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For release on delivery
8:45 a.m. EDT
July 9, 2019

Welcoming Remarks

by
Jerome H. Powell
Chair
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
via prerecorded video
to
“Stress Testing: A Discussion and Review,” a research conference
at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston

Boston, Massachusetts

July 9, 2019

Good morning everyone and thank you to President Rosengren and the Boston
Fed for hosting this conference.
The Federal Reserve is strongly committed to stress testing as a cornerstone of
our bank supervisory and financial stability missions. Stress testing is perhaps the most
successful supervisory innovation of the post-crisis era. But if stress tests are to
continue to serve their critical function, they will need to evolve in the years ahead to
keep pace with the ever-changing financial system, as they have since the first round of
tests in 2009.
Before looking to the future, let me recall a bit of history. A little more than
10 years ago, the United States and the world teetered on the brink of economic
catastrophe. What was urgently needed was a way to restore confidence in the financial
system—a daunting challenge. Neither the banks, nor the regulators, nor the public had a
reliable sense of the strength and resilience of our major banks. The announcement of
forward-looking stress-testing results in May 2009 helped restore confidence and
stabilize banks by providing a credible and independent picture of their finances. 1 These
original stress tests evolved into the Comprehensive Capital Analysis and Review, or
CCAR, program, which has served to institutionalize capital planning by firms, and
supervision by the Fed, as a forward-looking endeavor.

1

The stress tests were announced in February 2009, and the results were released in May 2009. See,
respectively, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation,
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and Office of Thrift Supervision (2009), “Agencies to Begin
Forward-Looking Economic Assessments,” joint press release, February 25,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/bcreg20090225a.htm; and Board of Governors
(2009), “Federal Reserve, OCC, and FDIC Release Results of the Supervisory Capital Assessment
Program,” press release, May 7,
https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/bcreg20090507a.htm.

-2Since 2009, large banks have added more than $800 billion in common equity
capital, giving them a much thicker cushion to deal with losses. Banks have gotten much
better at assessing and managing their risks, effectively tracking commitments across
their organizations, anticipating capital needs, and planning for different scenarios.
The stress tests of the future—5 and 10 years from now—will need to continue to
ensure that banks remain able, even in a severe downturn, to provide the credit that
households and businesses depend on. As financial institutions and the financial system
evolve, stress testing will need to keep up. When the next episode of financial instability
presents itself, it may do so in a messy and unexpected way. Banks will need to be ready
not just for expected risks, but for unexpected ones. Thus, the tests will need to vary
from year to year, and to explore even quite unlikely scenarios.
If the stress tests do not evolve, they risk becoming a compliance exercise,
breeding complacency from both supervisors and banks. We might also, inadvertently,
encourage the development of a banking system where, over time, all banks would look
much alike rather than the banking system we want and need, one with diverse
institutions with different business models. We simply can’t let these things happen.
The purpose of today’s gathering is to help us think about how to ensure the tests
continue to foster a dynamic banking system, financial stability, and a healthy and
growing economy. We have invited a wide range participants—fellow regulators,
bankers, analysts, academics, and community groups—with diverse perspectives.
Because we do not claim a monopoly on knowledge or wisdom, we have invited many
who have disagreed with us in the past. I strongly believe that diverse perspectives and
healthy debate will sharpen our thinking and lead us to better answers.

-3I’m sorry I’m not able to be with you today. And I want to particularly thank all
of the speakers, discussants, and other participants for helping us grapple with the
challenges of ensuring that tomorrow’s stress tests remain as effective and vigorous as
they are today. Thank you.