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For release on delivery
10:00 a.m. EDT
September 30, 2010

Statement by
Ben S. Bernanke
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs
U.S. Senate
Washington, D.C.
September 30, 2010

Chairman Dodd, Ranking Member Shelby, and other members of the Committee, thank
you for the opportunity to testify about the Federal Reserve’s implementation of the Dodd-Frank
Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 (Dodd-Frank Act).
In the years leading up to the recent financial crisis, the global regulatory framework did
not effectively keep pace with the profound changes in the financial system. The Dodd-Frank
Act addresses critical gaps and weaknesses of the U.S. regulatory framework, many of which
were revealed by the crisis. The Federal Reserve is committed to working with the other
financial regulatory agencies to effectively implement and execute the act, while also developing
complementary improvements to the financial regulatory framework.
The act gives the Federal Reserve several crucial new responsibilities. These
responsibilities include being part of the new Financial Stability Oversight Council, supervision
of nonbank financial firms that are designated as systemically important by the council,
supervision of thrift holding companies, and the development of enhanced prudential standards
for large bank holding companies and systemically important nonbank financial firms designated
by the council (including capital, liquidity, stress test, and living will requirements). In addition,
the Federal Reserve has or shares important rulemaking authority for implementing the so-called
Volcker Rule restrictions on proprietary trading and private fund activities of banking firms,
credit risk retention requirements for securitizations, and restrictions on interchange fees for
debit cards, among other provisions.
All told, the act requires the Federal Reserve to complete more than 50 rulemakings and
sets of formal guidelines, as well as a number of studies and reports, many within a relatively
short period. We have also been assigned formal responsibilities to consult and collaborate with
other agencies on a substantial number of additional rules, provisions, and studies. Overall, we

-2have identified approximately 250 projects associated with implementing the act. To ensure that
we meet our obligations in a timely manner, we are drawing on expertise and resources from
across the Federal Reserve System in areas such as banking supervision, economic research,
financial markets, consumer protection, payments, and legal analysis. We have created a senior
staff position to coordinate our efforts and have developed project-reporting and tracking tools to
facilitate management and oversight of all of our implementation responsibilities.
The Federal Reserve is committed to its long-standing practice of ensuring that all its
rulemakings be conducted in a fair, open, and transparent manner. Accordingly, we are
disclosing on our public website summaries of all communications with members of the public-including banks, trade associations, consumer groups, and academics--regarding matters subject
to a proposed or potential future rulemaking under the act.
In addition to our own rulemakings and studies, we have been providing technical and
policy advice to the Treasury Department as it works to establish the oversight council and the
related Office of Financial Research. We are working with the Treasury to develop the council’s
organizational documents and structure. We are also assisting the council with the construction
of its framework for identifying systemically important nonbank financial firms and financial
market utilities, as well as with its required studies on the proprietary trading and private fund
activities of banking firms and on financial-sector concentration limits.
Additionally, work is well under way to transfer the Federal Reserve’s consumer
protection responsibilities specified in the act to the new Bureau of Consumer Financial
Protection. A transition team at the Board, headed by Governor Duke, is working closely with
Treasury staff responsible for setting up the new agency. We have established the operating
accounts and initial funding for the bureau, and we have provided the Treasury detailed

-3information about our programs and staffing in the areas of rulemaking, compliance
examinations, policy analysis, complaint handling, and consumer education. We are also
providing advice and information about supporting infrastructure that the Bureau will need to
carry out its responsibilities, such as human resource systems and information technology.
Well before the enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act, the Federal Reserve was working with
other regulatory agencies here and abroad to design and implement a stronger set of prudential
requirements for internationally active banking firms. The governing body for the Basel
Committee on Banking Supervision reached an agreement a few weeks ago on the major
elements of a new financial regulatory architecture, commonly known as Basel III. By
increasing the quantity and quality of capital that banking firms must hold and by strengthening
liquidity requirements, Basel III aims to constrain bank risk-taking, reduce the incidence and
severity of future financial crises, and produce a more resilient financial system. The key
elements of this framework are due to be finalized by the end of this year.
In concordance with the letter and the spirit of the act, the Federal Reserve is also
continuing its work to strengthen its supervision of the largest, most complex financial firms and
to incorporate macroprudential considerations into supervision. As the act recognizes, the
Federal Reserve and other financial regulatory agencies must supervise financial institutions and
critical infrastructures with an eye toward not only the safety and soundness of each individual
firm, but also overall financial stability. Indeed, the crisis demonstrated that a too narrow focus
on the safety and soundness of individual firms can result in a failure to detect and thwart
emerging threats to financial stability that cut across many firms.
A critical feature of a successful systemic or macroprudential approach to supervision is a
multidisciplinary perspective. Our experience in 2009 with the Supervisory Capital Assessment

-4Program (popularly known as the bank stress tests) demonstrated the feasibility and benefits of
employing such a perspective. 1 The stress tests also showed how much the supervision of
systemically important institutions can benefit from simultaneous horizontal evaluations of the
practices and portfolios of a number of individual firms and from employment of robust
quantitative assessment tools. Building on that experience, we have reoriented our supervision
of the largest, most complex banking firms to include a quantitative surveillance mechanism and
to make greater use of the broad range of skills of the Federal Reserve staff.
A final element of the Federal Reserve’s efforts to implement the Dodd-Frank Act relates
to the transparency of our balance sheet and liquidity programs. Well before enactment, we were
providing a great deal of relevant information on our website, in statistical releases, and in
regular reports to the Congress. Under a framework established by the act, the Federal Reserve
will, by December 1, provide detailed information regarding individual transactions conducted
across a range of credit and liquidity programs over the period from December 1, 2007, to
July 20, 2010. This information will include the names of counterparties, the date and dollar
value of individual transactions, the terms of repayment, and other relevant information. On an
ongoing basis, subject to lags specified by the Congress to protect the efficacy of the programs,
the Federal Reserve also will routinely provide information regarding the identities of
counterparties, amounts financed or purchased and collateral pledged for transactions under the
discount window, open market operations, and emergency lending facilities.

1

See Ben S. Bernanke (2010), “The Supervisory Capital Assessment Program--One Year Later,” speech delivered
at the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago 46th Annual Conference on Bank Structure and Competition, held in
Chicago, Ill., May 6, www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/bernanke20100506a.htm; and Daniel K. Tarullo
(2010), “Lessons from the Crisis Stress Tests,” speech delivered at the Federal Reserve Board International
Research Forum on Monetary Policy, Washington, March 26,
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/tarullo20100326a.htm.

-5To conclude, the Dodd-Frank Act is an important step forward for financial regulation in
the United States, and it is essential that the act be carried out expeditiously and effectively. The
Federal Reserve will work closely with our fellow regulators, the Congress, and the
Administration to ensure that the law is implemented in a manner that best protects the stability
of our financial system and strengthens the U.S. economy.