speeches · February 16, 2011
Speech
Ben S. Bernanke · Chair
For release on delivery
10:00 a.m. EST
February 17, 2011
Statement by
Ben S. Bernanke
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs
U.S. Senate
Washington, D.C.
February 17, 2011
Chairman Johnson, Ranking Member Shelby, and other members of the Committee,
thank you for the opportunity to testify about the Federal Reserve’s implementation of the Dodd-
Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 (Dodd-Frank Act). The Dodd-
Frank Act addresses critical gaps and weaknesses in the U.S. regulatory framework, many of
which were revealed by the recent financial crisis. The Federal Reserve is committed to working
with the other U.S financial regulatory agencies to implement the act effectively and
expeditiously. We are also cooperating with our international counterparts to further strengthen
financial regulation, to ensure a level playing field across countries, and to enhance international
supervisory cooperation. And we have revamped the supervisory function at the Federal Reserve
to allow us to better meet the objectives of the act.
The act gives the Federal Reserve important responsibilities both to make rules to
implement the law and to apply the new rules. In particular, the act requires the Federal Reserve
to complete more than 50 rulemakings and sets of formal guidelines, as well as a number of
studies and reports. We have also been assigned formal responsibilities to consult and
collaborate with other agencies on a substantial number of additional rules, provisions, and
studies. So that we meet our obligations on time, we are drawing on expertise and resources
from across the Federal Reserve System in banking supervision, economic research, financial
markets, consumer protection, payments, and legal analysis. In all, more than 300 members of
the Federal Reserve staff are working on Dodd-Frank implementation projects. We have created
a senior staff position to coordinate our efforts and have developed project-reporting and
tracking tools to facilitate management and oversight of all of our implementation
responsibilities.
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We have made considerable progress in carrying out our assigned responsibilities. We
have been providing significant support to the Financial Stability Oversight Council, of which
the Federal Reserve is a member. We are assisting the council in designing its systemic risk
monitoring and evaluation process and in developing its analytical framework and procedures for
identifying systemically important nonbank firms and financial market utilities. We also are
helping the new Office of Financial Research at the Treasury Department develop potential data
reporting standards to support the council’s systemic risk monitoring and evaluation duties. We
contributed significantly to the council’s recent studies--one on the Volcker rule’s restrictions on
banking entities’ proprietary trading and private fund activities and a second one on the act’s
financial-sector concentration limit. And we are now developing for public comment the
necessary rules to implement these important restrictions and limits. Last week, the Board
adopted a final rule to ensure that activities prohibited by the Volcker rule are divested or
terminated in the time period required by the act.
We also have been moving forward rapidly in other areas. Last fall, we issued a study on
the potential effect of the act’s credit risk retention requirements on securitization markets, as
well as an advance notice of proposed rulemaking on the use of credit ratings in the regulations
of the federal banking agencies. In addition, in December, the Board and the other federal
banking agencies requested comment on a proposed rule that would implement the capital floors
required by the Collins Amendment. In December, we also requested comment on proposed
rules that would establish standards for debit card interchange fees and implement the act’s
prohibition on network exclusivity arrangements and routing restrictions. In January, the Board,
together with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, and Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS), provided the Congress a comprehensive
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report on the agencies’ progress and plans relating to the transfer of the supervisory authority of
the OTS for thrifts and thrift holding companies. In addition, as provided by the act, we and the
Federal Reserve Banks each established offices to consolidate and build on our existing equal
opportunity programs to promote diversity in management, employment, and business activities.
We continue to work closely and cooperatively with other agencies to develop joint rules
to implement the credit risk retention requirements for securitizations, resolution plans (or
“living wills”) for large bank holding companies and council-designated nonbank firms, and
capital and margin requirements for swap dealers and major swap participants. We are
consulting with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission (CFTC) on a variety of rules to enhance the safety and efficiency of the
derivatives markets, including rules that would require most standardized derivatives to be
centrally traded and cleared, require the registration and prudential regulation of swap dealers
and major swap participants, and improve the transparency and reporting of derivatives
transactions. We also are coordinating with the SEC and the CFTC on the agencies’ respective
rulemakings on risk-management standards for financial market utilities, and we are working
with market regulators and central banks in other countries to update the international standards
for these types of utilities.
The transfer of the Federal Reserve’s consumer protection responsibilities specified in the
act to the new Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection (CFPB) is well under way. A team at
the Board, headed by Governor Duke, is working closely with the staff at the CFPB and at the
Treasury to facilitate the transition. We have provided technical assistance as well as staff
members to the CFPB to assist it in setting up its functions. We have finalized funding
agreements and provided initial funding to the CFPB. Moreover, we have made substantial
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progress toward a framework for transferring Federal Reserve staff members to the CFPB and
integrating CFPB employees into the relevant Federal Reserve benefit programs.
One of the Federal Reserve’s most important Dodd-Frank implementation projects is to
develop more-stringent prudential standards for all large banking organizations and nonbank
firms designated by the council. Besides capital, liquidity, and resolution plans, these standards
will include Federal Reserve- and firm-conducted stress tests, new counterparty credit limits, and
risk-management requirements. We are working to produce a well-integrated set of rules that
will significantly strengthen the prudential framework for large, complex financial firms and the
financial system.
Complementing these efforts under Dodd-Frank, the Federal Reserve has been working
for some time with other regulatory agencies and central banks around the world to design and
implement a stronger set of prudential requirements for internationally active banking firms.
These efforts resulted in the adoption in the summer of 2009 of more-stringent regulatory capital
standards for trading activities and securitization exposures. And, of course, it also includes the
agreements reached in the past couple of months on the major elements of the new Basel III
prudential framework for globally active banks. Basel III should make the financial system more
stable and reduce the likelihood of future financial crises by requiring these banks to hold more
and better-quality capital and more-robust liquidity buffers. We are committed to adopting the
Basel III framework in a timely manner. In December 2010, we requested comment with the
other U.S. banking agencies on proposed rules that would implement the 2009 trading book
reforms, and we are already working to incorporate other aspects of the Basel III framework into
U.S. regulations.
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To be effective, regulation must be supported by strong supervision. The act expands the
supervisory responsibilities of the Federal Reserve to include thrift holding companies and
nonbank financial firms that the council designates as systemically important, along with certain
payment, clearing, and settlement utilities that are similarly designated. Reflecting the expansion
of our supervisory responsibilities, we are working to ensure that we have the necessary
resources and expertise to oversee a broader range of financial firms and business models.
The act also requires supervisors to take a macroprudential approach; that is, the Federal
Reserve and other financial regulatory agencies are expected to supervise financial institutions
and critical infrastructures with an eye toward not only the safety and soundness of each
individual firm, but also taking into account risks to overall financial stability.
We believe that a successful macroprudential approach to supervision requires both a
multidisciplinary and wide-ranging perspective. Our experience in 2009 with the Supervisory
Capital Assessment Program (popularly known as the bank stress tests) demonstrated the
feasibility and benefits of employing such a perspective. Building on that experience and other
lessons learned from the recent financial crisis, we have reoriented our supervision of the largest,
most complex banking firms to include greater use of horizontal, or cross-firm, evaluations of the
practices and portfolios of firms, improved quantitative surveillance mechanisms, and better use
of the broad range of skills of the Federal Reserve staff. And we have created a new Office of
Financial Stability within the Federal Reserve, which will monitor financial developments across
a range of markets and firms and coordinate with the council and with other agencies to
strengthen systemic oversight.
The Federal Reserve is committed to its long-standing practice of ensuring that all of its
rulemakings are conducted in a fair, open, and transparent manner. Accordingly, we are
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disclosing on our public website summaries of all communications with members of the public--
including banks, trade associations, consumer groups, and academics--regarding matters subject
to a proposed or potential future rulemaking under the act. We also have implemented measures
within the act to enhance the Federal Reserve’s transparency. In December, we publicly released
detailed information regarding individual transactions conducted between December 1, 2007,
and July 20, 2010, across a wide range of Federal Reserve credit and liquidity programs, and we
are developing the necessary processes to disclose information concerning transactions
conducted after July 20, 2010, on a delayed basis as provided in the act.
To conclude, the Dodd-Frank Act is a major step forward for financial regulation in the
United States. The Federal Reserve will work closely with our fellow regulators, the Congress,
and the Administration to ensure that the law is implemented expeditiously and in a manner that
best protects the stability of our financial system and our economy.
Cite this document
APA
Ben S. Bernanke (2011, February 16). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20110217_bernanke
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_20110217_bernanke,
author = {Ben S. Bernanke},
title = {Speech},
year = {2011},
month = {Feb},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20110217_bernanke},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}