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For release on delivery
11:00 a.m. EDT
September 30, 2022

Large Bank Supervision and Regulation

Remarks by
Michelle W. Bowman
Member
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at
The Institute of International Finance
Washington, D.C.

September 30, 2022

Today, I would like to talk about the future of supervision and regulation of the
largest banks, which changed significantly after the financial crisis 14 years ago and has
evolved more gradually over the past 5 years. As the backdrop for this look into the
future, it is important to recognize that this recent past for supervision and regulation has
been a success, resulting in a banking system that is safer, stronger, better capitalized, and
more resilient. This is particularly true for oversight of the largest banks, including
global systemically important banks (GSIBs), and their central role in the financial
system. As supervision and regulation have been refined in recent years, the largest
banks have maintained high levels of capital, and their resilience has been repeatedly
confirmed by both supervisory and real-life stress tests. Most notably, the U.S. financial
system faced the onset of the pandemic in the spring of 2020, which disrupted financial
markets and raised fears of a severe crisis. During this time, banks performed very well,
continuing to keep credit flowing throughout the financial system as governments and
central banks responded to the crisis, setting the stage for a rapid recovery from the
sharpest economic contraction that the U.S. economy has ever experienced.
This outcome is a recognition, in my view, of the gradual and experiential
approach to changing large bank supervision and regulation over the past several years.
After the rush of regulation and the supervisory overhaul of large banks in the wake of
the financial crisis, the Board of Governors took time to observe how the changes were
working, and how things might be improved. Input was solicited from the public, and the
changes made were incremental and carefully calibrated. I think the evidence is very
clear that these changes have preserved and, in many cases, strengthened supervision and
regulation, and that our gradual and evolutionary approach was wise. As I look ahead,

-2that record of success is a testament to the progress we have made to date and argues for
the same incremental approach to ongoing refinements in supervision and regulation.
I am looking forward to working with Michael Barr, the Board’s Vice Chair for
Supervision, on the dual goals of making the financial system safer and fairer, two
objectives that I strongly support. In doing so, I am not opposed to changes that make
sense, based on the experience we have gained from applying existing rules and
approaches, or prompted by new and emerging issues. As always, we should ensure that
any further changes yield significant improvement to safety and soundness at reasonable
cost and seek to avoid approaches that fail to consider the tradeoffs between cost and
safety.
In forming my judgments about whether proposed changes in regulation meet the
standard I have just laid out, I will be guided by the four principles I described in 2021,
outlining my perspective on bank regulation and supervision. 1 I would like to briefly
discuss these four principles, and then talk about how they have guided and will guide my
thinking on a number of issues important to large bank supervision and regulation.
The first principle is that bank regulation and supervision should be transparent,
consistent, and fair. Combined, these three elements, which we can think of collectively
as due process, build respect for supervisory practices, and in doing so, make supervision
more effective and encourage open communication between banks and supervisors. This
principle applies equally to regulation. Supervision cannot replace—and should never
supersede—rulemaking. Published regulations that have gone through the rulemaking

See Michelle Bowman, “My Perspective on Bank Regulation and Supervision” (speech at the Conference
for Community Bankers sponsored by the American Bankers Association, February 16, 2021),
https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/bowman20210216a.htm.
1

-3process, with solicitation of public comment and bona fide engagement with the issues
raised, are the best and clearest way for banks to understand the rules of the road and for
the bank regulatory agencies to ensure banks satisfy safety-and-soundness objectives.
This brings me to the second fundamental principle for regulation and
supervision: striking the right balance between ensuring safety and soundness, on the one
hand, and promoting acceptable and manageable risk-taking, including encouraging
responsible innovation. To put it simply, this means matching regulatory and supervisory
requirements to the risks presented. For the largest banks, this naturally includes an
increased focus on financial stability risks.
There are obvious risks from under-regulation, and it is those risks that were
addressed in the wake of the financial crisis 14 years ago. But we sometimes overlook
the significant costs to our economy, and risks to safety and soundness, from overregulation, where rules are not designed and calibrated to address the actual risks. In a
time of rising interest rates that could constrain credit, it is especially important to ensure
that regulation and supervision not add costs and burdens for banks with little or no
benefits to safety and soundness.
My third principle is that effective regulation and supervision needs to be
efficient. Efficiency is key to effective regulation. In the design of a regulatory
framework, there is flexibility in how to achieve a desired outcome, and there are often
multiple approaches that would be effective in doing so. Once a decision has been made
to regulate an activity, the next objective should be to ensure that the regulation achieves
its intended purpose and that there are not more efficient alternatives that can yield those
benefits at a lower cost.

-4My fourth and final principle is that regulation and supervision should serve a
legitimate prudential purpose, like promoting safety and soundness, or reducing financial
stability risk. After the last financial crisis, there was strong public support for enhancing
regulation and supervision over the banking system, with a particular focus on the largest
banks. And many of the steps taken after the last financial crisis have improved the
resiliency of the U.S. financial system. While the need for robust regulation and
supervision remains as true today as it was after the last financial crisis, regulation and
supervision must also allow banks to continue providing credit and other financial
products and services.
Collectively, these principles guide my thinking about the future of supervision
and regulation. With that framework in mind, I would like to turn to some critical issues
that are relevant to large banks.
Stress Testing
As I just discussed, a critical element of due process is that rules and supervision
should be consistent among firms, and over time. This can be a challenge because of the
variability in the business models of banks, especially among the largest banks. Each
bank is different in terms of its balance sheet, business lines, and risk profile, so
regulators must be vigilant that both regulations and supervisory practices are being
applied consistently.
One area where this need for consistency is clear is in the Board’s stress testing
framework. Since 2013, stress testing has been used to assess banks’ capital positions
and determine whether they have sufficient capital to both absorb losses and continue
lending during stressed conditions. This process has evolved considerably since its

-5inception, and that evolution is important to ensure that stress testing continues to be
relevant and effective.
Much of the stress testing framework is designed to encourage consistency—we
have a common scenario design for firms, and similarly situated firms are subject to
stress testing on the same frequency. However, the stress tests produce results that vary
considerably from year to year due to how a specific scenario interacts with a specific
firm’s business model, and this volatility flows through to the stress capital buffers that
apply to the largest firms. Although the stress scenarios are approved by the Board and
change in some ways that are predictable over time or relate to changes in the underlying
economy, how a scenario will affect a particular firm is not always predictable. These
year-to-year variations are often not based in underlying changes to banks’ business
models and can create short-term challenges for capital management. There are likely
many ways to limit this volatility while maintaining the value of the Board’s stress tests,
including by averaging results over multiple years.
As the stress testing framework continues to evolve over time, we should take into
account what we learn from past tests, feedback from the public and the banks
themselves, and ensure that the test evolves in a way that improves consistency and
fairness over time.
Capital
Next, let’s consider capital regulation. This is an area where requirements were
quickly bolstered without extensive analysis in response to the 2008 financial crisis,
resulting, in some cases, in redundant methods of calculating capital and demands that
firms of all sizes and risk profiles comply with the highest requirements. The goal of

-6efficiency dictates that over time this needs to be addressed. This is indeed what has
happened over the past five years. In addition, the principle of balancing safety and
soundness with the need for appropriate risk-taking is reflected in the extensive tailoring
framework that the Board adopted over this time period, which carefully and deliberately
matched regulation and supervision to the actual risks presented by different institutions.
Often, the rules adopted immediately after the financial crisis applied a one-size-fits-all
approach framed around the largest banks whose activities presented the most significant
risks. This approach ignores the importance of bank size and business model.
Obviously, expectations for the smallest banks with simple business models should not
be equivalent to the expectations for large regional banks, or for large and complex bank
holding companies engaged in significant securities or cross-border activities beyond
taking deposits and retail lending.
As we look into the future to potential changes to the capital framework,
including those expected under the Basel III endgame rulemaking, capital is a topic that
is helpful to approach holistically. From my perspective, capital requirements should
strike an appropriate balance for each relevant tier of firm, with requirements that
appropriately address risks, including financial stability risks, while recognizing the costs
of over-regulation. Calibrating capital requirements is not a zero-sum game, where more
capital is necessarily always better. Regulation is not cost-free. Over-regulation can
restrain bank lending, which becomes a burden for individual borrowers and a potential
threat to economic growth.
Thinking about capital holistically also provides an opportunity to consider
adjustments to the components of the capital requirements for the largest institutions,

-7including the supplementary leverage ratio, the countercyclical capital buffer (CCyB),
and, as I already discussed, the stress capital buffer, particularly where specific actions
may have unintended consequences.
Since the onset of the pandemic, the banking system has seen a significant inflow
of reserves due to the Federal Reserve’s asset purchases in support of the economic
recovery. For some firms, the influx of reserves resulted in leverage ratios becoming
binding capital constraints, rather than serving as backstops to risk-based capital
requirements. While these firms’ leverage ratios may become less binding as the Federal
Reserve reduces the size of its balance sheet and reserves are drained from the banking
system, leverage ratios that discourage banks from intermediation in the Treasury market,
or from holding ultra-safe assets such as Treasuries and reserves, can distort incentives
and disrupt markets. Addressing these issues could improve market functioning and
financial stability.
The CCyB is another component of the capital stack that deserves careful thought.
In theory, the CCyB is a tool that could raise capital requirements in boom times to build
resiliency and reduce capital requirements during times of stress to facilitate lending. In
practice, the Board has not yet utilized the CCyB. While having releasable capital
buffers shouldn’t necessarily be ruled out, in my view, after a decade of stress testing and
recent real-life stress experience, we have seen that the existing level of capital
requirements has proven to be adequate for banks to deal with significant stress.
Balancing safety and soundness with the need for appropriate risk-taking means that we
should not simply assume that the further layering on of capital requirements, including
through the application of the CCyB, would be beneficial.

-8The key is to strike an appropriate balance over time that addresses risks,
including financial stability risks, without impeding the ability of the banking industry to
extend credit and provide other financial services that are critical to our economy. The
capital structure must also be predictable, to facilitate banks’ longer-term capital
planning, while preserving capital to allow firms to respond to unforeseen circumstances.
Bank Mergers and Acquisitions
I now want to turn to the review of bank mergers and acquisitions, specifically to
discuss how the need for transparency, and to pursue legitimate prudential purposes,
should guide our analysis of banking transactions under the established statutory
framework.
The regulatory consideration of mergers is guided by the statutory factors
prescribed by Congress—all of which are grounded in legitimate prudential purposes.
The factors considered generally include the competitive effects of the proposed merger,
financial and managerial resources, future prospects of the merged institutions,
convenience and needs of the communities to be served, compliance with money
laundering laws, and the effect of the transaction on the stability of the U.S. banking or
financial system. 2 This analytical merger framework works best when it is accompanied
by transparency, both in timelines and expectations, that allows firms to know and
understand what is expected of them, and what they can fairly expect during the merger
application process. The rules of the road should not change during the application
process.

2

See 12 U.S.C. §§ 1828(c)(5), (11); 1842(c).

-9We should be vigilant to be sure that other factors, like the idea that mergers are
harmful or that increased bank size is inherently problematic, do not infiltrate that
statutory analytical framework. The analysis and approval of mergers and acquisitions
should be based on the reality of how customers and the financial system would be
affected. For larger banks in particular, the evolution of the merger review framework
should also factor in the evolution of markets, industry, and customer preferences.
A merger can have a significant impact on local communities, in terms of the
quality and availability of products and services. The effects of a merger can be
beneficial to communities, enhancing the safety and soundness of a firm, and leading to
significant public benefits. The consequences of getting these policies wrong can
significantly harm communities, in some instances creating banking “deserts,” especially
in rural and underserved markets. 3
Resolution
Next, I would like to discuss resolution planning, or so-called living wills. 4 Each
large banking organization is required to periodically submit a resolution plan to the
Board of Governors and the FDIC, describing the organization’s plan for an orderly
resolution in the event of material financial distress or failure. The requirements for these
plans are established by statute and regulation, with additional guidance published to give
firms appropriate notice of regulatory expectations. For the U.S.-based GSIBs, resolution
plans are also informed by other regulatory requirements, including the requirement that
such firms issue a minimum amount of total loss-absorbing capacity, which includes both

See Michelle W. Bowman, “The New Landscape for Banking Competition” (speech at the 2022
Community Banking Research Conference, St. Louis, MO, September 28, 2022),
https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/bowman20220928a.htm.
4
See 12 U.S.C. § 5365.
3

- 10 equity and long-term debt. 5 The requirements that establish and support the orderly
resolution of firms are important to supporting the financial stability of the United States.
Of course, these requirements have evolved over time, most recently with a
proposal intended to increase the efficiency of living wills by alternating between dataintensive full plans and risk-focused targeted plans. I expect that further evolution will
be considered in response to ongoing changes in the financial landscape and the risks
facing the largest firms. In doing so, I believe that fairness dictates that broad
supervisory powers should not displace rulemaking.
In my view, the need for fairness and due process in resolution planning is
particularly critical when it comes to considering whether and how to address concerns
about the resolvability of regional banks. This question of fairness and due process is
important, and it involves, among other things, a debate about the merits of a single point
of entry resolution strategy on the one hand (more common among the GSIBs), and on
the other hand, established bankruptcy and FDIC bank resolution procedures. This issue
transcends particular firms, and particular transactions. It is an issue that affects a broad
range of institutions of similar size. And policy actions in this area will require working
with colleagues at other bank regulatory agencies and seeking public comment. Fairness
dictates that this debate occurs in the arena of regulation, with all the appropriate due
process protections that this entails, and not on an ad hoc basis for a single firm that
chooses to make an acquisition subject to regulatory approval. If the regulatory
framework for resolution needs to be improved, we should look at the framework, and
identify and remediate any areas of concern. It is hard to understand why banks that

5

12 C.F.R. pt. 252, subpart G.

- 11 choose to grow through acquisition should be subject to different resolution expectations
than banks that grow organically. This strikes me as a clear example where requirements
and expectations should only evolve through appropriate rulemaking processes,
consistent with underlying law, in order to promote a level playing field.
Other Areas
There are a number of other areas where I think these principles can help frame a
productive conversation about the future of regulation and supervision, including around
banks engaging in crypto-asset-related activities, and improving the transparency of
supervisory standards.
Another area where regulation and supervision continues to evolve is around
banks engaging in crypto-asset activities. These activities raise a number of significant
issues. When I think about the evolution of supervision and regulation of these activities,
I ask myself whether the rules are clear in the current rapidly evolving environment, and
whether the rules as they evolve are serving a legitimate prudential purpose. Banks seek
to understand and comply with rules because, above all, they value predictability and
consistency. When a bank understands the legitimacy of a rule and establishes internal
incentives to comply with it, the bank itself becomes the strongest supervisory tool that
there is. But sometimes, rules are difficult to apply. This can be due to quickly evolving
technologies, particularly when it comes to digital assets, but it can also be due to a lack
of experience with new rules, or when the rules are not that clear in a particular context.
Banks should be able to know what the supervisory expectations are with respect to these
new technologies in order to responsibly take advantage of them. The adoption and use
of new technologies may present novel supervisory concerns, but the best way to address

- 12 these concerns and encourage innovation is dialogue between bankers and supervisors
before and during the development and implementation of those technologies.
I believe the goal with digital assets should be to match oversight to risk, and to
provide clarity in supervisory expectations for banks seeking to engage in the cryptoasset ecosystem. As fluctuations in crypto-asset prices have shown, there clearly are
material risks associated with these assets. However, it is also an area where there has
been and continues to be intense consumer demand, and we should consider whether
there is a stabilizing role for banks to play in intermediation, or ensure that the
competitive landscape does not create a financial stability risk by pushing activities
outside the banking system, as we have seen with the mortgage industry. To be effective
in this space, any clarity regulators provide will need to recognize that this is not a riskfree activity, but I believe we should allow banks to participate as long as the risks can be
identified and managed appropriately and responsibly.
Another way to promote consistency is to continue improving the disclosures
around supervisory standards. While doing so improves transparency, it also improves
fairness, another of my core principles. Like the due process protections enshrined in the
U.S. Constitution and embedded in regulatory law, fairness is fundamental to the
legitimacy and effectiveness of financial oversight, including supervision. In the context
of bank regulation and supervision, fairness means being transparent about expectations,
which should be clearly laid out in advance (and I want to emphasize that “in advance”
part). Supervision should not be adjusted in specific situations to displace or alter
regulations, or without appropriate notice and opportunity for public comment, and
should be accompanied by clear communication with regulated firms. Where we have

- 13 established precedents, we should respect them. Banks rely on our precedents in making
their business decisions, so not respecting precedents can interfere with the ability of
firms to plan and to fairly compete. If changes to precedents are appropriate, we should
explain those intentions and employ a transparent and accountable administrative process
to ensure fairness and appropriately implement the change.
Take, for example, the supervision criteria implemented by the Large Institution
Supervision Coordinating Committee (the LISCC manual). Currently, these materials are
not public. Making these materials public would not only improve transparency, doing
so would also provide some assurance to the banks subject to them that they are being
held to the same supervisory expectations as their peers over time. Without this clarity, it
is far more challenging to build trust in this aspect of the supervisory process.
Improving transparency around supervisory standards promotes safety and
soundness, both encouraging compliance, and limiting the role of formal and informal
enforcement actions and penalties in addressing serious issues. In my view, success
should not be measured by penalties or enforcement, but by how well banks are
following the rules.
The principles I’ve articulated today reflect my approach to considering whether
and how the regulation and supervision of the largest banks should evolve in response to
changing economic and financial conditions. The regulation and supervision of financial
institutions must be nimble to address new risks to safety and soundness and financial
stability, but should always consider tradeoffs and potential unintended consequences,
like increasing the cost of lending or pushing financial activities outside of the regulatory
perimeter into the shadow banking system. I look forward to working with Vice Chair

- 14 Barr, my fellow Board members, and colleagues at the other bank regulatory agencies, as
we consider the evolution of supervision and regulation for the largest financial
institutions.