The Manila Times

Fed seeks to require bigger capital for largest banks

- AFP

WASHINGTON: Shares of the largest US banks fell on Monday (Tuesday in Manila) after the Federal Reserve’s main regulator proposed higher capital requiremen­ts for them.

Stress tests for the banks -- to see how they could ride out extreme crises -- indicated that the largest eight so- called global systemical­ly important banks (GSIB) need safety, Fed governor Daniel Tarullo said in a speech.

The Fed would soon formally propose a “stress capital buffer approach” to replace a previous capital strength surcharge on large banks, he added.

“This would generally result in a significan­t increase in capital requiremen­ts applicable to the GSIBs,” he said.

The tougher standard is based - lation should be progressiv­ely more stringent for firms of greater importance, and thus system,” he said.

“The surcharges are calibrated to force large, interconne­cted banks to internaliz­e the additional costs their distress would impose on the

The eight include Bank of America, Bank of New York Mellon, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley, State Street and Wells Fargo.

Shares for the group sank after the speech. JPMorgan lost 2.2 percent, Wells Fargo, 1.9 percent and Morgan Stanley, 2.8 percent.

On the other hand, Tarullo said, US regional banks would see some terms for them in the stress tests eased.

The annual stress tests, implemente­d after the 2008 crisis, are used to determine if banks have adequate capital to handle a deep recession. Banks that do not pass the tests can be denied to shareholde­rs.

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