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For release on delivery
10:30 a.m. EDT
February 14, 2013

Statement by
Daniel K. Tarullo
Governor
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs
U.S. Senate
Washington, D.C.
February 14, 2013

Chairman Johnson, Ranking Member Crapo, and other members of the committee, thank
you for the opportunity to testify on implementation of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act of 2010 (Dodd-Frank Act). In today’s testimony, I will provide an
update on the Federal Reserve’s recent activities pertinent to the Dodd-Frank Act and describe
our regulatory and supervisory priorities for 2013.
The Federal Reserve, in many cases jointly with other regulatory agencies, has made
steady and considerable progress in implementing the Congressional mandates in the DoddFrank Act, though obviously some work remains. Throughout this effort, the Federal Reserve
has maintained a focus on financial stability. In the process of rule development, we have placed
particular emphasis on mitigating systemic risks. Thus, among other things, we have proposed
varying the application of the Dodd-Frank Act’s special prudential rules based on the relative
size and complexity of regulated financial firms. This focus on systemic risk is also reflected in
our increasingly systematic supervision of the largest banking firms.
Recent Regulatory Reform Milestones
Strong bank capital requirements, while not alone sufficient to guarantee the safety and
soundness of our banking system, are central to promoting the resiliency of banking firms and
the financial sector as a whole. Capital provides a cushion to absorb a firm’s expected and
unexpected losses, helping to ensure that those losses are borne by shareholders rather than
taxpayers. The financial crisis revealed, however, that the regulatory capital requirements for
banking firms were not sufficiently robust. It also confirmed that no single capital measure
adequately captures a banking firm’s risks of credit and trading losses. A good bit of progress
has now been made in strengthening and updating traditional capital requirements, as well as
devising some complementary measures for larger firms.

-2As you know, in December 2010 the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (Basel
Committee) issued the Basel III package of reforms to its framework for minimum capital
requirements, supplementing an earlier set of changes that increased requirements for important
classes of traded assets. Last summer, the Federal Reserve, the Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency (OCC), and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) issued for comment a
set of proposals to implement the Basel III capital standards for all large, internationally active
U.S. banking firms. In addition, the proposals would apply risk-based and leverage capital
requirements to savings and loan holding companies for the first time. The proposals also would
modernize and harmonize the existing regulatory capital standards for all U.S. banking firms,
which have not been comprehensively updated since their introduction twenty-five years ago,
and incorporate certain new legislative provisions, including elements of sections 171 and 939A
of the Dodd-Frank Act.
To help ensure that all U.S. banking firms maintain strong capital positions, the Basel III
proposals would introduce a new common equity capital requirement, raise the existing tier 1
capital minimum requirement, implement a capital conservation buffer on top of the regulatory
minimums, and introduce a more risk-sensitive standardized approach for calculating riskweighted assets. Large, internationally active banking firms also would be subject to a
supplementary leverage ratio and a countercyclical capital buffer and would face higher capital
requirements for derivatives and certain other capital markets exposures they hold. Taken
together, these proposals should materially reduce the probability of failure of U.S. banking
firms--particularly the probability of failure of the largest, most complex U.S. banking firms.

-3In October 2012, the Federal Reserve finalized rules implementing stress testing
requirements under section 165 of the Dodd-Frank Act. Consistent with the statute, the rules
require annual supervisory stress tests for bank holding companies with $50 billion or more in
assets and any nonbank financial companies designated by the Financial Stability Oversight
Council (Council). The rules also require company-run stress tests for a broader set of regulated
financial firms that have $10 billion or more in assets. The new Dodd-Frank Act supervisory
stress test requirements are generally consistent with the stress tests that the Federal Reserve has
been conducting on the largest U.S. bank holding companies since the Supervisory Capital
Assessment Program in the spring of 2009. The stress tests allow supervisors to assess whether
firms have enough capital to weather a severe economic downturn and contribute to the Federal
Reserve’s ability to make assessments of the resilience of the U.S. banking system under adverse
economic scenarios. The stress tests are an integral part of our capital plan requirement, which
provides a structured way to make horizontal evaluations of the capital planning abilities of large
banking firms.
The Federal Reserve also issued in December of last year a proposal to implement
enhanced prudential standards and early remediation requirements for foreign banks under
sections 165 and 166 of the Dodd-Frank Act. The proposal is generally consistent with the set of
standards previously proposed for large U.S. bank holding companies. The proposal generally
would require foreign banks with a large U.S. presence to organize their U.S. subsidiaries under
a single intermediate holding company that would serve as a platform for consistent supervision
and regulation. The U.S. intermediate holding companies of foreign banks would be subject to
the same risk-based capital and leverage requirements as U.S. bank holding companies. In

-4addition, U.S. intermediate holding companies and the U.S. branches and agencies of foreign
banks with a large U.S. presence would be required to meet liquidity requirements similar to
those applicable to large U.S. bank holding companies. The proposals respond to fundamental
changes in the scope and scale of foreign bank activities in the United States in the last fifteen
years. They would increase the resiliency and resolvability of the U.S. operations of foreign
banks, help protect U.S. financial stability, and promote competitive equity for all large banking
firms operating in the United States. The comment period for this proposal closes at the end of
March.
Priorities for 2013
The Federal Reserve’s supervisory and regulatory program in 2013 will concentrate on
four tasks: (1) continuing key Dodd-Frank Act and Basel III regulatory implementation work; (2)
further developing systematic supervision of large banking firms; (3) improving the resolvability
of large banking firms; and (4) reducing systemic risk in the shadow banking system.
Carrying Forward the Key Dodd-Frank Act and Basel III Regulatory Implementation Work
Capital, Liquidity, and Other Prudential Requirements for Large Banking Firms. Given
the centrality of strong capital standards, a top priority this year will be to update the bank
regulatory capital framework with a final rule implementing Basel III and the updated rules for
standardized risk-weighted capital requirements. The banking agencies have received more than
2,000 comments on the Basel III capital proposal. Many of the comments have been directed at
certain features of the proposed rule considered especially troubling by community and smaller
regional banks, such as the new standardized risk weights for mortgages and the treatment of
unrealized gains and losses on certain debt securities. These criticisms underscore the difficulty

-5in fashioning standardized requirements applicable to all banks that balance risk sensitivity with
the need to avoid excessive complexity. Here, though, I think there is a widespread view that the
proposed rule erred on the side of too much complexity. The three banking agencies are
carefully considering these and all comments received on the proposal and hope to finalize the
rulemaking this spring.
The Federal Reserve also intends to work this year toward finalization of its proposals to
implement the enhanced prudential standards and early remediation requirements for large
banking firms under sections 165 and 166 of the Dodd-Frank Act. As part of this process, we
intend to conduct shortly a quantitative impact study of the single-counterparty credit limits
element of the proposal. Once finalized, these comprehensive standards will represent a core
part of the new regulatory framework that mitigates risks posed by systemically important
financial firms and offsets any benefits that these firms may gain from being perceived as “too
big to fail.”
We also anticipate issuing notices of some important proposed rulemakings this year.
The Federal Reserve will be working to propose a risk-based capital surcharge applicable to
systemically important banking firms. This rulemaking will implement for U.S. firms the
approach to a systemic surcharge developed by the Basel Committee, which varies in magnitude
based on the measure of each firm’s systemic footprint. Following the passage of the DoddFrank Act, which called for enhanced capital standards for systemically important firms, the
Federal Reserve joined with some other key regulators from around the world in successfully
urging the Basel Committee to adopt a requirement of this sort for all firms of global systemic
importance.

-6Another proposed rulemaking will cover implementation by the three federal banking
agencies of the recently completed Basel III quantitative liquidity requirements for large global
banks. The financial crisis exposed defects in the liquidity risk management of large financial
firms, especially those which relied heavily on short-term wholesale funding. These new
requirements include the liquidity coverage ratio (LCR), which is designed to ensure that a firm
has a sufficient amount of high quality liquid assets to withstand a severe standardized liquidity
shock over a 30-day period. The Federal Reserve expects that the U.S. banking agencies will
issue a proposal in 2013 to implement the LCR for large U.S. banking firms. The Basel III
liquidity standards should materially improve the liquidity risk profiles of internationally active
banks and will serve as a key element of the enhanced liquidity standards required under the
Dodd-Frank Act.
Volcker Rule, Swaps Push-out, and Risk Retention. Section 619 of the Dodd-Frank Act,
known as the “Volcker rule,” generally prohibits a banking entity from engaging in proprietary
trading or acquiring an ownership interest in, sponsoring, or having certain relationships with a
hedge fund or private equity fund. In October 2011, the federal banking agencies and the
Securities and Exchange Commission sought public comment on a proposal to implement the
Volcker rule. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission subsequently issued a substantially
similar proposal. The rulemaking agencies have spent the past year carefully analyzing the
nearly 19,000 public comments on the proposal and have made significant progress in crafting a
final rule that is faithful to the language of the statute and maximizes bank safety and soundness
and financial stability at the least cost to the liquidity of the financial markets, credit availability,
and economic growth.

-7Section 716 of the Dodd-Frank Act generally prohibits the provision of federal
assistance, such as FDIC deposit insurance or Federal Reserve discount window credit, to swap
dealers and major swap participants. The Federal Reserve is currently working with the OCC
and the FDIC to develop a proposed rule that would provide clarity on how and when the section
716 requirements would apply to U.S. insured depository institutions and their affiliates and to
U.S. branches of foreign banks. We expect to issue guidance on the implementation of
section 716 before the July 21, 2013, effective date of the provision.
To implement the risk retention requirements in section 941 of the Dodd-Frank Act, the
Federal Reserve, along with other federal regulatory agencies, issued in March 2011 a proposal
that generally would force securitization sponsors to retain at least 5 percent of the credit risk of
the assets underlying a securitization. The agencies have reviewed the substantial volume of
comments on the proposal and the definition of a qualified mortgage in the recent final “abilityto-pay” rule of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB). As you know, the CFPB’s
definition of qualified mortgage serves as the floor for the definition of exempt qualified
residential mortgages in the risk retention framework. The agencies are working closely together
to determine next steps in the risk retention rulemaking process, with a view toward crafting a
definition of a qualified residential mortgage that is consistent with the language and purposes of
the statute and helps ensure a resilient market for private-label mortgage-backed securities.
Improving Systematic Supervision of Large Banking Firms
Given the risks to financial stability exposed by the financial crisis, the Federal Reserve
has reoriented its supervisory focus to look more broadly at systemic risks and has strengthened
its micro-prudential supervision of large, complex banking firms. Within the Federal Reserve,

-8the Large Institution Supervision Coordinating Committee (LISCC) was set up to centralize the
supervision of large banking firms and to facilitate the execution of horizontal, cross-firm
analysis of such firms on a consistent basis. The LISCC includes senior staff from various
divisions of the Board and from the Reserve Banks. It fosters interdisciplinary coordination,
using quantitative methods to evaluate each firm individually, relative to other large firms, and as
part of the financial system as a whole.
One major supervisory exercise conducted by the LISCC each year is a Comprehensive
Capital Analysis and Review (CCAR) of the largest U.S. banking firms.1 Building on
supervisory work coming out of the crisis, CCAR was established to ensure that each of the
largest U.S. bank holding companies (1) has rigorous, forward-looking capital planning
processes that effectively account for the unique risks of the firm and (2) maintains sufficient
capital to continue operations throughout times of economic and financial stress. CCAR, which
uses the annual stress test as a key input, enables the Federal Reserve to make a coordinated,
horizontal assessment of the resilience and capital planning abilities of the largest banking firms
and, in doing so, creates closer linkage between micro-prudential and macro-prudential
supervision. Large bank supervision at the Federal Reserve will include more of these
systematic, horizontal exercises.
Improving the Resolvability of Large Banking Firms
One important goal of post-crisis financial reform has been to counter too-big-to-fail
perceptions by reducing the anticipated damage to the financial system and economy from the
failure of a major financial firm. To this end, the Dodd-Frank Act created the Orderly

1

For more information, see www.federalreserve.gov/bankinforeg/ccar.htm.

-9Liquidation Authority (OLA), a mechanism designed to improve the prospects for an orderly
resolution of a systemic financial firm, and required all large bank holding companies to develop,
and submit to supervisors, resolution plans. Certain other countries that are home to large,
globally active banking firms are working along roughly parallel lines. The Basel Committee
and the Financial Stability Board have devoted considerable attention to the orderly resolution
objective by developing new standards for statutory resolution frameworks, firm-specific
resolution planning, and cross-border cooperation. Although much work remains to be done by
all countries, the Dodd-Frank Act reforms have generally put the United States ahead of its
global peers on the resolution front.
Since the passage of the Dodd-Frank Act, the FDIC has been developing a single-pointof-entry strategy for resolving systemic financial firms under the OLA. As explained by the
FDIC, this strategy is intended to effect a creditor-funded holding company recapitalization of
the failed financial firm, in which the critical operations of the firm continue, but shareholders
and unsecured creditors absorb the losses, culpable management is removed, and taxpayers are
protected. Key to the ability of the FDIC to execute this approach is the availability of sufficient
amounts of unsecured long-term debt to supplement equity in providing loss absorption in a
failed firm. In consultation with the FDIC, the Federal Reserve is considering the merits of a
regulatory requirement that the largest, most complex U.S. banking firms maintain a minimum
amount of long-term unsecured debt. A minimum long-term debt requirement could lend greater
confidence that the combination of equity owners and long-term debt holders would be sufficient
to bear all losses at the consolidated firm, thereby counteracting the moral hazard associated with
taxpayer bailouts while avoiding disorderly failures.

- 10 Reducing Systemic Risk in the Shadow Banking System
Most of the reforms I have discussed are aimed at addressing systemic risk posed by
regulated banking organizations, and all involve action the Federal Reserve can take under its
current authorities. Important as these measures are, however, it is worth recalling that the
trigger for the acute phase of the financial crisis was the rapid unwinding of large amounts of
short-term funding that had been made available to firms not subject to consolidated prudential
supervision. Today, although some of the most fragile investment vehicles and instruments that
were involved in the pre-crisis shadow banking system have disappeared, non-deposit short-term
funding remains significant. In some instances it involves prudentially regulated firms, directly
or indirectly. In others it does not. The key condition of the so-called “shadow banking system”
that makes it of systemic concern is its susceptibility to destabilizing funding runs, something
that is more likely when the recipients of the short-term funding are highly leveraged, engage in
substantial maturity transformation, or both.
Many of the key issues related to shadow banking and their potential solutions are still
being debated domestically and internationally. U.S. and global regulators need to take a hard,
comprehensive look at the systemic risks present in wholesale short-term funding markets.
Analysis of the appropriate ways to address these vulnerabilities continues as a priority this year
for the Federal Reserve. In the short term, though, there are several key steps that should be
taken with respect to shadow banking to improve the resilience of our financial system.
First, the regulatory and public transparency of shadow banking markets, especially
securities financing transactions, should be increased. Second, additional measures should be
taken to reduce the risk of runs on money market mutual funds. The Council recently proposed a

- 11 set of serious reform options to address the structural vulnerabilities in money market mutual
funds.
Third, we should continue to push the private sector to reduce the risks in the settlement
process for tri-party repurchase agreements. Although an industry-led task force made some
progress on these issues, the Federal Reserve concluded that important problems were not likely
to be successfully addressed in this process and has been using supervisory authority over the
past year to press for further and faster action by the clearing banks and the dealer affiliates of
bank holding companies.2 The amount of intraday credit being provided by the clearing banks in
the tri-party repo market has been reduced and is scheduled to be reduced much further in the
coming years as a result of these efforts. But vulnerabilities in this market remain a concern, and
addressing these vulnerabilities will require the cooperation of the broad array of participants in
this market and their federal regulators. The Federal Reserve will continue to report to Congress
and publicly on progress made to address the risks in the tri-party repo market.
In addition to these concrete steps to address concrete problems, regulators must continue
to closely monitor the shadow banking sector and be wary of signs that excessive leverage and
maturity transformation are developing outside of the banking system.
Conclusion
The financial regulatory architecture is stronger today than it was in the years leading up
to the crisis, but considerable work remains to complete implementation of the Dodd-Frank Act
and the post-crisis global financial reform program. Over the coming year, the Federal Reserve
will be working with other U.S. financial regulatory agencies, and with foreign central banks and
regulators, to propose and finalize a number of ongoing initiatives. In this endeavor, our goal is
2

For additional information, see www.newyorkfed.org/banking/tpr_infr_reform.html.

- 12 to preserve financial stability at the least cost to credit availability and economic growth. We are
focused on the monitoring of emerging systemic risks, reducing the probability of failure of
systemic financial firms, improving the resolvability of systemic financial firms, and building up
buffers throughout the financial system to enable the system to absorb shocks.
As we take this work forward, it is important to remember that preventing a financial
crisis is not an end in itself. Financial crises are profoundly debilitating to the economic wellbeing of the nation.
Thank you for your attention. I would be pleased to answer any questions you might
have.