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For release on delivery
8:10 a.m. PST (11:10 a.m. EST)
January 13, 2012

Opportunities to Reduce Regulatory Burden and Improve Credit Availability
Remarks by
Elizabeth A. Duke
Member
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
to the
2012 Bank Presidents Seminar
Sponsored by the California Bankers Association
Santa Barbara, California

January 13, 2012

It's a pleasure to be here this morning to address the 2012 California Bankers Association
Bank Presidents Seminar. Before joining the Federal Reserve, I spent most of my career in
banking, much of it as president of a community bank. So I know how important these
conferences can be as you try to meet the expectations of regulators, customers, employees,
communities, and shareholders--and to do so safely and profitably--with limited resources. For
more than three years now I have viewed banking from a different perspective, as a regulator
whose primary concerns are the safety and soundness of the banking system and consumer
protection. Three years may sound brief, but I think that the intensity of my tenure more than
offsets its relatively short duration. I arrived at the Federal Reserve in 2008, just in time to serve
on the front lines of the combat against the collapse of our financial system. I witnessed firsthand the damage that can result from reckless lending and weak risk-management practices.
As we all know, fallout from the crisis was not limited to those who engaged in the
activities that were at the center of the problem. Indeed, as the crisis developed, conditions
deteriorated so severely that many banks that had been considered financially strong, that had
never made a single sub-prime loan, found themselves struggling for survival. This was
particularly the case for banks in states like California that were most heavily impacted by a
sharp deterioration in real estate markets and a significant increase in unemployment.
Community bankers’ efforts to address the asset quality problems that followed have been
crucial to recovery. We are just now starting to reap the benefits of those efforts and are seeing
some improvement in community banks in California and across the country.
But while the effects of the economic crisis are receding, bankers are now facing a wave of
increased regulatory requirements. For the most part, the new regulations are directed at the
largest institutions, whose failure would pose the greatest risk to the financial system, or at the

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lending practices that led to the crisis. Even so, the changes are so sweeping that many industry
analysts have questioned whether the overall weight of regulation poses a threat to the future of
the community bank model.
I do believe in the community bank model and its future. Indeed, I believe there is a real
place for the customization and flexibility that community banks can exercise to meet the needs
of local communities and small business customers. Still, the disproportionate cost of regulatory
compliance for smaller institutions is real. Financial supervisors must be vigilant in efforts to
maintain financial system stability and ensure that consumers are able to understand their
financial product choices, no matter where they choose to bank. However, as we and other
agencies craft regulations to implement the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act) and adjust supervisory practices to meet these priorities, I think
we must avoid a one-size-fits-all approach to supervision.
To this end, the Federal Reserve last year formed a subcommittee of the Board to oversee
the supervision of community and small regional banking organizations. I chair the
subcommittee and am joined in this effort by Governor Sarah Bloom Raskin, who complements
my community banking background with her experience as a banking lawyer and a state bank
supervisor. In addition, in 2010 the Federal Reserve formed the Community Depository
Institution Advisory Council (CDIAC) with membership drawn from smaller banks, thrifts, and
credit unions. Council members meet with the Federal Reserve Board twice a year to share their
perspectives on the lending environment, regulatory issues, and the economy.1

                                                            
1

In addition to the national CDIAC that meets with the Board, each Reserve Bank has its own local CDIAC that
provides a regional perspective to Reserve Bank management. See
http://www.federalreserve.gov/aboutthefed/cdiac.htm for more information.

‐ 3 ‐ 
 

Today, I plan to discuss with you some ideas and initiatives that are on our subcommittee
agenda as we strive for balance between our supervisory responsibilities and the effect
supervisory practices have on the cost of compliance and credit availability.
Before I begin, I should note that the views I will share today are my own and do not
necessarily represent the views of my colleagues on the Federal Reserve Board. But I think it is
also safe to say that my concern and commitment to get this right is shared by all of my
colleagues on the Board of Governors and by the staff throughout the Federal Reserve System
who do the really hard work every day.
Clarifying Supervisory Expectations
One of the most daunting aspects of any comprehensive financial regulatory reform
legislation such as the Dodd-Frank Act is the sheer volume of new regulatory proposals and final
regulations. I still remember the experience as a banker of reading through hundreds of pages of
dense language, paying close attention to the footnotes, trying to determine whether a regulation
even applied to my bank and, if it did, what was expected of us. That was before we even got
around to figuring out how we were going to meet the requirements, let alone what compliance
was going to cost. And now, as a regulator, I still read every rule, guidance, and proposal with
the knowledge that the effort expended to understand new regulatory requirements is itself an
additional burden.
So, in response to a suggestion that was made by one of our CDIAC members, we are now
working to include, at the beginning of each regulatory proposal, final rule, or regulatory
guidance, a statement outlining which banks are affected. In particular, when issuing
supervisory letters, we try to state specifically if and how new guidance will apply to community
banks. This way, banks won’t waste resources on requirements that don’t apply to them.

‐ 4 ‐ 
 

Sometimes, this statement is relatively simple: for example, many provisions of the Dodd–Frank
Act by statute apply only to the largest banks.
In cases where the rules apply to all banks, but expectations vary by bank size or the degree
to which banks engage in specific activities, it may be more helpful to make distinctions
throughout the regulation or guidance. For example, when we proposed interagency guidance
covering incentive compensation, we tried to note under each provision the simplified
expectations for community banks that did not make extensive use of incentive compensation.
Also helpful in clarifying supervisory expectations is the use of examples. Interagency
guidance issued in 2009 covering workouts of commercial real estate (CRE) loans contained
several examples of loan restructurings and how they should be classified.2 I think the examples
helped bankers and examiners alike understand policymakers’ expectations for the regulatory
treatment of loan workouts. Still, even with the examples, we heard reports that the guidance
was not being implemented consistently in the field. To further ensure consistency, we
conducted extensive examiner training. After the training was completed, we conducted a
review of hundreds of loan files from recent examinations. Our file review indicated that, with
very few exceptions, the loans were classified according to the guidance.
I believe bankers come to fully understand supervisory expectations over time, as their
experience grows. But when something radically changes the supervisory landscape such as new
regulations, drastic changes in the economic environment, or reassignment of regulatory
authority, more direct outreach might be needed.

                                                            
2

See Supervision and Regulation (SR) letter 09-7, “Prudent Commercial Real Estate Loan Workouts.”
http://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/bcreg/20091030a.htm

‐ 5 ‐ 
 

For many years, the Reserve Banks have maintained local training and outreach programs
for banks in their districts. For instance, the popular “Ask the Fed” calls conducted by the
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis provide bankers with an opportunity to hear Federal Reserve
staff discuss recent policy initiatives and to be updated on the most common problems that
examiners see in the field. The calls also provide an informal setting for bankers to ask questions
on issues of concern. In addition, consumer compliance webinars have provided a forum for the
Federal Reserve to discuss emerging consumer compliance issues and to answer questions from
webinar participants directly.3 These initiatives have been so successful that a planning group is
studying options for leveraging these efforts in a coordinated, national initiative to improve
communication of relevant information to community banks supervised by the Federal Reserve.
Despite all efforts to communicate supervisory expectations, there are inevitably
disagreements between banks and their examiners about examination findings. The Federal
Reserve Ombudsman actively works with banks that have concerns about their examinations or
that wish to appeal an examination finding. The Ombudsman works independently from the
bank supervision chain of command and has broad authority to mediate complaints, including the
authority to refer matters to committees of the Board. The Ombudsman’s office also has a
follow-up program in place to protect the banks that contact it from retaliation. And the
Ombudsman tracks the nature and source of complaints in order to identify potential systemic
problems.4

                                                            
3

See www.consumercomplianceoutlook.org for archived webinars and publications, and announcements about
future events.
4
 See www.federalreserve.gov/aboutthefed/ombudsman.htm 

‐ 6 ‐ 
 

Balancing Safety and Soundness with Credit Availability
Since 2008, many banks have seen their assets’ quality criticized and their ratings
downgraded. This is not surprising given the severity of the economic downturn and the effect it
had on the quality of bank assets. However, some bankers complain that examiners also
tightened their approach. Indeed, we repeatedly hear that fear of examiner criticism is one of the
reasons banks hesitate to lend to small businesses. We take these concerns seriously. In
response, we are actively communicating with examiners and have stepped up examiner training
to ensure that supervision in the field is consistent with policy. At the same time, I think it is
important to continually reevaluate our supervisory policies and procedures to ensure that the
policies themselves are not unnecessarily constricting credit availability. Here are a few such
policies that we are currently evaluating at the Federal Reserve.
CRE concentrations
First, is the interagency supervisory guidelines issued in 2006 that required additional risk
monitoring of CRE lending whenever loans reached certain thresholds--100 percent of capital for
loans secured by construction and land acquisition activities and 300 percent of capital for loans
secured by total non-owner occupied commercial real estate, including construction and land
acquisition activities. 5 Although these thresholds were never intended to be hard caps, we hear
from banks that they are now widely regarded as such. Many bankers have told me that they
manage their loan portfolios to stay below these thresholds and forego growth in these loan
categories, even when promising, creditworthy lending prospects are available. These reports
were so widespread that the Government Accountability Office (GAO) conducted a study on

                                                            
5

See SR letter 07-1, “Interagency Guidance on Concentrations in Commercial Real Estate.”

‐ 7 ‐ 
 

supervision of CRE lending and concluded that the guidance warranted clarification.6 Federal
Reserve staff is working with the other agencies on ways to clarify the expectations of the
interagency CRE guidance and reduce any unintended restrictions on sound lending.
Given the high level of losses experienced on construction and land development projects
over the past several years and the number of failed banks with high concentrations of such
lending, it seems prudent for banks to keep construction loan exposures at, or even well below,
100 percent of capital. However, losses on loans secured by existing non-owner occupied
commercial real estate have been much more modest, suggesting that banks’ efforts to maintain
concentration ratios below 300 percent of capital may constrain lending for some creditworthy
borrowers.
Moreover, to generate loan volume without increasing real estate lending, many banks are
now targeting growth in commercial and industrial (C&I) loans, a type of lending with which
they may have less expertise. In fact, banks have generally experienced higher loss rates on C&I
loans than on commercial real estate secured loans (excluding construction loan losses), even
through the crisis. So this portfolio shift has the potential to increase rather than decrease
expected losses.
For my part, I believe we should retain and perhaps strengthen the 100 percent of capital
guideline on construction lending and consider dropping or modifying the 300 percent guideline
for non-owner occupied CRE loans. Analysis undertaken by Federal Reserve staff suggests that
retaining only the 100 percent guideline on construction loans would still be adequate to identify
the banks at greatest risk. And bankers would still have to manage their loan portfolios

                                                            
6

See GAO’s May 2010 report on Enhanced Guidance on Commercial Real Estate Risks Needed. For more
information go to www.gao.gov/assets/320/318489.pdf.

‐ 8 ‐ 
 

appropriately and consider the risks of concentrations. But this change would help to eliminate
any perception of a cap on what, in many cases, could be prudent, secured lending.
Accounting standards
One factor that contributes to regulatory uncertainty is the intersection of Generally
Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) and regulatory requirements. Nowhere is this more
evident than in the accounting for the allowance for loan and lease losses (ALLL). The current
accounting standard requires provisions only to cover losses that have already been incurred.
Conflicting views of the range of likely losses sometimes leads to a perception that the
regulatory evaluation of the adequacy of ALLL levels involves something of a “black box.” To
further complicate things, the accounting standard generally requires estimation, using statistical
analysis, of a bank’s unique past loss patterns, but most community banks have neither the rich
data nor the capability to perform such analysis. Federal Reserve staff is currently investigating
whether there is any way to use available supervisory data to publish loss rate ranges that could
be used as a starting point for any bank to calculate allowance amounts in a way that is simple to
understand and not inconsistent with GAAP. Even if development of such a tool does not turn
out to be feasible, staff is still working to amend its approach to clarify expectations, improve
transparency, and heighten consistency.
Along the same lines, I hear enough feedback about troubled debt restructurings (TDRs) to
lead me to believe that it could be helpful to issue guidance clarifying the regulatory and
accounting treatment of TDRs, non-performing assets, and classified loans. Even though these
designations have different definitions, time frames, and regulatory consequences, they often
seem to be used interchangeably. Reportedly, some bankers are reluctant to offer modifications
that would help struggling borrowers and enhance the potential for ultimate repayment because

‐ 9 ‐ 
 

they are concerned that the loan would be classified as a TDR and remain classified even after
performance under the modified terms is demonstrated.
Asset classifications
Taking this a step further, now might be a good time to review the definitions and usages of
asset classifications. Right now, the definition of a substandard loan encompasses a broad range
of assets, many of which will never sustain a loss. Yet our classification and bank rating system
gives the same weight to all loans in the same classification bucket, regardless of loss potential.
As a result, when a bank starts to approach a level of classification that it believes would cause
examiners to downgrade its CAMELS7 rating, the bank stops making loans that it believes will
be classified even if there is no concern about actual losses from the loans.
There was an interagency proposal issued in 20058 that would have established a two-step
process for classifying commercial loans. The first step would be to evaluate the loan (the
probability of default) and the second step involved estimating the potential loss (the loss given
default). Many larger banks already use this approach in their own internal loan classification
systems. On the other hand, many commenters at the time, including those from both small and
large banks, objected to the proposal for a variety of reasons and the agencies decided to table it
for the time being. Still, as I went back and reviewed the proposal, it struck me that some form
of such guidance could be helpful in responding to the complaint that I hear over and over that
loan classifications often ignore the loss protection provided by guarantors or collateral. And I
think it might allow more accurate measurement of credit risk in all loan portfolios, not just
                                                            
7

To assess the bank's performance and summarize its overall condition, examiners use the Uniform Financial
Institutions Rating System (UFIRS), which is commonly referred to as the CAMELS rating system. The acronym
CAMELS is derived from six key areas of examination focus: Capital adequacy, Asset quality, Management and
board oversight, Earnings, Liquidity, and Sensitivity to market risk.
8
See “2005 Interagency Proposal on the Classification of Commercial Credit Exposures”. For more information
please go to http://www.federalreserve.gov/BoardDocs/Press/bcreg/2005/20050328/attachment.pdf.

‐ 10 ‐ 
 

commercial loans. So we are continuing to study the idea and the effect it might have on asset
quality ratings if it was applied to different portfolios.
Ratings upgrades
I also believe that when conditions warrant a change in CAMELS ratings, the update
should take place as quickly as possible. It is always important to promptly identify problem
banks and make use of all supervisory tools to foster their recovery. But I believe that as a bank
stabilizes and demonstrates improvement, we should ensure that examiners move just as
promptly to assign ratings that reflect the improved financial and managerial condition of the
bank and free it from restrictions that could delay the bank’s return to prudent lending activity.
Encouraging Creative Supervisory Approaches to Emerging Problems
So far, I have talked mainly about making adjustments to conventional supervisory
approaches. In some cases, however, I think it might make sense to challenge some of our
traditional thinking.
The first area that I think could benefit from a fresh approach is our requirement for the
active marketing for sale of properties acquired in foreclosure, often called real estate owned, or
REO, properties. While existing statutes and regulations do not prohibit financial institutions
from renting REO properties, supervisory guidance encourages sales as the primary disposition
tool. The problem with this requirement in the current environment is that having banks,
servicers, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Federal Housing Administration all following the
same approach with thousands of properties on the market at the same time may actually be
exacerbating the slump in housing prices.
Our research suggests that if lenders were permitted in some cases to rent residential
REO property rather than sell it at fire-sale prices, it could better balance rental and owner-

‐ 11 ‐ 
 

occupied markets and thus help housing prices stabilize sooner. Banks would have the
opportunity to offset carrying costs and potentially increase their ultimate recovery. And the net
result of removing some properties from the distress sale inventory could ultimately lead to
higher recoveries for all holders of REO. Given current market conditions, banks could still
divest property within statutory time frames, but with better results for themselves, surrounding
property owners, and the economy. We are in the process now of exploring ways to clarify our
guidance regarding rental of residential REO properties.
Let me turn now to a supervisory innovation that, I believe, will prove quite valuable in
ensuring the stability of our financial system: stress testing. At the height of the crisis, the
Federal Reserve, working with other banking agencies, conducted stress tests on the largest
financial institutions and published the results. Banks that did not appear to have sufficient
capital to withstand adverse conditions were required to raise additional capital. Last year, we
reviewed the largest banks’ capital plans in light of stress test results and used the information to
guide approvals of planned capital distributions. The Dodd-Frank Act requires annual
supervisory stress tests for institutions with assets of at least $50 billion and internal stress tests
for institutions with assets of $10 billion or more. There are no current bank-wide stress testing
requirements for banks with assets less than $10 billion. The only expectations for smaller banks
are those contained in existing guidance, such as for interest rate risk or for commercial real
estate concentrations.
As strongly as I believe in the concept of stress testing for capital adequacy, I don’t believe
that it needs to become a complicated, expensive, and burdensome process for smaller
institutions with traditional business models. In many cases, smaller institutions are already

‐ 12 ‐ 
 

incorporating the impact of adverse outcomes or stressful events into their existing risk
management and business decision-making process.
The capital stress testing framework that we have developed is a dynamic way of looking at
potential threats to capital in the context of the company’s ability to replace capital through its
earnings power, the current level of capital, and plans for capital distribution. For traditional
community banks, the primary threat to capital is the risk of loan losses. We now have data on
losses by loan category for two periods of severe financial stress, the recent financial crisis and
the savings and loan crisis.
One way to test whether community banks have enough capital to withstand stress would
be to apply the level of losses generally experienced in a stressed environment to bank loan
portfolios to estimate potential losses. In such an analysis, a bank with concentrations in a
lending category that could experience high losses during times of economic stress, such as
construction lending or credit card loans, would have a high potential loss rate applied to those
portfolios and thus require more capital than a bank with a more conservative portfolio. The
rough estimates based on average losses by loan category could be further refined by looking at
the individual bank loan classifications. We could similarly study the impact of stressful
conditions on pre-provision net revenue, but I don’t believe these fluctuations will have nearly as
strong an impact on stressed capital as loan losses would have. And this analysis could be
accomplished in smaller banks using existing call report data and supervisory asset
classifications.
There are two points here. First, stress testing does not necessarily have to involve
additional burden on the banks. Second, and perhaps most importantly, I hope that bankers do

‐ 13 ‐ 
 

not feel that they have to spend scarce resources trying to conform to stress testing expectations
that apply only to larger institutions.
Regulatory Burden and Mortgage Lending
I’ve focused most of my remarks today on policy ideas the Federal Reserve has the
authority to pursue in order to reduce regulatory burden. One area that imposes especially heavy
costs of regulatory burden on community banks, but for which the Federal Reserve no longer has
rule-writing authority, is mortgage lending.
Community banks have long been a source of funding for mortgages that didn’t fit the
underwriting criteria to qualify for purchase by the government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs).
These loans typically are held on balance sheet rather than securitized. Consequently,
community banks retain 100 percent of the credit risk of these loans and have no incentive to
make loans without regard to the consumer’s ability to pay. But because community banks hold
the loans on balance sheet, they may charge higher rates than those for prime GSE loans or
include balloon payments to account for the liquidity and interest rate risk of holding the loans in
portfolio. Further, community banks with small portfolios do not realize economies-of-scale so
their costs are higher. And keeping up with regulatory change can be difficult, especially for
banks that rely on purchased software and for loan officers who do not specialize in mortgage
lending, but rather make the occasional mortgage loan to satisfy a customer need.
Traditional community lending is totally different than sub-prime lending. But it is
difficult to make that distinction if regulatory requirements use the interest rate on the loan as a
proxy to identify sub-prime loans. No one can argue with the need for stronger regulation to
prevent the lending abuses that led to the current foreclosure crisis. However, I think it would
also be unfortunate if the laws and regulations put in place to require other lenders to adopt the

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same responsible practices long used by community banks are so complicated and expensive that
they have the unintended effect of forcing some community banks to leave the market.
It is difficult to think about crafting a regulatory regime that is simplified for smaller
lenders that retain 100 percent of the risk they take, but I think it is important to try. The Federal
Reserve had to think through a lot of these issues as we drafted proposals for escrow
requirements and the definition of qualified mortgages. The Dodd-Frank Act made a start by
crafting exemptions for banks in rural or underserved areas, but I think broader exemptions could
be warranted for the thousands of smaller banks that make loans in small metropolitan areas or
suburban areas. The Dodd-Frank Act transferred rule-writing responsibility for most mortgagerelated statutes from the Federal Reserve to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB).
So the CFPB will be finalizing the rules for which we issued initial proposals. The CFPB has
already established an office for outreach to community banks and I have discussed this issue
with them. I urge you to continue to explain how the burden of regulation, including regulations
covering mortgage lending, impacts the ability of community banks to meet the credit needs of
their communities.
Conclusion
The bottom line is that doing the necessary work of protecting our financial system and its
customers comes with a cost. But that doesn’t mean that we shouldn’t continue to try to at least
limit the burden. I hope you have noticed the number of times I have referred to reports from
bankers or concerns expressed by borrowers. Even though I have experience living with
regulatory burden, I still need regular feedback from bankers and consumers of banking services
to understand the impact of regulation--both its effectiveness in achieving intended results and in
limiting any unintended consequences. The Federal Reserve makes every effort to identify

‐ 15 ‐ 
 

opportunities to reduce burden or improve credit availability. To assist us in this effort, I hope
you will continue to point out such opportunities as you see them.