View original document

The full text on this page is automatically extracted from the file linked above and may contain errors and inconsistencies.

For release on delivery
8:15 p.m. EST
March 3, 2015

Improving the Oversight of Large Financial Institutions

Remarks by
Janet L. Yellen
Chair
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at the
Citizens Budget Commission
New York, New York

March 3, 2015

Thank you for the opportunity to speak to you today, it is great to be back in New
York. The Citizens Budget Commission has played an important role over the years as a
forum to discuss issues of interest to New Yorkers that are often also of national and even
global importance. Given New York’s preeminence as a center of global finance, I
thought it would be appropriate to discuss just such a topic, which is how the Federal
Reserve oversees the largest financial institutions, many of which are headquartered or
have a major presence here, and how that oversight has strengthened since the financial
crisis. 1
The Financial Crisis and Large Financial Institutions
The crisis had many causes, including the numerous factors that drove a lengthy
housing boom and the expansion of a largely unregulated “shadow banking system”
rivaling the traditional banking sector in size. A self-reinforcing financial panic
magnified the damage from risks that had built up over many years throughout the
country and across the financial system.
But to a considerable extent, large and complex financial institutions were the
epicenter of the crisis. These institutions, some of which were not subject to Federal
Reserve oversight at the time, were the locus for much of the excessive risk-taking that
led to the crisis. Due to their primacy and interconnections with the rest of the financial
system, these large institutions were also the means by which the crisis spread quickly
and with devastating effect through the economy.

1

Although the Federal Reserve supervises entities with a range of legal forms, including depository
institutions and holding companies, for the purposes of my remarks today, “financial institutions,” “firms,”
“banks,” and “banking organizations” are used interchangeably unless indicated otherwise.

-2The financial crisis and the recession caused great hardship for millions of
individuals and families in this city and in communities throughout our country. I believe
all Americans share a common interest in working to make sure that our financial system
is strong, resilient, and able to serve a healthy and growing economy. A critical part of
our work since the crisis to promote a stable financial system has therefore involved
greater effort to ensure that large institutions are operating safely and soundly and are
prepared to continue serving households and businesses even when faced with stressful
financial conditions.
In the run-up to the crisis, large firms failed to adequately anticipate and manage
risks that grew and concentrated in their increasingly sprawling, diverse, and complex
operations. Partly as a result, these firms had trouble retaining the trust of markets and
creditors when the financial system came under stress. Doubts quickly mounted about
whether these institutions could sustain losses in the value of many assets they held.
Further doubts were raised about whether these firms had enough cash and other liquid
assets to meet the immediate or potential demands of short-term creditors and large
institutional customers. In the lead-up to the crisis, many large institutions had become
heavily reliant on very short-term borrowing, at relatively low rates, to fund lending and
other operations providing higher returns. While this approach may have appeared to be
an easy source of profit, it had the disadvantage of leaving those banks exposed to
devastating runs if short-term funding dried up, as it did in the crisis.
Large financial institutions, of course, were not alone in failing to see these risks.
The checks and balances that were widely expected to prevent excessive risk-taking by
large financial firms--regulatory oversight and market discipline--did not do so.

-3Government agencies, including the Fed, failed to recognize the extent of the risks or
how severely they could damage the financial system and the economy. Investors failed
to anticipate and understand the risks of large financial institutions’ activities that
materialized during the crisis.
Background on Financial Regulation and Supervision
Before I turn to the Fed’s actions to improve oversight of large financial
institutions, let me be clear about what I mean by “large institutions.” Generally, I have
in mind those firms whose financial distress would pose a significant risk to financial
stability--firms that are, in that sense, “systemically important.” This would include U.S.
banking organizations with large, complex, and often international operations; foreign
banking organizations with extensive U.S. operations; and other large and complex
financial firms. Today the Federal Reserve subjects 16 of those firms to significantly
higher levels of oversight than are applied to other institutions.2 To put the scale and
importance of these firms in perspective, the 8 U.S. bank holding companies among these
16 firms hold nearly 60 percent of all assets in the U.S. banking system. 3
The Federal Reserve’s oversight of large financial institutions is aimed at
ensuring the safety and soundness of individual financial institutions as well as the
resiliency of the financial system. The Fed expects the banks it oversees, including the
largest banks, to be financially sound. Two core elements of soundness are capital and

2

A current list of these firms is available on the Federal Reserve Board’s webpage “Large Institution
Supervision Coordinating Committee” at www.federalreserve.gov/bankinforeg/large-institutionsupervision.htm. This list may evolve based on changes in firms’ relative systemic importance. Financial
Stability Oversight Council determinations of nonbank financial institutions subject to Federal Reserve
oversight are available on the U.S. Department of Treasury’s website at
www.treasury.gov/initiatives/fsoc/designations/Pages/default.aspx.
3
Information is based on data from the most recent FR Y-9C report, which is filed quarterly by bank
holding companies and savings and loan holding companies. To access the report, see the Board’s
webpage “Reporting Forms” at www.federalreserve.gov/apps/reportforms/default.aspx.

-4liquidity. Capital is the funds provided by a bank’s shareholders that serve as a buffer to
enable the firm to absorb unexpected losses, including during times of economic
downturn or financial stress. A bank’s liquidity is its ability to meet current and future
obligations to customers and others with whom it enters into financial transactions.
Liquidity is the lifeblood of a financial firm, because once liquidity dries up, the firm is
no longer able to operate.
Beyond focusing on capital and liquidity, the Fed also promotes safety and
soundness by seeking to ensure that banks are well managed and subject to strong
governance by a board of directors responsible to shareholders. It is unfortunate that I
need to underscore this, but we expect the firms we oversee to follow the law and to
operate in an ethical manner. Too often in recent years, bankers at large institutions have
not done so, sometimes brazenly. These incidents, both individually and in their totality,
raise legitimate questions of whether there may be pervasive shortcomings in the values
of large financial firms that might undermine their safety and soundness. 4
While the Federal Reserve looks closely at the individual safety and soundness of
large financial firms, as I noted earlier, it is not sufficient to view each of these firms in
isolation. The safety and soundness of large firms affects, and is affected by, the stability
of the broader financial system. In the decades of relative financial stability leading up to
the crisis, it is fair to say that the Fed focused too much on individual firms and not
enough on their role in the financial system and the implications of those firms’

4

For more information, see Daniel K. Tarullo (2014), “Good Compliance, Not Mere Compliance,” speech
delivered at “Reforming Culture and Behavior in the Financial Services Industry,” a conference sponsored
by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, New York, N.Y., October 20,
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/tarullo20141020a.htm.

-5operations for financial stability. To use an apt metaphor, we looked closely at the trees
and not as intently as we should have at the forest. One of the most fundamental changes
in the Fed’s oversight of large institutions since the crisis, a principle that undergirds
everything I will discuss today, is elevating the importance of financial stability in that
oversight.
The Fed oversees financial institutions through regulation and supervision. While
they are often closely related, these are two distinct activities. On the one hand,
regulation refers primarily to the rules that firms must follow. Regulation starts with
laws passed by Congress which are the basis for specific and detailed rules written by the
Fed and other agencies. Supervision, on the other hand, involves monitoring and
examining the day-to-day operations of these firms, including their financial condition,
how they manage risks, and their corporate governance, to make sure they are complying
with laws and regulations and operating in a safe and sound manner.
The Federal Reserve Board writes the regulations firms must follow, establishes
supervisory policies and, in close collaboration with the 12 regional Reserve Banks, is
deeply engaged in the supervision of large financial institutions. Much of the day-to-day
work of supervision, particularly for smaller banks, occurs locally through the Reserve
Banks. For systemically important firms, the Board several years ago established the
Large Institution Supervision Coordinating Committee (LISCC) in order to assure wellcoordinated supervision.
I consider the effective supervision of large institutions, to ensure their safety and
soundness and the stability of the financial system, to be one of the Federal Reserve

-6Board’s most important responsibilities, and one of my most important responsibilities as
Chair.
In improving the oversight of large firms, the Federal Reserve has made it a top
priority to ensure that we appropriately tailor our regulation and supervision of banks to
their size, complexity, and risks. 5 We will use statutory authorities to ensure that we
avoid a one-size-fits-all approach as we promulgate rules and regulations. As we
continue this work, we will communicate to the Congress should we identify discrete
issues that may benefit from further clarification or technical changes without
undermining safety and soundness, such as those addressed by Congress last year related
to capital requirements for insurance companies.
Post-Crisis Regulation and Supervision of Large Financial Institutions
Regulatory Reform
Regulatory changes since the crisis have been extensive. 6 While my emphasis
today is on steps taken in the United States, I should also note that we work closely with

5

See Daniel K. Tarullo (2014), “A Tiered Approach to Regulation and Supervision of Community Banks,”
speech delivered at the Community Bankers Symposium, Chicago, Ill., November 7,
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/tarullo20141107a.htm; and Janet L. Yellen (2014), “Tailored
Supervision of Community Banks,” speech delivered at the Independent Community Bankers of America
2014 Washington Policy Summit,” Washington, May 1,
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/yellen20140501a.htm.
6
Several of my colleagues on the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, as well as Board staff, have spoken
extensively about the post-crisis regulatory reform agenda. See, for example, Tarullo (2014), “Liquidity
Regulation,” speech delivered at the Clearing House 2014 Annual Conference, New York, November 20,
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/tarullo20141120a%20.htm; Tarullo (2014), “Dodd-Frank
Implementation,” statement before the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, U.S. Senate,
September 9, www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/testimony/tarullo20140909a.htm; Stanley Fischer
(2014), “Financial Sector Reform: How Far Are We?,” speech delivered as the Martin Feldstein Lecture at
the National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, Mass., July 10,
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/fischer20140710a.htm; Scott G. Alvarez (2014), “Regulatory
Rulemakings,” statement before the Committee on Financial Services, U.S. House of Representatives,
April 8, www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/testimony/alvarez20140408a.htm; Tarullo (2014), “DoddFrank Implementation,” statement before the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, U.S.
Senate, February 6, www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/testimony/tarullo20140206a.htm; and Tarullo
(2013), “Evaluating Progress in Regulatory Reforms to Promote Financial Stability,” speech delivered at

-7our international colleagues to ensure that standards for systemically important financial
firms are raised globally as well. We have made significant progress on our regulatory
reform agenda both domestically and internationally, but we still have work to do.
I will briefly describe five regulatory changes that have been among the most
important in helping the Federal Reserve improve its oversight of the largest institutions.
First, all banks are required to hold significantly more capital, with higher
standards applied to the largest, most systemically important firms. Second, large
institutions have also been required to substantially increase their liquidity. The blueprint
for these higher capital and liquidity standards is an international agreement known as
Basel III, which establishes minimum standards for internationally active banks around
the world; the United States, however, has gone even further to raise capital requirements
for the largest firms. Third, large firms are now required to show that they can continue
to operate safely and serve their customers in stressful conditions similar to those that
occurred during the crisis, an exercise known as stress testing. Fourth, under the DoddFrank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act), Congress
authorized a new regime, known as “resolution,” to manage the failure of large firms in
an orderly manner and reduce the chances that such a failure would threaten financial
stability. The Congress empowered the Fed and the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC) to require large firms to develop resolution plans.
The fifth and final regulatory change I want to mention is that the Dodd-Frank
Act also gave the Federal Reserve more explicit responsibilities for safeguarding
financial stability. As applied to large institutions, more stringent capital requirements

the Peterson Institute for International Economics, Washington, May 3,
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/tarullo20130503a.htm.

-8and the other regulatory changes I have just described are intended to promote the
stability of the financial system. In addition, to address the fragmentation of
responsibility for financial stability across different agencies, the Fed is part of a new
interagency body, the Financial Stability Oversight Council, which helps U.S. regulators
work together more effectively to better promote the stability of the financial system.
Enhanced Supervision
Along with the additional tools provided by these regulatory changes, the Federal
Reserve has fortified its supervision of large financial institutions. We significantly
enhanced the manner by which we assess whether these firms have sufficient capital and
liquidity and are meeting new regulatory requirements in this area. We have substantially
raised our expectations for how well the firms we supervise should be managing their
risks, maintaining internal controls, and exercising governance. And we have
reorganized our supervision of large financial institutions to increase the quality,
consistency, and range of perspectives brought to bear on supervisory strategy and
decisionmaking.
One of the most important enhancements to large bank supervision since the
financial crisis is our assessment of whether large institutions are holding enough capital
to deal with stressful financial conditions. The program includes stress testing and a
yearly review of how firms are planning their future capital needs. 7 The latest results will
be disclosed in the coming days.

7

The Comprehensive Capital Analysis and Review applies to a larger number of institutions than the most
systemically important firms discussed in these remarks.

-9Capital stress testing for banks is not new but the Federal Reserve has employed it
much more extensively since the crisis. 8 Using information on a bank’s finances and
operations, these tests gauge how a firm’s capital position would be affected by
hypothetical scenarios covering a range of adverse economic and financial conditions.
Such tests show the potential harm faced by individual banks in stressful conditions and
thus the potential that such problems could affect the stability of the financial system.
The goal is to see that large institutions have enough capital not just to survive in these
conditions, but also to continue serving their customers. The Federal Reserve conducts
stress tests once a year, and the firms are required to run their own tests and disclose
results to the public twice a year.
Stress testing is an important tool, but it is not sufficient to provide a full picture
of the capital adequacy of large firms. 9 The Fed also looks at other aspects of large
banks’ capital planning, such as their risk management, internal controls, and
governance. If the Federal Reserve is not satisfied with the results from capital stress
tests or identifies shortcomings in a firm’s capital planning, we may restrict the firm’s
ability to pay dividends, buy back shares, or take other actions that would reduce its
capital base.
In addition to these steps related to capital, in 2012 the Federal Reserve began a
comprehensive assessment of large banks’ liquidity. 10 We review the firms’ own

8

In addition to ad hoc stress testing that was conducted throughout the crisis, in 2009 the Federal Reserve
and the other U.S. federal banking agencies undertook the Supervisory Capital Assessment Program at the
19 largest U.S. bank holding companies. This exercise played a key role in publicly identifying capital
deficiencies at the largest firms and bolstering market confidence by requiring companies to address these
deficiencies.
9
For more information about the Comprehensive Capital Analysis and Review exercise and interagency
Dodd-Frank Act stress-testing requirements, see the webpage “Stress Tests and Capital Planning” on the
Board’s website at www.federalreserve.gov/bankinforeg/stress-tests-capital-planning.htm.
10
This Federal Reserve assessment is known as the Comprehensive Liquidity Analysis and Review.

- 10 liquidity stress tests, and we conduct an independent assessment of their liquidity. These
liquidity exercises provide a regular opportunity for Fed supervisors to respond to
evolving liquidity risks and firm practices over time. Through this effort, we can require
large firms to take specific actions to bolster their liquidity or enhance the way they
manage their liquidity risks.
Through stress testing and other improvements to supervision, the Federal
Reserve is requiring more of large institutions. We are also requiring more of ourselves.
Before the crisis, the Fed’s supervision of large institutions did not make the fullest and
most effective use of the expertise of our staff across the Federal Reserve System. To
improve our supervision of the largest systemically important firms, we have created the
Large Institution Supervision Coordinating Committee, which I mentioned earlier. The
LISCC brings together experts from around the Federal Reserve System in the areas of
supervision, research, legal, financial markets, and payment systems in a centralized body
led by the Federal Reserve Board.
The LISCC program enhances supervision in several ways. First, by looking at
firms both individually and collectively, it helps ensure supervisors are well positioned to
identify issues at individual firms as well as trends across and interconnections among
firms that may pose risks to financial stability. The LISCC also promotes high standards
and consistency in the supervision of large firms through a centralized yet Systemwide
approach. By bringing together staff members from across the Federal Reserve System,
the LISCC is designed to ensure that diverse views and perspectives are brought to bear
on important decisions about the supervision of systemically important firms. Lastly, the
diversity of skills among the Fed experts involved in the LISCC allows it to consider

- 11 financial stability risks from the broader economy, financial markets, and other sources.
The LISCC also builds on the comprehensive analysis of financial stability by the
Board’s Office of Financial Stability Policy and Research, which was established after
the financial crisis.
The Federal Reserve has significant responsibilities for supervising large financial
institutions, but we cannot guarantee their stability on our own. It is important that we
communicate and coordinate with other U.S. financial regulatory agencies with
responsibilities that affect the safety and soundness of large institutions. We also need to
cooperate with supervisors in other countries where these firms operate. This
cooperation helps us understand developments in a complex and global financial system
that have implications for individual firms or for large institutions generally. It can also
provide information and perspective about firms whose supervision we may share with
other agencies or governments. In addition, it facilitates a coordinated approach to
ensuring that large firms are operating in a safe and sound manner.
To be effective, regulation and supervision must be independent of the entities
subject to oversight. You may know or have heard the term “regulatory capture.”
Regulatory capture is when a regulatory agency advances the interests of the industry it is
supposed to oversee rather than the broader public interest it should represent. 11
Regulatory capture, which may occur in the oversight of any industry, can happen in both
intentional and inadvertent ways. The most blatant ways involve tangible conflicts of
interest--for example the expectation government officials might have of future rewards

11

A body of economic literature addresses regulatory capture, with perhaps one of the most influential
works being George J. Stigler (1971), “The Theory of Economic Regulation,” Bell Journal of Economics
and Management Science, vol. 2 (Spring), pp. 3-21. See also Ernesto Dal Bó (2006), “Regulatory Capture:
A Review,” Oxford Review of Economic Policy, vol. 22 (Summer), pp. 203-25.

- 12 from the industry they oversee. But experience and extensive research shows that
regulatory capture also occurs in less tangible ways, when close contact and familiarity
between individuals leads those enforcing the rules to sympathize with those they
oversee. Whatever the source, the risk of regulatory capture is something the Federal
Reserve takes very seriously and works very hard to prevent. We enforce strict ethics
rules and promote strong values among our employees, among them a commitment to
public service. It is important that anyone serving the Fed feel safe speaking up when
they have concerns about bias toward industry, and that those concerns be addressed.
The broadening of expertise and participation in supervision conducted by the LISCC, as
overseen by the Board, represents yet another check to the risk of regulatory capture in
the oversight of large firms.
The Results of Improved Supervision
I believe the changes I have described have significantly improved the strength
and stability of large financial institutions and the financial system.
As I mentioned earlier, strong capital and liquidity are fundamental to the
resiliency of large institutions. The good news is that the amount and quality of capital
and the strength of liquidity positions at large firms are greatly improved since the crisis.
While some of the improvement in the capital positions of large firms is due to
the regulatory changes I have described that are being phased in over the next several
years, some of it has come as a direct result of the Fed’s capital planning and stresstesting requirements. From early 2009 through 2014, capital held by the eight most
systemically important U.S. bank holding companies more than doubled, reflecting an

- 13 increase of almost $500 billion in the strongest form of capital held by these companies. 12
Likewise, the Federal Reserve’s increased focus on liquidity has contributed to
significant increases in firms’ liquidity. The high-quality liquid assets held by these eight
firms has increased by roughly one-third since 2012, and their reliance on short-term
wholesale funding has dropped considerably.
Beyond these very tangible gains, we see some evidence of improved risk
management, internal controls, and governance at large firms. But large firms still have
room for improvement in this area, and supervisors will be watching closely. The
compliance breakdowns in recent years that I mentioned earlier in my remarks undermine
confidence in large firms’ risk management and controls, which has implications for
financial stability. The Fed has taken and will continue to take swift and meaningful
action to ensure that firms focus on their risk-management practices and continue to
strengthen them.
Both the Federal Reserve and the large firms we oversee have become more
forward looking in evaluating these firms’ capacity to withstand significant financial
stress, which has enhanced financial stability. Much of this new perspective has come
through our capital and liquidity reviews, which require both firms and supervisors to
make financial projections into the future rather than simply relying on current and past
performance. Likewise, requiring firms to plan for their possible demise and orderly
resolution has forced them to think more carefully about the sustainability of their
business models and corporate structures.

12

Specifically, for the period from 2009 to 2013, tier 1 common equity as defined in the Board’s regulatory
capital regulations, and in 2014, common equity tier 1 capital, due to changes in regulatory capital
regulations.

- 14 We have a more consistent and industry-wide perspective on risks and
vulnerabilities than we had prior to the crisis. The focus on individual firms is still
extremely important, but we now supplement this approach more systematically with
reviews of issues across multiple firms simultaneously. These reviews allow us to
identify common themes and unacceptable practices among large firms that will enable
us to take consistent and effective action.
Lastly, I believe the resolution authority enacted by the Congress and our work
with the FDIC on the orderly resolution of large institutions are reducing the problem of
firms considered “too big to fail” by addressing the risks a failure of a large firm would
pose to the financial system. The plans developed by the largest firms to date still have a
number of shortcomings, but the Federal Reserve has asked for and expects these
institutions to make substantial progress in the coming months which will leave firms and
the government better positioned to manage the failure of a large institution in an orderly
way. 13
The goal, through this and other actions I have described today, is to do whatever
can be done to avert the dire threat and lasting damage of a severe financial crisis. We
cannot eliminate the possibility of another crisis, but we can make a crisis less likely and
less damaging by limiting excessive risk-taking by firms we oversee and by helping
ensure that the most systemically important firms are better prepared to weather a crisis.
We have focused our efforts on the largest firms because they were and continue
to be crucial to the financial system and its ability to support the financial needs of

13

See Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(2014), “Agencies Provide Feedback on Second Round Resolution Plans of ‘First-Wave’ Filers,” joint
press release, August 5, www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/bcreg/20140805a.htm.

- 15 households and businesses. By working to promote the safety and soundness of large
firms, the Federal Reserve is trying to ensure that these and many other banks can
continue to serve the people of New York and every community in America.