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U.S. - EU regulatory dialogue
Before the Committee on Financial Services, U.S. House of Representatives
May 13, 2004
Thank you, Mr. Chairman, for the opportunity to speak today on matters relating to
the informal U.S.-EU Financial Markets Regulatory Dialogue. I would like to focus
my remarks on the Dialogue's role in helping us to monitor European-wide
regulatory developments in financial services and understand the effects on U.S.
banking organizations operating in the European Union.
Background to the Dialogue
As has been noted, the Dialogue was initiated by the Treasury Department in 2002,
at a time of significant regulatory developments in both the European Union and in
the United States. At that time, the European Union was continuing its efforts, begun
in 1999, to establish a single market in financial services by implementing the
"Financial Services Action Plan" (FSAP). The FSAP consists of a number of
regulatory and legislative measures designed to achieve, among other things, a single
wholesale European market; open and secure retail markets; and state-of-the-art
prudential rules and supervision. On our side of the Atlantic, U.S. regulators were
continuing to implement provisions of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act and Congress
was considering reforms that led to the adoption of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. These
developments, which affected European financial services firms with U.S.
operations, naturally were of interest to staff of the European Commission.
From the outset, the Dialogue's purpose has been to foster a better mutual
understanding of U.S. and EU regulatory approaches and to identify potential
substantive conflicts in approach as early in the regulatory process as possible. The
Dialogue consists of an informal discussion or explanation of regulatory approaches,
developments, and timetables, conducted at an experts level. This format has served
us well during the past two years. Although the Federal Reserve has regular contact
with staff of the European Commission in other groups on a range of issues, the
Dialogue is the only venue dedicated specifically to U.S.-EU regulatory issues.
Federal Reserve's Interest in Monitoring Foreign Regulatory Developments
As the umbrella supervisor of U.S. bank holding companies and financial holding
companies, the Federal Reserve has a strong interest in the regulatory environments
in which these firms operate outside the United States. We have an established
program of working with foreign supervisors at both bilateral and multilateral levels.
Through regular contact, we track changes to foreign bank regulatory and
supervisory systems and seek to understand how these systems affect the banking
institutions we supervise.
This is especially important in the European Union, where U.S. banking
organizations have substantial operations. As of September 30, 2003, thirty-four U.S.

banking organizations operated in the European Union with aggregate EU assets of
more than $747 billion. As of December 31, 2003, sixty-eight EU banking
organizations maintained active banking operations in the United States, with total
third-party banking assets in their U.S. offices of $937 billion. As these figures
suggest, institutions from the United States and the EU are major participants in each
other's markets.
The Dialogue as an Additional Forum for Monitoring EU Regulatory
Developments
As the EU seeks increasingly to harmonize financial services rules across its internal
market, the regulatory role of the European Commission has grown correspondingly.
In this environment, the Dialogue complements the Federal Reserve's ongoing
relationships and discussions with EU national regulators.
The Dialogue, moreover, fills a role not presently served by any one of those
ongoing relationships and discussions. As the market for financial services becomes
increasingly integrated, the interests of banking, securities, and insurance regulators
correspondingly are becoming more common and intertwined. The Dialogue
provides a forum for discussion of issues in each of these areas. The regulatory
discussions benefit from this sharing of different substantive perspectives. For this
reason, too, the Dialogue is an efficient forum for information exchange, which has
great utility for supervisors of large complex financial services organizations.
Global companies operate across many countries and must adapt their business and
strategy to local regulatory and supervisory requirements. It is now generally
accepted in the U.S. and internationally that a foreign firm that conducts business in
a local market should receive national treatment, that is, the foreign firm should be
treated no less favorably than a domestic firm operating in like circumstances. The
United States adopted a specific policy of national treatment for foreign banks
operating in this country with the enactment of the International Banking Act of
1978.
As we have previously testified, implementing a policy of national treatment can be
challenging. Although large financial services companies operate in a globalized
world, each is based in a specific country whose economic regulation or supervisory
approach will differ from those in other countries. The challenge of providing
national treatment arises as we seek to adapt our own regulatory system to a foreign
banking organization that operates under a different legal and regulatory structure.
We believe the Federal Reserve has successfully met the challenge in its treatment
of foreign banking organizations operating in this country. Part of that success can be
attributed to our work with foreign regulators and supervisors in seeking to
understand the operating environment of the foreign banks we regulate. The
Dialogue contributes to that knowledge.
We are equally concerned that U.S. banking organizations receive national treatment
in their foreign operations. The Dialogue provides us the best opportunity to
understand EU directives that affect those operations and provides us with the ability
to raise concerns directly with the staff that has responsibility for the preparation and
presentation of such directives.
The Dialogue provides a useful forum for information exchange between U.S.

regulators and the European Union over Europe-wide matters that have the potential
to affect the application of national treatment in particular situations. In
implementing the FSAP in the European Union, the European Union has an
obligation to ensure that the rules adopted are consistent with the principle of
national treatment. It is our expectation that the European Commission and the
member states will continue to seek to do so.
Select Issues Discussed During the Dialogue
The Dialogue has touched on a variety of issues in the past two years. Of particular
interest to the Federal Reserve and to U.S. banking organizations operating in the EU
is the issue of the application of the EU's Financial Conglomerates Directive to U.S.
financial firms. This Directive, and others that have been amended in connection
with its adoption, establishes various supervisory requirements for EU firms. Among
other matters, it requires that the consolidated group be subject to supervision and
minimum capital standards by a member state authority. For firms that are
headquartered outside the EU, such as U.S. banking organizations, the directives
require that the foreign financial firm operating in EU markets must be subject to
supervision at the holding company level by a competent home country authority,
which supervision is equivalent to that provided for by the provisions of the
Directive.
The EU's national supervisors will be responsible for making equivalency
determinations on a group-by-group basis, in accordance with guidance issued by the
European Commission. In the absence of an equivalence determination, U.S.
financial firms with EU operations could be subject to higher capital and risk control
requirements or be required to create an EU sub-holding company.
The European Commission is preparing guidance on what might constitute
equivalent supervision by third countries. In preparing this guidance, committees
working under the auspices of the Commission convened a technical group
comprised of member state supervisors to provide input on issues to be taken into
account in verifying equivalence. The group sent questionnaires to home country
supervisors of financial organizations having operations in the EU, inquiring about
the measures those supervisors take to ensure that the entities they supervise are
subject to consolidated supervision at the top-tier level. The Federal Reserve and the
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency prepared a joint response on supervision
of U.S. banking organizations with EU operations. We understand that the EC's
guidance is expected to be issued in the summer.
Member state lead regulators are expected to rely on the European Commission's
guidance in verifying equivalent supervision with respect to individual institutions.
We anticipate that the European Commission will keep us informed of member
states' progress in this regard during the Dialogue and also will alert us to the
existence of and procedures for addressing any disparities in member states'
approaches. We fully expect that U.S. banking organizations will be found to meet
the supervision standard of the directive.
Another topic of discussion relating to banks has been the status of work on
revisions to the Basel Capital Accord (Basel II). The discussions within the Dialogue
have not focused on technical issues that have been under consideration within the
Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (Basel Committee), but rather have

addressed the scope of application and implementation and timing concerns.
Specifically, the Dialogue has served as a useful venue for both the EU
representatives and the Federal Reserve participants to gain a better understanding
of the implementation procedures that are anticipated to be applicable in each
jurisdiction. Staff has been able to ask questions about the EU legislative process,
and to explain in detail how the U.S. regulatory process functions. Understanding the
requirements and limitations of each others' legislative and regulatory processes has
helped both sides achieve, in my view, a better sense of the implementation
challenges we all face and of the commitment to see the process through.
With regard to the scope of application of the proposed new Accord, the Federal
Reserve representatives were able to provide information for the EU participants
about the reasons the U.S. banking agencies proposed to require only a core set of
banks to apply the advanced approaches for both credit risk and operational risk. As
you know, one of the primary drivers behind this decision was the U.S. banking
agencies' collective view that complex, sophisticated organizations should be using
the most advanced risk measurement and management practices available and those
techniques and practices are recognized in the Basel II advanced approaches. The
U.S. agencies also proposed permitting other institutions to move voluntarily to the
advanced approaches subject to the same rigorous risk measurement and
management requirements as core banks. Through the Dialogue, the participants
were able to discuss the U.S. approach and to compare it with the EU proposal to
apply Basel II to all of its banks and investment companies. These different
implementation strategies will raise some issues, and that is why the Basel
Committee has created the Accord Implementation Group to coordinate
implementation across jurisdictions and work through home-host issues.
As noted, issues are not resolved during Dialogue discussions; that is not the purpose
of the Dialogue. But open communication that fosters understanding can feed back
into the decision-making discussions when they are held in other appropriate forums.
With respect to Basel II implementation and the Dialogue, in my view, the current
structure will continue to serve a useful purpose--as implementation issues are
identified, the Dialogue can be a venue for candid, informal communication.
Participants can take back to their constituents the results of those discussions and
the subject matter experts can determine how best to address issues that are raised or
respond to particular questions or concerns.
The Dialogue has been useful in diffusing tensions over matters that have a direct
impact on global firms. This has been especially true with respect to issues under the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act, a discussion of which I shall leave to my SEC colleague. The
Dialogue has also been helpful on less high profile matters. Through discussions at
Dialogue meetings, we were able to keep EC staff apprised of developments relating
to asset pledge requirements applicable to foreign banking organizations having U.S.
offices.
For more than forty years, federal and state bank licensing authorities have imposed
an asset pledge or capital equivalency deposit requirement on U.S. branches and
agencies of international banks, primarily for safety and soundness reasons. This
requirement obligated such institutions to hold certain negotiable securities at
American custodian banks. In recent years, foreign banks were of the view that such
requirements were more onerous than necessary and sought a reduction in the level

of assets to be pledged. The matter was brought to the attention of European
Commission staff who raised it at the Dialogue. We were able to inform Commission
staff of progress being made on this front by state authorities in New York and
elsewhere over a two-year period. New York changed its asset pledge requirement in
2003, generally satisfying the concerns of foreign banks. The Dialogue was a useful
forum to keep Commission staff apprised of developments during this period.
International Accounting
The FSAP also contemplates mandating adherence to international accounting
standards. Currently, banking organizations in the European Union may prepare their
annual financial statements in accordance with the accounting standards of the
International Accounting Standards Board (IASB), U.S. generally accepted
accounting principles (U.S. GAAP), and/or national standards. The use of U.S.
GAAP is usually limited to those banking organizations or other companies whose
securities are publicly traded on U.S. stock exchanges and are registered with the
Securities and Exchange Commission. In many cases, these companies will also
provide separate financial statements based on their national accounting standards
and disclosure rules. The European Union will require all EU companies listed on EU
exchanges that are currently following national standards to follow IASB standards
by 2005 and will require those EU companies that currently follow U.S. GAAP to
adopt IASB standards by 2007. The EU is also working to adopt international
auditing standards for external audits of EU companies, including banks.
The IASB is now independent of the international accounting profession and
independently funded. It has adopted many of the structural elements of the FASB in
the United States, which are intended to promote an independent, objective
standards-setting environment. Many senior American accounting experts serve on
the IASB and its staff. IASB GAAP has many similarities with U.S. GAAP and the
IASB issued extensive enhancements to its standards last year and this year, with
additional improvements also issued as a proposal this year. For example, in recent
months the IASB issued major revisions to its standards for financial instruments,
which are similar to U.S. GAAP and cover many areas of banking activities. One
aspect of these revisions by the IASB significantly improved the guidance on loan
loss allowances in ways that could lead to better bank reserving practices around the
world.
The Federal Reserve has long supported sound accounting policies and meaningful
public disclosure by banking and financial organizations with the objective of
improving market discipline and fostering stable financial markets. The concept of
market discipline is assuming greater importance among international banking
supervisors as well. Basel II seeks to strengthen the market's ability to aid bank
supervisors in evaluating banking organizations' risks and assessing capital adequacy.
It consists of three pillars, or tools: a minimum risk-based capital requirement (pillar
I), risk-based supervision (pillar II), and disclosure of risks and capital adequacy to
enhance market discipline (pillar III). This approach to capital regulation, with its
market-discipline component, signals that sound accounting and disclosure will
continue to be important aspects of our supervisory approach.
The Federal Reserve and the other U.S. banking agencies are also actively involved
in the efforts of the Basel Committee to promote sound international accounting,
auditing, and disclosure standards and practices for global banking organizations and

other companies. For example, an official of the Federal Reserve Board is a member
of the Standards Advisory Council that advises the IASB and its trustees on IASB
projects, proposals and standards. The U.S. banking agencies have been active in
supporting the Basel Committee in its work with the IASB's technical advisory
groups to enhance the IASB's standards for financial instruments and bank
disclosures. The Federal Reserve Board has also been active in supporting the Basel
Committee's projects with the International Federation of Accountants (IFAC) and
other international regulatory organizations, such as International Organization of
Securities Commissions (IOSCO), to promote substantial enhancements to global
standards and practices for audits of banks and other companies.
Although the Federal Reserve Board has been actively involved in addressing
international accounting and auditing issues primarily through our involvement in the
Basel Committee's projects, the Securities and Exchange Commission has had the
primary role in discussing these matters with the EU representatives as part of the
Dialogue.
Cooperation on Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorist Financing
Issues
While not historically part of the U.S.-EU Dialogue, recent anti-money laundering
and counter-terrorist financing regulatory initiatives on both sides of the Atlantic
have had a significant impact on banking organizations, many of which operate
globally. Because of the potential consequences of differences in regulatory
approaches in this area, governments have been in frequent contact. In the end, the
anti-money laundering provisions set forth in the USA PATRIOT Act and those
contained in the EU Anti-Money Laundering Directive are generally in harmony.
Part of this can be attributed to the Federal Reserve's and other U.S. and EU
regulatory authorities' mutual involvement in multilateral policy efforts to improve
regulatory systems so to prevent these crimes, such as the Financial Action Task
Force and the Basel Committee's cross-border banking group. On a practical level,
supervisory dialogue and cooperation on anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist
financing also has been necessary due to the role the Federal Reserve frequently
shares with its EU counterparts as "home/host" supervisors of global banking
organizations. However, this cooperation is typically focused on providing assistance
in order to fulfill supervisory mandates, not to conduct money laundering or terrorist
financing investigations, the authority for which typically falls with law enforcement
authorities.
While Bank Secrecy Act requirements, including the provisions added by the
USA PATRIOT Act, generally do not extend to foreign operations of U.S. banking
organizations, the Federal Reserve is interested in understanding the global
operations of the banking organizations under Federal Reserve supervision as a
matter of safety and soundness. In this regard, the Federal Reserve relies upon
communication with supervisors from foreign jurisdictions, including EU member
states, in which banking organizations subject to Federal Reserve supervision have
material operations.
Critical information obtained in the course of an examination, which may impact a
banking organization's operations in the foreign jurisdiction, is typically exchanged
among relevant supervisors. For example, when a Federal Reserve Bank conducts an

on-site examination of a foreign banking organization in the United States, and
significant problems are identified with regard to its anti-money laundering program,
the Federal Reserve contacts the home country supervisor to discuss the findings and
to develop corrective action plans.
Moreover, the Federal Reserve may provide information to European Union member
bank supervisors when administrative penalties have been imposed or any other
formal enforcement action has been taken against a U.S. banking organization
(whether or not it is related to anti-money laundering requirements) if the Federal
Reserve believes such information will be important to the host country supervisor.
The Federal Reserve expects the same from its counterparts.
Future of the Dialogue
As is evident from the tenor of my remarks, the Federal Reserve has found the
Dialogue to be a useful vehicle for monitoring the rapid regulatory developments in
the European Union and exchanging information. We are committed to continuing
discussions with the Commission on matters of mutual interest, both bilaterally and
as part of the financial markets regulatory discussions led by the Treasury
Department. The regulatory landscape in the European Union is certain to continue
to develop rapidly in the coming years, particularly with expansion of the European
Union, member states' implementation of the numerous FSAP measures needed to
create a single market for financial services, and the growing integration of our
capital markets.
We at the Federal Reserve have an obligation to keep apprised of these
developments on a timely basis in order to fulfill our supervisory function and to
ensure a level playing field for U.S. banking organizations operating in the European
Union. We are confident that continuing the Dialogue in its present form would
facilitate these objectives.
We are equally confident that other existing multilateral and bilateral exchange
mechanisms are appropriate venues for discussing policies and attempting to resolve
disputes. In our view, formalizing the Dialogue--for example, by elevating it to the
principals level or expanding its mandate to include policy-setting or dispute
resolution functions--would be unnecessary and may impair the Dialogue's utility.
The Federal Reserve believes that U.S. banks are second to none in their ability to
compete when they are given the opportunity of operating on a level playing field.
Providing strong supervision at home and participating in international regulatory
and supervisory groups such as the Dialogue helps assure that our banking
organizations will continue to have such opportunities.
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