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For release on delivery
10:00 a.m. EDT
September 9, 2014

Statement by
Daniel K. Tarullo
Member
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs
U.S. Senate
Washington, D.C.
September 9, 2014

Chairman Johnson, Ranking Member Crapo, and other members of the committee, thank
you for the opportunity to testify on the Federal Reserve’s activities in mitigating systemic risk
and implementing the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (DoddFrank Act). In testifying before this committee in February, I noted my hope and expectation
that this year would be the beginning of the end of our implementation of the major provisions of
the Dodd-Frank Act. Seven months later, we are on track to fulfill that expectation. The Federal
Reserve and other banking supervisors have continued to make progress in implementing the
congressional mandates in the Dodd-Frank Act, promoting a stable financial system, and
strengthening the resilience of banking organizations. In today’s testimony, I will provide an
update on the Federal Reserve’s implementation of the Dodd-Frank Act and describe key
upcoming regulatory and supervisory priorities to address the problems of “too big to fail” and
systemic risk. The Federal Reserve is committed to continuing to work with our fellow banking
agencies and with the market regulators to help ensure that the organizations we supervise
operate in a safe and sound manner and are able to support activity in other sectors of the
economy.
As we complete our revisions to the financial regulatory architecture, we are cognizant
that regulatory compliance can impose a disproportionate burden on smaller financial
institutions. In addition to overseeing large banking firms, the Federal Reserve supervises
approximately 800 state-chartered community banks that are members of the Federal Reserve
System, as well as several thousand small bank holding companies. In my testimony, I also will
describe how the Federal Reserve is seeking to ensure that its regulations and supervisory
framework are not unnecessarily burdensome for community banking organizations so they can
continue their important function of safe and sound lending to local communities.

-2Recent Dodd-Frank Act Implementation Milestones
Since the passage of the Dodd-Frank Act more than four years ago, the Federal Reserve
and the other agencies represented at this hearing have completed wide-ranging financial
regulatory reforms that have remade the regulatory landscape for financial firms and markets.
Internationally, at the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS), we have helped
develop new standards for global banks on risk-based capital, leverage, liquidity, singlecounterparty credit limits, and margin requirements for over-the-counter derivatives. We have
also worked with the Financial Stability Board (FSB) to reach global agreements on resolution
regimes for systemic financial firms and on a set of shadow banking regulatory reforms.
Domestically, we have completed many important measures. We approved final rules
implementing the Basel III capital framework, which help ensure that U.S. banking organizations
maintain strong capital positions and are able to continue lending to creditworthy households and
businesses even during economic downturns. We implemented the Dodd-Frank Act’s stress
testing requirements, which are complemented by the Federal Reserve’s annual Comprehensive
Capital Analysis and Review. Together, these supervisory exercises provide a forward-looking
assessment of the capital adequacy of the largest U.S. banking firms. Pursuant to section 165 of
the Dodd-Frank Act, we established a set of enhanced standards for large U.S. banking
organizations to help increase the resiliency of their operations and thus promote financial
stability. In addition, the Federal Reserve implemented a rule requiring foreign banking
organizations with a significant U.S. presence to establish U.S. intermediate holding companies
over their U.S. subsidiaries and subjecting such companies to substantially the same prudential
standards applicable to U.S. bank holding companies. We finalized the Volcker rule to

-3implement section 619 of the Dodd-Frank Act and prohibit banking organizations from engaging
in short-term proprietary trading of certain securities and derivatives. These and other measures
have already created a financial regulatory architecture that is much stronger and much more
focused on financial stability than the framework in existence at the advent of the financial crisis.
More recently, the Federal Reserve, often in tandem with some or all of the other
agencies represented at this hearing, has made progress on a number of other important
regulatory reforms. I will discuss those steps in more detail.
Liquidity rules for large banking firms
Last week, the Federal Reserve and the other U.S. banking agencies approved a final rule,
consistent with the enhanced prudential standards requirements in section 165 of the Dodd-Frank
Act, which implements the first broadly applicable quantitative liquidity requirement for U.S.
banking firms. Liquidity standards for large U.S. banking firms are a key contributor to financial
stability, as they work in concert with capital standards, stress testing, and other enhanced
prudential standards to help ensure that large banking firms manage liquidity in a manner that
mitigates the risk of creditor and counterparty runs.
The rule’s liquidity coverage ratio, or LCR, requires covered banking firms to hold
minimum amounts of high-quality liquid assets--such as central bank reserves and high-quality
government and corporate debt--that can be converted quickly and easily into cash sufficient to
meet expected net cash outflows over a short-term stress period. The LCR applies to bank
holding companies and savings and loan holding companies with $250 billion or more in total
consolidated assets or $10 billion or more in on-balance-sheet foreign exposures. The rule also
applies a less stringent, modified LCR to bank holding companies and savings and loan holding

-4companies that are below these thresholds but with more than $50 billion in total assets. The
rule does not apply to bank holding companies or savings and loan holding companies with less
than $50 billion in total assets, nor to nonbank financial companies designated by the Financial
Stability Oversight Council (FSOC). The Federal Reserve will apply enhanced liquidity
standards to designated nonbank financial companies through a subsequently issued order or rule
following an evaluation of each of their business models, capital structures, and risk profiles.
The rule’s LCR is based on a liquidity standard agreed to by the BCBS but is more
stringent than the BCBS standard in several areas, including the range of assets that qualify as
high-quality liquid assets and the assumed rate of outflows for certain kinds of funding. In
addition, the rule’s transition period is shorter than that in the BCBS standard. The accelerated
phase-in of the U.S. LCR reflects our objective that large U.S. banking firms maintain the
improved liquidity positions they have already built following the financial crisis, in part because
of our supervisory oversight. We believe the LCR will help ensure that these improved liquidity
positions will not weaken as memories of the financial crisis fade.
The final rule is largely identical to the proposed rule, with a few key adjustments made
in response to comments from the public. Those adjustments include changing the scope of
corporate debt securities and publicly traded equities qualifying as high-quality liquid assets,
phasing in reporting requirements, and modifying the stress period and reporting frequency for
firms subject to the modified LCR.
Swap margin reproposal
Sections 731 and 764 of the Dodd-Frank Act require the establishment of initial and
variation margin requirements for swap dealers and major swap participants (swap entities) on

-5swaps that are not centrally cleared. These requirements are intended to ensure that the
counterparty risks inherent in swaps are prudently limited and not allowed to build to
unsustainable levels that could pose risks to the financial system. In addition, requiring all
uncleared swaps to be subject to robust margin requirements will remove economic incentives
for market participants to shift activity away from contracts that are centrally cleared.
The Federal Reserve and four other U.S. agencies originally issued a proposed rule to
implement these provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act in April 2011. Following the release of the
original proposal, the BCBS and the International Organization of Securities Commissions began
working to establish a consistent global framework for imposing margin requirements on
uncleared swaps. This global framework was finalized last September. After considering the
comments that were received on the April 2011 U.S. proposal and the recently established global
standards, the agencies issued a reproposal last week. Under the reproposal, swap entities would
be required to collect and post initial and variation margin on uncleared swaps with another swap
entity and other financial end user counterparties. The requirements are intended to result in
higher initial margin requirements than would be required for cleared swaps, which is meant to
reflect the more complex and less liquid nature of uncleared swaps.
In accordance with the statutory requirement to establish margin requirements regardless
of counterparty type, the reproposal would require swap entities to collect and post margin in
connection with any uncleared swaps they have with nonfinancial end users. These
requirements, however, are quantitatively and qualitatively different from the margin
requirements for swaps with financial end users. Specifically, swaps with nonfinancial end users
would not be subject to specific, numerical margin requirements but would only be subject to

-6initial and variation margin requirements at such times, in such forms, and in such amounts, if
any, that the swap entity determines is necessary to address the credit risk posed by the
counterparty and the transaction. There are currently cases where a swap entity does not collect
initial or variation margin from nonfinancial end users because it has determined that margin is
not needed to address the credit risk posed by the counterparty or the transaction. In such cases,
the reproposal would not require a change in current practice. The agencies believe that these
requirements are consistent with the Dodd-Frank Act and appropriately reflect the low level of
risk presented by most nonfinancial end users.
The agencies in the reproposal have taken several steps to help mitigate any impact to the
liquidity of the financial system that could result from the swap margin requirements. These
steps include incorporating an initial margin requirement threshold below which exchanges of
initial margin are not required, allowing for a wider range of assets to serve as eligible collateral,
and providing smaller swap entities with an extended timeline to come into compliance. We
look forward to receiving comments on the reproposal.
Modifications to the supplementary leverage ratio and adoption of the enhanced
supplementary leverage ratio
Also last week, the Federal Reserve and the other U.S. banking agencies approved a final
rule that modifies the denominator calculation of the supplementary leverage ratio in a manner
consistent with the changes agreed to earlier this year by the BCBS. The revised supplementary
leverage ratio will apply to all banking organizations subject to the advanced approaches riskbased capital rule starting in 2018. These modifications to the supplementary leverage ratio will
result in a more appropriately measured set of leverage capital requirements and, in the

-7aggregate, are expected to modestly increase the stringency of these requirements across the
covered banking organizations.
This rule complements the agencies’ adoption in April of a rule that strengthens the
internationally agreed-upon Basel III leverage ratio as applied to U.S.-based global systemically
important banks (GSIBs). This enhanced supplementary leverage ratio, which will be effective
in January 2018, requires U.S. GSIBs to maintain a tier 1 capital buffer of at least 2 percent
above the minimum Basel III supplementary leverage ratio of 3 percent, for a total of 5 percent,
to avoid restrictions on capital distributions and discretionary bonus payments. In light of the
significantly higher risk-based capital rules for GSIBs under Basel III, imposing a stricter
leverage requirement on these firms is appropriate to help ensure that the leverage ratio remains
a relevant backstop for these firms.
Key Regulatory Priorities
As we near the completion of the implementation of the major provisions of the DoddFrank Act, some key regulatory reforms remain unfinished. To that end, the Federal Reserve
contemplates near- to medium-term measures to enhance the resiliency and resolvability of U.S.
GSIBs and address the risks posed to financial stability from reliance by financial firms on shortterm wholesale funding.
The financial crisis made clear that policymakers must devote significant attention to the
potential threat to financial stability posed by our most systemic financial firms. Accordingly,
the Federal Reserve has been working to develop regulations that are designed to reduce the
probability of failure of a GSIB to levels that are meaningfully below those for less systemically

-8important firms and to materially reduce the potential adverse impact on the broader financial
system and economy in the event of a failure of a GSIB.
GSIB risk-based capital surcharges
An important remaining Federal Reserve initiative to improve GSIB resiliency is our
forthcoming proposal to impose graduated common equity risk-based capital surcharges on U.S.
GSIBs. The proposal will be consistent with the standard in section 165 of the Dodd-Frank Act
that capital requirements be progressively more stringent as the systemic importance of a firm
increases. It will build on the GSIB capital surcharge framework developed by the BCBS, under
which the size of the surcharge for an individual GSIB is a function of the firm’s systemic
importance. By further increasing the amount of the most loss-absorbing form of capital that is
required to be held by firms that potentially pose the greatest risk to financial stability, we intend
to improve the resiliency of these firms. This measure might also create incentives for them to
reduce their systemic footprint and risk profile.
While our proposal will use the GSIB risk-based capital surcharge framework developed
by the BCBS as a starting point, it will strengthen the BCBS framework in two important
respects. First, the surcharge levels for U.S. GSIBs will be higher than the levels required by the
BCBS, noticeably so for some firms. Second, the surcharge formula will directly take into
account each U.S. GSIB’s reliance on short-term wholesale funding. We believe the case for
including short-term wholesale funding in the surcharge calculation is compelling, given that
reliance on this type of funding can leave firms vulnerable to runs that threaten the firm’s
solvency and impose externalities on the broader financial system.

-9Resolvability of GSIBs
Our enhanced regulation of GSIBs also includes efforts to improve their resolvability.
Most recently, in August, the Federal Reserve and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(FDIC) completed reviews of the second round of resolution plans submitted to the agencies in
October 2013 by 11 U.S. bank holding companies and foreign banks. Section 165(d) of the
Dodd-Frank Act requires banking organizations with total consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more and nonbank financial companies designated by the FSOC to submit resolution plans to the
Federal Reserve and the FDIC. Each plan must describe the organization’s strategy for rapid and
orderly resolution in the event of material financial distress or failure. In completing the second
round reviews of these banking organizations’ resolution plans, the FDIC and the Federal
Reserve noted certain shortcomings in the resolution plans that the firms must address to
improve their resolvability in bankruptcy. Both agencies also indicated the expectation that the
firms make significant progress in addressing these issues in their 2015 resolution plans.
In addition, the Federal Reserve has been working with the FDIC to develop a proposal
that would require the U.S. GSIBs to maintain a minimum amount of long-term unsecured debt
at the parent holding company level. While minimum capital requirements are designed to cover
losses up to a certain statistical probability, in the even less likely event that the equity of a
financial firm is wiped out, successful resolution without taxpayer assistance would be most
effectively accomplished if a firm has sufficient long-term unsecured debt to absorb additional
losses and to recapitalize the business transferred to a bridge operating company. The presence
of a substantial tranche of long-term unsecured debt that is subject to bail-in during a resolution
and is structurally subordinated to the firm’s other creditors should reduce run risk by clarifying

- 10 the position of those other creditors in an orderly liquidation process. A requirement for longterm debt also should have the benefit of improving market discipline, since the holders of that
debt would know they faced the prospect of loss should the firm enter resolution.
The Federal Reserve is working with global regulators, under the auspices of the FSB, to
develop a proposal that would require the largest, most complex global banking firms to
maintain a minimum amount of loss absorbency capacity beyond the levels mandated in the
Basel III capital requirements.
Another element of our efforts to promote resolvability of large banking organizations
involves the early termination rights of derivative counterparties to GSIBs. Some of the material
operating subsidiaries of GSIBs are counterparties to large volumes of over-the-counter
derivatives and other qualifying financial contracts that provide for an event of default based
solely on the insolvency or receivership of the parent holding company. Although the DoddFrank Act created an orderly liquidation authority (OLA) to better enable the government to
resolve a failed systemically important financial firm--and the OLA’s stay and transfer
provisions can prevent exercise of such contractual rights by counterparties to contracts under
U.S. law--the OLA provisions may not apply to contracts under foreign law. Accordingly,
counterparties of the foreign subsidiaries and branches of GSIBs may have contractual rights and
substantial economic incentives to accelerate or terminate those contracts as soon as the U.S.
parent GSIB enters OLA. This could render a resolution unworkable by resulting in the
disorderly unwind of an otherwise viable foreign subsidiary and the disruption of critical intraaffiliate activities that rely on the failing subsidiary. The challenge would be compounded in a
bankruptcy resolution because derivatives and other qualifying financial contracts are exempt

- 11 from the automatic stay under bankruptcy law, regardless of whether the contracts are governed
by U.S. or foreign law.
The international regulatory community is working to mitigate this risk as well. The
Federal Reserve is working with the FDIC and global regulators, financial firms, and other
financial market actors to develop a protocol to the International Swaps and Derivatives
Association (ISDA) Master Agreement to address the impediments to resolvability generated by
these early termination rights. The FSB will be reporting progress on this effort in the fall.
Short-term wholesale funding
As I have noted in prior testimony before this committee, short-term wholesale funding
plays a critical role in the financial system. During normal times, it helps to satisfy investor
demand for safe and liquid investments, lowers funding costs for borrowers, and supports the
functioning of important markets, including those in which monetary policy is executed. During
periods of stress, however, runs by providers of short-term wholesale funding and associated
asset liquidations can result in large fire sale externalities and otherwise undermine financial
stability. A dynamic of this type engulfed the financial system in 2008.
Since the crisis, the Federal Reserve has taken several steps to address short-term
wholesale funding risks. The Basel III capital framework and the Federal Reserve’s stress
testing regime have significantly increased the quantity and quality of required capital in the
banking system, particularly for those banking organizations that are the most active participants
in short-term wholesale funding markets. Similarly, the implementation of liquidity regulations
such as the LCR, together with related efforts by bank supervisors, will help to limit the amount
of liquidity risk in the banking system.

- 12 We have also taken steps to reduce risks posed by the use of short-term wholesale
funding by actors outside the banking system. These include leading an effort to reduce reliance
by borrowers in the tri-party repo market on intraday credit from clearing banks and increasing
the regulatory charges on key forms of credit and liquidity support that banks provide to shadow
banks. In part because of these actions and in part because of market adjustments, there is less
risk embedded in short-term wholesale funding markets today than in the period immediately
preceding the financial crisis. The short-term wholesale funding markets are generally smaller,
the average maturity of short-term funding arrangements is moderately greater, and collateral
haircuts are more conservative. In addition, the banking organizations that are the major
intermediaries in short-term wholesale funding markets are much more resilient based on the
measures I discussed earlier.
Nevertheless, we believe that more needs to be done to guard against short-term
wholesale funding risks. While the total amount of short-term wholesale funding is lower today
than immediately before the crisis, volumes are still large relative to the size of the financial
system. Furthermore, some of the factors that account for the reduction in short-term wholesale
funding volumes, such as the unusually flat yield curve environment and lingering risk aversion
from the crisis, are likely to prove transitory.
Federal Reserve staff is currently working on three sets of initiatives to address residual
short-term wholesale funding risks. As discussed above, the first is a proposal to incorporate the
use of short-term wholesale funding into the risk-based capital surcharge applicable to U.S.
GSIBs. The second involves proposed modifications to the BCBS’s net stable funding ratio
(NSFR) standard to strengthen liquidity requirements that apply when a bank acts as a provider

- 13 of short-term funding to other market participants. The third is numerical floors for collateral
haircuts in securities financing transactions (SFTs)--including repos and reverse repos, securities
lending and borrowing, and securities margin lending.
Modifications to the NSFR could be designed to help address the types of concerns
described in my previous testimony regarding SFT matched book activity. In the classic fact
pattern, a matched book dealer uses SFTs to borrow on a short-term basis from a cash investor,
such as a money market mutual fund, to finance a short-term SFT loan to a client, such as a
leveraged investment fund. The regulatory requirements on SFT matched books are generally
low despite the fact that matched books can pose significant microprudential and
macroprudential risks. Neither the BCBS LCR nor the NSFR originally finalized by the Basel
Committee would have imposed a material charge on matched book activity.
In January, the BCBS proposed a revised NSFR that would require banks to hold a
material amount of stable funding against short-term SFT loans, as well as other short-term
credit extensions, to nonbank financial entities. By requiring banks that make short-term loans to
hold stable funding, such a charge would help limit the liquidity risk that a dealer would face if it
experiences a run on its SFT liabilities but is unable to liquidate corresponding SFT assets. In
addition, by making it more expensive for the dealer to provide short-term credit, the charge
could help lean against excessive short-term borrowing by the dealer’s clients.
Turning to numerical floors for SFT haircuts, the appeal of this policy measure is that it
would help address the risk that post-crisis reforms targeted at banking organizations will drive
systemically risky activity toward places in the financial system where prudential standards do
not apply. In its universal form, a system of numerical haircut floors for SFTs would require any

- 14 entity that wants to borrow against a security to post a minimum amount of excess margin to its
lender that would vary depending on the asset class of the collateral. Like minimum margin
requirements for derivatives, numerical floors for SFT haircuts would serve as a mechanism for
limiting the build-up of leverage at the transaction level and could mitigate the risk of procyclical
margin calls.
Last August, the FSB issued a consultative document that represented an initial step
toward the development of a framework of numerical floors. However, the FSB’s proposal
contained some significant limitations, including that its scope was limited to transactions in
which a bank or broker-dealer extends credit to an unregulated entity and that the calibration of
the numerical floor levels was relatively low. Since then, the FSB has been actively considering
whether to strengthen the proposal along both of these dimensions.
Financial sector concentration limits
In May, the Federal Reserve proposed a rule to implement section 622 of the Dodd-Frank
Act, which prohibits a financial company from combining with another company if the resulting
financial company’s liabilities exceed 10 percent of the aggregate consolidated liabilities of all
financial companies. Under the proposal, financial companies subject to the concentration limit
would include insured depository institutions, bank holding companies, savings and loan holding
companies, foreign banking organizations, companies that control insured depository institutions,
and nonbank financial companies designated by the FSOC for Federal Reserve supervision.
Consistent with section 622, the proposal generally defines liabilities of a financial company as
the difference between its risk-weighted assets, as adjusted to reflect exposures deducted from
regulatory capital, and its total regulatory capital. Firms not subject to consolidated risk-based

- 15 capital rules would measure liabilities using generally accepted accounting standards. We
anticipate finalizing this rule in the near term.
Credit risk retention
Section 941 of the Dodd-Frank Act requires firms generally to retain credit risk in
securitization transactions they sponsor. Retaining credit risk creates incentives for securitizers
to monitor closely the quality of the assets underlying a securitization transaction and
discourages unsafe and unsound underwriting practices by originators. In August 2013, the
Federal Reserve, along with several other agencies, revised a proposal from 2011 to implement
section 941. The Federal Reserve is working with the other agencies charged by the Dodd-Frank
Act with implementing this rule to complete it in the coming months.
Rationalizing the Regulatory Framework for Community Banks
Before closing, I would like to discuss the Federal Reserve’s ongoing efforts to minimize
regulatory burden consistent with the effective implementation of our statutory responsibilities
for community banks, given the important role they play within our communities. Over the past
few decades, community banks have substantially reduced their presence in lines of businesses
such as consumer lending in the face of competition from larger banks benefiting from
economies of scale. Today, as a group, their most important forms of lending are to small- and
medium-sized businesses. Smaller community banks--those with less than $1 billion in assets-account for nearly one-fourth of commercial and industrial lending, and nearly 40 percent of
commercial real estate lending, to small- and medium-sized businesses, despite their having less
than 10 percent of total commercial banking assets. These figures reveal the importance of

- 16 community banks to local economies and the damage that could result if these banks were unable
to continue operating within their communities.
Banking regulators have taken many steps to try to avoid unnecessary regulatory costs for
community banks, such as fashioning more basic supervisory expectations for smaller, less
complex banks and identifying which provisions of new regulations are relevant to smaller
banks. In this regard, the Federal Reserve has worked to communicate clearly the extent to
which new rules and policies apply to smaller banks and to tailor them as appropriate. We also
work closely with our colleagues at the federal and state banking regulatory agencies to ensure
that supervisory approaches and methodologies are consistently applied to community banks.
But several new statutory provisions apply explicitly to some smaller banks or, by failing
to exclude any bank from coverage, apply to all banks. The Federal Reserve is supportive of
considering areas where the exclusion of community banks from statutory provisions that are
less relevant to community bank practice may be appropriate. For example, we believe it would
be worthwhile to consider whether community banks should be excluded from the scope of the
Volcker rule and from the incentive compensation requirements of section 956 of the DoddFrank Act. The concerns addressed by statutory provisions like these are substantially greater at
larger institutions and, even where a practice at a smaller bank might raise concerns, the
supervisory process remains available to address what would likely be unusual circumstances.
Another area in which the Federal Reserve has made efforts to right-size our supervisory
approach with regard to community banks is to improve our off-site monitoring processes so that
we can better target higher risk institutions and activities. Research conducted for a 2013
conference sponsored by the Federal Reserve System and the Conference of State Bank

- 17 Supervisors addressed the resilience of the community bank model and showed how some banks
performed better than others during the recent crisis. Building on this research, we are updating
our off-site monitoring screens to reflect experience gained during the crisis and recalibrating our
examination scoping process for community banks to focus our testing on higher-risk banks and
activities, and whenever possible reduce procedures for banks of lower risk.
Recognizing the burden that the on-site presence of many examiners can place on the
day-to-day business of a community bank, we are also working to increase our level of off-site
supervisory activities. Responding to on-site examinations and inspections is of course a cost for
community banks, but this cost must be weighed against the supervisory benefit of face-to-face
interactions with bank examiners to explore and resolve institution-specific concerns. The
Federal Reserve aims to strike the appropriate balance of off-site and on-site supervisory
activities to ensure that the quality of community bank supervision is maintained without
creating an overly burdensome process. To that end, last year we completed a pilot on
conducting parts of the labor-intensive loan review off-site using electronic records from banks.
Based on good results with the pilot, we are planning to continue using this approach in future
reviews at banks where bank management is supportive of the process and where electronic
records are available. We are also exploring whether other examination procedures can be
conducted off-site without compromising the ability of examiners to accurately assess the safety
and soundness of supervised banks.
Conclusion
The Federal Reserve has made significant progress in implementing the Dodd-Frank Act
and other measures designed to improve the resiliency of banking organizations and reduce

- 18 systemic risk. We are committed to working with the other U.S. financial regulatory agencies to
promote a stable financial system in a manner that does not impose a disproportionate burden on
smaller institutions. To help us achieve these goals, we will continue to seek the views of the
institutions we supervise and the public as we further develop regulatory and supervisory
programs to preserve financial stability at the least cost to credit availability and economic
growth.
Thank you for your attention. I would be pleased to answer any questions you might
have.