios are due by December 1, 2025. Comments on the proposal enhancing model and scenario transparency are due by January 22, 2026.
For media inquiries, please email [email protected] or call (202) 452-2955.
Board memo (PDF)
Federal Register notice: Enhanced Transparency and Public Accountability of the Supervisory Stress Test Models and Scenarios; Modifications to the Capital Planning and Stress Capital Buffer Requirement Rule, Enhanced Prudential Standards Rule, and Regulation LL
Federal Register notice: Request for Comment on Scenarios for the Board's 2026 Supervisory Stress Test
2026 Proposed Supervisory Stress Test Scenarios (PDF)
Statement from Chair Powell
Statement from Vice Chair for Supervision Bowman
Statement from Governor Barr
Statement from Governor Miran
Statement from Governor Waller
Open Board meeting on October 24, 2025
Dodd-Frank Act Stress Tests 2026
Note: Due to the government shutdown, publication in the Federal Register may be delayed.
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APA
Federal Reserve (2025, October 23). Press Release. Press Releases, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/press_release_20251024_federal_reserve_board_requests_comment_on
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_press_release_20251024_federal_reserve_board_requests_comment_on,
author = {Federal Reserve},
title = {Press Release},
year = {2025},
month = {Oct},
howpublished = {Press Releases, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/press_release_20251024_federal_reserve_board_requests_comment_on},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}