speeches · August 3, 2015
Regional President Speech
Thomas M. Hoenig · President
Statement of
Thomas M. Hoenig, Vice Chairman
Of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation,
At the Interagency Outreach Meeting
On
The Economic Growth
And
Regulatory Paperwork Reduction Act
Kansas City
August 4, 2015
Thank you for joining us to discuss regulatory relief, or, as the process is officially
called, the Economic Growth and Regulatory Paperwork Reduction Act. This process is
designed to identify unnecessary or outdated regulations. The ideas we will share today
are particularly timely as lawmakers in Washington debate various approaches to relief
and, importantly, various approaches to determining what type of banks are eligible for
relief.
I think it is fair to say there is broad agreement that the regulatory burden should be
eased for community banks. However, what is proving more difficult is finding
agreement on what exactly defines a traditional bank and what specific regulatory
changes would give such banks meaningful relief without compromising bank
soundness or consumer protections.
As some of you know, I have spent my career in the weeds of bank supervision; in fact I
spent the bulk of my career right here at the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City
supervising banks of all sizes throughout the region. What my experience tells me is
consistent with what I hear from many community bankers. They judge that the
regulations and supervisory requirements that burden them should not be the same as
those that apply to complex institutions that do both trading and traditional commercial
banking. To be blunt, that is not the message we hear in Washington from lobbyists who
represent banks with a variety of business models, or the message you hear from
consultants selling advise.i
Providing meaningful regulatory relief for banks engaged in the basics of commercial
banking, while maintaining a safe and sound financial system, requires focusing the
discussion more on bank activity and complexity, and less on size.
With that in mind, I have recommended that we establish an objective set of criteria for
eligibility for relief that emphasizes the core commercial banking model and the
importance of strong equity capital.
Under the plan, a bank would be eligible for regulatory relief if:
it holds no trading assets or liabilities
it holds no derivative positions other than interest rate and foreign exchange
derivatives
the total notional value of all its derivatives exposures - including cleared and
non-cleared derivatives - is less than $3 billion
it maintains a ratio of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles equity-to-assets
of at least 10%
Defining eligibility for regulatory relief around these specific criteria, rather than asset
size, reflects the longstanding business models of traditional commercial banks. And
because these criteria are objective, they can be enforced with less of an imposition on
the banks, using off-site call report monitoring and within the regular exam process.
More than 90 percent of the approximately 6,400 commercial banks in our country meet
the first three criteria, and two-thirds of them meet the fourth criterion regarding capital.
The remaining one-third of these banks are within two percentage points of the capital
requirement and could be afforded relief as they achieve this objective over a 24-month
period.
It is worth noting that among banks that would qualify are 18 regional banks - one with
assets exceeding $104 billion. Given meaningful regulatory relief, many other regional
banks, which are already close to meeting these thresholds, could choose to follow suit.
Importantly, size does not limit eligibility for regulatory relief using this metric. An insured
bank of any size would qualify if it does not expand into activities that are associated
with commercial and investment banks, insurance companies, or commercial or
industrial firms. The effect is to keep nonbank activities outside the insured bank, where
they are directly subsidized by the taxpayer and create unstable economic distortions.
This issue contributed significantly to the recent financial crisis and invited passage of
the Dodd-Frank Act.
With this framework, then, we can outline meaningful regulatory relief for those more
traditional banks that is consistent with safety and soundness, and would benefit not
only these banks but also the American public. They include, for example:
Exempting these more traditional banks from all Basel capital standards and
associated risk-weighted asset calculations.
In addition to drastically simplifying the calculation of capital requirements, such
an exemption would address other specific issues related to Basel III for
community banks including mortgage service rights, capital buffers for banks
registered as S-Corporations, high-volatility commercial real estate, and various
securitizations products.
Exempting these banks from several entire schedules on the call report.
Allowing for greater examiner discretion and eliminating requirements to refer "all
possible or apparent fair lending violations to Justice" if judged to be minimal or
inadvertent.
Establishing further criteria that would exempt eligible banks from appraisal
requirements
Exempting banks, if applicable, from stress testing requirements.
Where judged appropriate, allowing for an 18-month examination cycle as
opposed to the current required 12-month cycle for traditional banks.
Mortgages made by these traditional banks that remain in the banks' portfolio
would be a qualified mortgage loan for purposes of Dodd-Frank Act.
Updating existing guidance to clarify that Volcker Rule compliance requirements
can be met by simply having clear policies and procedures that place appropriate
controls on the activities -- and which are required and currently verified by
examiners regardless of the Volcker Rule.
This proposal would not extend to reforms judged necessary for the most complex
banks that have used at a debilitating cost to the American public.
U.S. banks engaged in core banking activities and operating with reasonable levels of
capital should not incur the same regulatory burden as those that do not. Nor should
traditional bankers seeking measurable regulatory relief be held hostage to debate over
Dodd-Frank requirements that apply to firms that choose to engage is a much broader
set of investment banking and commercial activities. The public needs commercial
banks to provide credit to small businesses and consumers across the country without
the burdensome constraints of misdirected regulation.
The Volcker Rule is one example. The vast majority of community banks have virtually
no compliance burden associated with implementing the Volcker Rule because they
have no trading positions of any kind, including no proprietary trading operations and no
investments in any private-label securitizations, hedge funds or private equity funds. As
existing guidance details, community banks with less than $10 billion in total assets are
already exempt from all of the Volcker Rule compliance requirements if they do not
engage in any of the covered activities other than trading in certain government,
agency, state, and municipal obligations. This is the case for most community banks.
For community banks that are receiving conflicting information from consultants,
regulators should clarify or expand the current guidance to eliminate the confusion.
Last Updated 8/4/2015
Cite this document
APA
Thomas M. Hoenig (2015, August 3). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20150804_thomas_m_hoenig
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20150804_thomas_m_hoenig,
author = {Thomas M. Hoenig},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2015},
month = {Aug},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20150804_thomas_m_hoenig},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}