ATR Op-Ed in The Hill: "The Regulators' New Bank Capital Proposal Ignores Costs To Consumers"
On
The op-ed begins by describing how regulators issued a new proposal to force large banks to hold additional capital. It also briefly describes the proposal's effect on financial services:
The
These new rules will make borrowing more expensive, hamper dividends and share buybacks and reduce the availability of credit cards and mortgage loans with agreeable terms and conditions.
Next, the article briefly discusses the
The new proposal is an end run around
However, in certain cases the proposal is more restrictive than the final Basel III framework:
The proposal, in some cases, is stricter than the final Basel III framework. For example, the proposal uses more punitive calculations for residential mortgages held by banks. The calculations are 20 percent higher than Basel III, even though the proposal contains no "evidence to support the sizing of the surcharge," according to one
The piece goes on to talk about more specific examples of how increased capital requirements harms business and limits availability of credit:
The competitive nature of the
The proposal also imposes stringent leverage evaluations for banks that previously did not have to comply. The new mandate will force banks to limit funding for credit cards or reduce exposure to securitizations that fund auto loans and mortgages. One paper from
Certain board members and high-ranking officials serving in the agencies that issued the proposal expressed strong concerns that the proposal may be too burdensome. The dissension among regulatory officials is apparent:
Even though Fed Chair
There is also significant opposition from lawmakers in the
Congressional concerns with the proposal are far and wide. Sen.
Reps.
The proposal claims that regulators do not have to conduct an analysis of the effects on small entities. However, under federal statute, small entities are broadly defined and are not restricted to small banking organizations. Accordingly, Reps.
The op-ed ends by stating that regulators need to produce a detailed analysis of the costs of the proposal on the broader economy. Neglecting costs could invite legal headaches down the road:
As the regulators receive comments and turn to finalize the proposal over the next year, they should explicitly quantify and enumerate the direct and indirect costs the proposal will impose on banks and their counterparties. Ignoring costs contravenes
The regulators need to tread carefully or risk exposing their arbitrary proposal to future litigation.
Click here (https://thehill.com/opinion/finance/4144333-the-regulators-new-bank-capital-proposal-ignores-costs-to-consumers/) to read the full op-ed.
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Original text here: https://www.atr.org/atr-op-ed-in-the-hill-the-regulators-new-bank-capital-proposal-ignores-costs-to-consumers/



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