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For release on delivery
7:15 p.m. EDT
April 9, 2012

Fostering Financial Stability

Remarks by
Ben S. Bernanke
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at the
2012 Financial Markets Conference
Sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta
Atlanta, Georgia

April 9, 2012

I commend the organizers of this conference for the event’s apt subtitle: “The
Devil’s in the Details.” For the Federal Reserve and other financial regulators, getting
the details right is crucial as we implement the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act) and strive to meet our broader financial
stability responsibilities. About three and a half years have passed since the darkest days
of the financial crisis, but our economy is still far from having fully recovered from its
effects. The heavy human and economic costs of the crisis underscore the importance of
taking all necessary steps to avoid a repeat of the events of the past few years.
Tonight I will discuss some ways in which the Federal Reserve, since the crisis,
has reoriented itself from being (in its financial regulatory capacity) primarily a
supervisor of a specific set of financial institutions toward being an agency with a broader
focus on systemic stability as well. I will highlight some of the ways we and other
agencies are working to increase the resiliency of systemically important financial firms
and identify and mitigate systemic risks, including those associated with the so-called
shadow banking system. I will also discuss the broad outlines of our evolving approach
to monitoring financial stability. Our efforts are a work in progress, and we are learning
as we go. But I hope to convey a sense of the strong commitment of the Federal Reserve
to fostering a more stable and resilient financial system.
Systemically Important Financial Firms
Banking Institutions
Since the crisis, the Federal Reserve has made important strides in the traditional,
microprudential regulation and supervision of individual banking organizations.
Promoting the safety and soundness of individual financial firms is a critical

-2responsibility. To an increasing extent, however, we have also been working to embed
our supervisory practices within a broader macroprudential framework that focuses not
only on the conditions of individual firms but also on the health of the financial system as
a whole.
Even before the enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act, we had begun to overhaul our
approach to supervision to better achieve both microprudential and macroprudential
goals. In 2009, we created the Large Institution Supervision Coordinating Committee--a
high-level, multidisciplinary working group, drawing on skills and experience from
throughout the Federal Reserve System--and charged it with overseeing the supervision
of the most systemically important financial firms. Through the coordinating committee,
we have supplemented the traditional, firm-by-firm approach to supervision with a
routine use of horizontal, or cross-firm, reviews to monitor industry practices, common
trading and funding strategies, balance sheet developments, interconnectedness, and other
factors with implications for systemic risk. Drawing on the work of economists and
financial market experts, the coordinating committee has also made increasing use of
improved quantitative methods for evaluating the conditions of supervised firms as well
as the risks they may pose to the broader financial system.
An important example of our strengthened, cross-firm supervisory approach is the
recently completed second annual Comprehensive Capital Analysis and Review
(CCAR).1 In the CCAR, the Federal Reserve assessed the internal capital planning

1

For more information, see Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (2012), “Federal Reserve
Releases Paper Describing Methodology Used in 2012 Comprehensive Capital Analysis and Review Stress
Test,” press release, March 12, www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/bcreg/20120312a.htm; and
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (2012), “Federal Reserve Announces Summary Results

-3processes of the 19 largest bank holding companies and evaluated their capital adequacy
under a very severe hypothetical stress scenario that included a peak unemployment rate
of 13 percent, a 50 percent drop in equity prices, and a further 21 percent decline in
housing prices. From a traditional safety-and-soundness perspective, we looked at
whether each firm would have sufficient capital to remain financially stable, taking into
account its capital distribution proposal, under the stress scenario. The simultaneous
review, by common methods, of the nation’s largest banking firms also helped us better
evaluate the resilience of the system as a whole, including the capacity of the banking
system to continue to make credit available to households and businesses if the economy
were to perform very poorly. Because stress tests will be an enduring part of the
supervisory toolkit, we are evaluating the recent exercise particularly closely to identify
both the elements that worked well and the areas in which execution and communication
can be improved.
We also now routinely use macroprudential methods in analyzing the potential
consequences of significant economic events for the individual firms we supervise and
for the financial system as a whole. A good example is our response to the European
sovereign debt concerns that emerged in the spring of 2010. Since those concerns arose,
we have been actively monitoring U.S. banks’ direct and indirect exposures to Europe
and tracking the banks’ management of their exposures. We have also been analyzing
scenarios under which European sovereign debt developments might lead to broader
dislocations, for example, through a sharp increase in investor risk aversion that
adversely affects asset values. This work not only has improved our understanding of
of Latest Round of Bank Stress Tests,” press release, March 13,
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/bcreg/20120313a.htm.

-4banks’ individual risk profiles, it also has helped us better evaluate the potential effects of
financial disruptions in Europe on credit flows and economic activity in the United
States.
Macroprudential considerations are being incorporated into the development of
new regulations as well as into supervision. For example, in December, the Federal
Reserve issued a package of proposed rules to implement sections 165 and 166 of the
Dodd-Frank Act. The rules would establish prudential standards for the largest bank
holding companies and systemically important nonbank financial firms, standards that
become more stringent as the systemic footprint of the firm increases. We are also
collaborating with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and foreign
authorities to help implement the FDIC’s new resolution authority for systemically
critical firms. In particular, last fall we issued a joint rule with the FDIC that requires
each of these firms to produce a credible plan--known as a living will--for an orderly
resolution in the event of its failure.
In the international arena, we strongly supported the Basel Committee’s adoption
in the summer of 2009 of tougher regulatory capital standards for trading activities and
securitization exposures. We have also worked closely with international partners to help
develop the Basel III framework, which requires globally active banks to hold more and
higher-quality capital and larger liquidity buffers, and which now incorporates a
provision to impose capital surcharges based on firms’ global systemic importance.
These surcharges are intended to reduce the risk of failure of systemic firms and also to
force these firms, in their decisions regarding their size and complexity, to internalize the
possible costs that those decisions might impose on the broader economic and financial

-5system. The purpose of each of these steps is to improve the traditional prudential
regulation of systemically important firms while fostering greater stability and resilience
in the banking system as a whole.
Nonbank Financial Firms
Gaps in the regulatory structure, which allowed some systemically important
nonbank financial firms to avoid strong, comprehensive oversight, were a significant
contributor to the crisis. The Federal Reserve has been working with the other member
agencies of the Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC), established by the DoddFrank Act, to close these regulatory gaps. On April 3 the FSOC issued a final rule and
interpretive guidance implementing the criteria and process it will use to designate
nonbank financial firms as systemically important.2 Once designated, these firms would
be subject to consolidated supervision by the Federal Reserve and would be required to
satisfy enhanced prudential standards established by the Federal Reserve under title I of
Dodd-Frank. The FSOC’s rule provides detail on the framework the FSOC intends to use
to assess the potential for a particular firm to threaten U.S. financial stability. The
analysis would take into account the firm’s size, interconnectedness, leverage, provision
of critical products or services, and reliance on short-term funding, as well as its existing
regulatory arrangements.
The FSOC’s issuance of this rule is an important step forward in ensuring that
systemically critical nonbank financial firms will be subject to strong consolidated
supervision and regulation. More work remains to be done, however. In particular,
2

Financial Stability Oversight Council (2012), "Authority to Require Supervision and Regulation of
Certain Nonbank Financial Companies," final rule and interpretive guidance (12 C.F.R. pt. 1310; RIN
4030-AA00), April 3, available on the Financial Stability Oversight Council website at
www.treasury.gov/initiatives/fsoc/Pages/final-rules.aspx; forthcoming in the Federal Register, vol. 77.

-6although the basic process for designation has now been laid out, further refinement of
the criteria for designation will be needed; and, for those firms that are ultimately
designated, it will fall to the Federal Reserve to develop supervisory frameworks
appropriate to each firm’s business model and risk profile. As the FSOC gains
experience with this process, it will make adjustments to its rule and its procedures as
appropriate.
Regulation of Shadow Banking
I have been discussing the oversight of systemically important financial
institutions in a macroprudential context. However, an important lesson learned from the
financial crisis is that the growth of what has been termed “shadow banking” creates
additional potential channels for the propagation of shocks through the financial system
and the economy. Shadow banking refers to the intermediation of credit through a
collection of institutions, instruments, and markets that lie at least partly outside of the
traditional banking system.
As an illustration of shadow banking at work, consider how an automobile loan
can be made and funded outside of the banking system. The loan could be originated by
a finance company that pools it with other loans in a securitization vehicle. An
investment bank might sell tranches of the securitization to investors. The lower-risk
tranches could be purchased by an asset-backed commercial paper (ABCP) conduit that,
in turn, funds itself by issuing commercial paper that is purchased by money market
funds. Alternatively, the lower-risk tranches of loan securitizations might be purchased
by securities dealers that fund the positions through collateralized borrowing using

-7repurchase (repo) agreements, with money market funds and institutional investors
serving as lenders.
Although the shadow banking system taken as a whole performs traditional
banking functions, including credit intermediation and maturity transformation, unlike
banks, it cannot rely on the protections afforded by deposit insurance and access to the
Federal Reserve’s discount window to help ensure its stability. Shadow banking depends
instead upon an alternative set of contractual and regulatory protections--for example, the
posting of collateral in short-term borrowing transactions. It also relies on certain
regulatory restrictions on key entities, such as the significant portfolio restrictions on
money market funds required by rule 2a-7 of the Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC), which are designed to ensure adequate liquidity and avoid credit losses. During
the financial crisis, however, these types of measures failed to stave off a classic and selfreinforcing panic that took hold in parts of the shadow banking system and ultimately
spread across the financial system more broadly.
An important feature of shadow banking is the historical and continuing
involvement of commercial and clearing banks--that is, more “traditional” banking
institutions. For example, commercial banks sponsored securitizations and ABCP
conduits, arrangements which, until recently, permitted those banks to increase their
leverage by keeping the underlying assets off their balance sheets. Clearing banks stand
in the middle of triparty repo agreements, managing the exchange of cash and securities
while providing protection and liquidity to both transacting parties. Moreover, to ease
operational frictions, clearing banks extend very large amounts of temporary intraday
credit to borrowers and lenders each day. This temporary intraday credit--averaging

-8about $1.4 trillion--allows securities dealers access to their securities (for example, the
tranches of loan securitizations mentioned earlier) during trading hours.
Because of these and other connections, panics and other stresses in shadow
banking can spill over into traditional banking. Indeed, the markets and institutions I
mentioned--the repo market, the ABCP market, and money market funds--all suffered
panics to some degree during the financial crisis. As a result, many traditional financial
institutions lost important funding channels for their assets; in addition, for reputational
and contractual reasons, many banks supported their affiliated funds and conduits,
compounding their own mounting liquidity pressures.
Status of Shadow Banking Reform Efforts
Given the substantial stakes, I am encouraged that both regulators and the private
sector have begun to take actions to prevent future panics and other disruptions in shadow
banking. However, in many key areas these efforts are still at early stages.
A first set of reforms relate to the accounting and regulatory capital treatment of
shadow banking entities sponsored by traditional banks. The Financial Accounting
Standards Board finalized a rule in 2009 that requires securitizations and other structured
finance vehicles, in certain situations, to be consolidated onto the sponsoring bank’s
balance sheet. In the context of regulatory capital, Basel 2.5 and Basel III addressed
interconnectedness and other sources of systemic risk frequently associated with shadow
banking by raising capital requirements for exposures to unregulated financial
institutions, such as asset managers, hedge funds, and credit insurers, and by
strengthening the capital treatment of liquidity lines to off-balance-sheet structures.

-9Basel III also includes quantitative liquidity rules that reflect contractual and other risks
that arise from bank sponsorship of off-balance-sheet vehicles.
A second area of ongoing reform is money market funds. In an important step
toward greater stability, the SEC in 2010 amended its regulations to, among other things,
require that money market funds maintain larger buffers of liquid assets, which may help
reassure investors and reduce the likelihood of runs. Notwithstanding the new
regulations, the risk of runs created by a combination of fixed net asset values, extremely
risk-averse investors, and the absence of explicit loss absorption capacity remains a
concern, particularly since some of the tools that policymakers employed to stem the runs
during the crisis are no longer available. SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro has advocated
additional measures to reduce the vulnerability of money market funds to runs, including
possibly requiring funds to maintain loss-absorbing capital buffers or to redeem shares at
the market value of the underlying assets rather than a fixed price of $1. Alternative
approaches to ensuring the stability of these funds have been proposed as well.
Additional steps to increase the resiliency of money market funds are important for the
overall stability of our financial system and warrant serious consideration.
A third set of emerging reforms is aimed at repo markets, an area in which the
Federal Reserve has taken an active role. The initial efforts have focused on the
vulnerabilities created by the large amounts of intraday credit provided by clearing banks
in the triparty repo market. Intraday credit, while a great convenience in normal times,
may foster systemic risk by creating large mutual exposures between securities dealers
and clearing banks. In times of market stress, a dealer default on intraday credit extended
could be large enough to pose a threat to the stability of the clearing bank--institutions

- 10 tightly connected to the rest of the financial system. But were a clearing bank to decline
to provide intraday credit to a dealer, that dealer’s ability to operate normally would be
substantially compromised, likely causing difficulties for its clients and counterparties,
including many other financial institutions. As a result, during a period of market stress,
the actions of clearing banks can jeopardize the stability of securities dealers, and vice
versa.
An industry task force recognized this mutual vulnerability in 2010 and
recommended the “practical elimination” of intraday credit in the triparty repo market.
Although some progress has been made, securities dealers and clearing banks have yet to
fully implement that recommendation. Nevertheless, through supervision and other
means, we continue to push the industry toward this critical goal. In doing so, we are
collaborating with other agencies, notably the SEC, which has regulatory responsibility
for money market funds and securities dealers, institutions that are active in the triparty
repo market. At the same time, we continue to urge market participants to improve their
risk-management practices, and, in particular, to ensure that tools are in place to address
the risks that would be posed to the repo market by the default of a major firm.
International regulatory groups have also been focused on addressing the financial
stability risks of shadow banking. The Group of Twenty leaders have directed the
Financial Stability Board (FSB), whose membership consists of key regulators from
around the world, including the Federal Reserve, with developing policy
recommendations to strengthen the regulation of the shadow banking system. The FSB
currently has five major projects under way devoted to understanding the risks of, and
developing policy recommendations for, shadow banking. The areas under study include

- 11 money market funds, securitization, securities lending and the repo market, banks’
interactions with shadow banks, and “other” shadow banking entities. Given the
substantial variation in the structure of shadow banking in different countries, the FSB’s
agenda is ambitious. But it is also critical in light of the potential risks to stability from
shadow banking and the ease with which shadow banking entities can create
intermediation chains across national borders.
Monitoring Financial Stability
I’ve outlined a number of ongoing efforts, both domestic and international, to
bring the shadow banking system into the sunlight, so to speak, and to impose tougher
standards on systemically important financial firms. But even as we make progress on
known vulnerabilities, we must be mindful that our financial system is constantly
evolving, and that unanticipated risks to stability will develop over time. Indeed, an
inevitable side effect of new regulations is that the system will adapt in ways that push
risk-taking from more-regulated to less-regulated areas, increasing the need for careful
monitoring and supervision of the system as a whole.
At the Federal Reserve, we have stepped up our monitoring efforts substantially
in recent years, with much of the work taking place under the auspices of our recently
created Office of Financial Stability Policy and Research. We conduct an active program
of research and data collection, often in conjunction with other U.S. and foreign
regulators and supervisors, including our fellow members on the FSOC. In addition, by
making use of resources throughout the Federal Reserve System, we are developing a
framework and infrastructure for monitoring systemic risk. Our goal is to have the
capacity to follow developments in all segments of the financial system, including parts

- 12 of the financial sector for which data are scarce or that have developed more recently and
are thus less well understood. This work complements and is closely coordinated with
our efforts, mentioned earlier, to supervise systemically important banking organizations
from a macroprudential perspective. For example, based on public data, we develop and
monitor measures of systemic importance that reflect firms’ interconnectedness and their
provision of critical services.
Unfortunately, data on the shadow banking sector, by its nature, can be more
difficult to obtain. Thus, we have to be more creative to monitor risk in this important
area. We look at broad indicators of risk to the financial system, such as measures of risk
premiums, asset valuations, and market functioning. We try to gauge the risk of runs by
looking at indicators of leverage (both on and off balance sheet) and tracking short-term
wholesale funding markets, especially for evidence of maturity mismatches between
assets and liabilities. We are also developing new sources of information to improve the
monitoring of leverage. For example, in 2010, we began a quarterly survey on dealer
financing (the Senior Credit Officer Opinion Survey on Dealer Financing Terms) that
collects information on the leverage that dealers provide to financial market participants
in the repo and over-the-counter derivatives markets.3 In addition, we are working with
other agencies to create a comprehensive set of regulatory data on hedge funds and
private equity firms.
Broader economic developments can also create risks to financial stability. To
assess such risks, we regularly monitor a number of metrics, including, for example, the
leverage of the nonfinancial sector. In addition, we use data from the flow of funds
3

The Senior Credit Officer Opinion Survey on Dealer Financing Terms is available on the Federal Reserve
Board’s website at www.federalreserve.gov/econresdata/releases/scoos.htm.

- 13 accounts to assess how much nonfinancial credit is ultimately being funded with shortterm debt.4 This assessment is important because an overleveraged nonfinancial sector
could serve to amplify shocks, to the detriment of the functioning of the financial sector
and broader economy. Our judgment of how the financial sector is affecting economic
activity reflects both information on lenders--most notably, underwriting standards, risk
appetite, and balance sheet capacity--and analytical indicators of macroeconomic
vulnerability to financial risks. Meanwhile, efforts are under way, both at the Federal
Reserve and elsewhere, to evaluate and develop new macroprudential tools and to
develop early warning indicators that could help identify and limit future buildups of
systemic risk.
In the decades prior to the financial crisis, financial stability policy tended to be
overshadowed by monetary policy, which had come to be viewed as the principal
function of central banks. In the aftermath of the crisis, however, financial stability
policy has taken on greater prominence and is now generally considered to stand on an
equal footing with monetary policy as a critical responsibility of central banks. We have
spent decades building and refining the infrastructure for conducting monetary policy.
And although we have done much in a short time to improve our understanding of
systemic risk and to incorporate a macroprudential perspective into supervision, our
framework for conducting financial stability policy is not yet at the same level.
Continuing to develop an effective set of macroprudential policy indicators and tools,

4

The Federal Reserve’s statistical release “Flow of Funds Accounts of the United States” provides detailed
information on patterns of financial intermediation through a consolidated set of balance sheets for the
household, business, and government sectors and financial institutions. The flow of funds accounts are
published quarterly and are available at www.federalreserve.gov/releases/z1.

- 14 while pursuing essential reforms to the financial system, is critical to preserving financial
stability and supporting the U.S. economy.