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Regulatory Reform: The New Face of Bank Regulation :: September 11, 2010 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
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Home > For the Public > News and Media > Speeches > 2010 > Regulatory Reform: The New Face of
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Regulatory Reform: The New
Face of Bank Regulation

Additional Information
Sandra Pianalto

These conventions are an ideal time to take a step back, look at the
bigger picture, and cast an eye toward the future. In particular, with
the passage of the Dodd-Frank Act, it is extremely important that all
of us take the time to think about the likely impact of the new
legislation.
Like any other major piece of legislation, the devil will be in the
details and, given the scale of the legislation, many of the details of
this new law remain to be worked out. While much of the push for
financial reform resulted from what happened in some of the
country’s largest financial firms, this legislation will affect all
participants in the financial system—both large and small; both banks
and non-banks. The Federal Reserve is also facing changes. We have
some extra responsibilities, thanks to much work by bankers.

P resident and CEO,
Federal Reserve Bank o f Cleveland
Joint Convention of the Ohio Bankers
League and the Illinois League of
Financial Institutions
French Lick, Indiana
September 11, 2010

Many of you were involved in trying to shape the legislation, and I
know that many of you remain concerned about the potential
regulatory burdens this legislation may pose, particularly on
community banks.
At this point, it is too early to speculate on exactly what will come a
year from now, or even two years down the road, but let me offer
my perspective on some of the broad themes of the new legislation
as it stands today. First, I will discuss how the legislation addresses
gaps in the regulatory and supervisory framework that became
apparent during the financial crisis. Then I will discuss how the
reform process should strengthen the core banking elements of trust
and stability. Finally, I will explain why it will be so important for
the regulatory and supervisory framework to distinguish between
firms that pose significant risk to the financial system and those that
do not.
Let me begin by offering my perspective on how the legislation
addresses the oversight gaps in our financial system. We all know
that the recent crisis revealed a number of gaps in regulatory,
supervisory, and industry practices. The call for new legislation was a
natural response. Indeed, many of the provisions of the Dodd-Frank
Act are designed to catch up with the evolution that has occurred in
the industry as a result of technological and financial innovations
over the past couple of decades.
In my mind, these innovations may have led to a sense of greater
transparency in the financial markets than actually existed.
Ultimately, it became difficult for regulators, supervisors, and market
participants alike to identify and quantify some of the true
underlying risks behind these innovations. The new law attempts to
address the gaps between the rapid evolution of the market and a

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Regulatory Reform: The New Face of Bank Regulation :: September 11, 2010 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
static regulatory structure.
From the early days of the financial crisis, there was a clear sense
that legislative changes would be necessary to help shield against
future crises. In addition to the important work you have conducted
within your organizations, many policymakers—including m yselfoffered ideas and proposals to address the gaps that became
apparent during the crisis.
At last year’s Ohio Bankers’ Day Conference in Columbus, I outlined
several principles that I believed should be included in financial
reform. First, I stressed that we needed to create an entity with
responsibility for overall financial stability and with the appropriate
authority to carry out those responsibilities. Second, I endorsed the
concept of consolidated supervision. This means that a single
supervisor would have the responsibility to identify the risk to an
organization as a whole and the authority to take action in any part
of the organization where necessary. And, third, I supported the
creation of a resolution authority that would enable the orderly
failure of systemically important nonbank firms.
I am pleased that the final legislation includes each of these
significant principles. A financial stability oversight council that is
created by the legislation will help ensure that supervisors work to
protect the integrity of the financial system as a whole, rather than
just focusing on the condition of individual firms. A stronger
consolidated supervision approach laid out in the legislation means
that supervisors can identify aggregate risk in an organization, and be
better equipped to mitigate that risk, in a more timely way. Finally,
the legislation calls for a resolution process for systemically
important nonbank firms, and requires organizational “living wills.”
This will help to prevent some firms from being too big or too
interconnected to fail.
Of course, the legislation does not address every aspect of financial
reform that will be needed in the future. As many have pointed out,
housing finance issues have yet to be sorted out. But with the Act,
we have a broad framework for reform. I think of it much like the
frame for a new house that has just been built from the initial
blueprints. We can see the massive wood beams in place—the broad
contours of the house—but the quality of the structure and the
amenities of the house depend on how the finishing takes place. If
the house is finished with care by seasoned professionals who work
closely together and use high-quality materials, then the house will
stand the test of time. Every house must provide the core elements
of shelter and comfort, but it is only through this attention to detail
during the finishing process that the architects’ vision of the home
will be realized.
So, just as the core elements of a house are shelter and comfort, I
will be looking for certain core elements as we build out the details
of the new legislation. The Dodd-Frank Act provides the frame of our
new house, but it is up to all of us to ensure the finished product
preserves and strengthens what I consider to be the core elements of
the banking system—trust and stability.
The first and most fundamental element is that public trust and
confidence must be maintained in our financial institutions. In the
broadest sense of the term, banks have long enjoyed the trust and
confidence of the public. Today, banks are a “safe haven,” but that
was not always so. The panics, bank runs, and bank failures of earlier
eras ruined families, businesses, and communities. Our impressions of
those uncertain times have been clearly shaped by family stories,
popular histories, and even the old Bailey Building and Loan that
Jimmy Stewart ran in “It’s A Wonderful Life.”

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Regulatory Reform: The New Face of Bank Regulation :: September 11, 2010 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
The regulatory framework that was built in the decades since those
times has instilled a deep sense of trust and confidence in the
American banking system, even during economic downturns and
periods of financial distress. Since the creation of the FDIC and
introduction of deposit insurance in 1934, not a single depositor has
lost a penny of insured funds as a result of the failure of an FDICinsured institution. While the backing of “the full faith and credit of
the U.S. government” for insured deposits has helped inspire public
trust in our banking system, the financial crisis of the past two years
has also revealed that trust is not something that can be taken for
granted.
One prominent goal of the Dodd-Frank Act is to maintain public trust
and confidence in insured depository institutions by insulating them
from certain risky activities. For example, the provisions of what has
become known as the “Volcker Rule” limit insured banks and their
affiliates from engaging in proprietary trading or having certain
business relationships with hedge funds or private equity funds. The
law also places restrictions on some activities related to derivatives.
Ultimately, these provisions reconfirm the principle that there will
be a solid safety net under all insured deposits, and reinforce the
sense that public funds will not be put at undue risk. Public trust has
been a cornerstone of the banking industry, and these provisions help
to prevent certain risky activities from eroding this foundation.
The second core element reinforced by this legislation is the
importance of preserving the stability of our financial system. In the
past, the stability of our financial system was preserved through the
oversight of individual firms by their financial supervisors. In the
wake of the recent financial crisis, we see that the supervisory lens
was often too narrow. Financial supervisors were focused on the risks
within the firms that we supervised, but in some cases, we may have
failed to recognize or act on the risks that spilled over to the
broader financial system.
By creating a council responsible for overall financial stability, which
includes the heads of each supervisory agency, the legislation
reinforces the core element of preserving stability across the entire
financial system. Working collectively as a council, the heads of the
supervisory agencies will be expected to share information and
perspectives on the financial system as a whole. This will help to
ensure that, in addition to being responsible for supervising individual
firms, each member of the council is also responsible for ensuring the
stability of the entire financial system.
Another important step in preserving the stability of the financial
system is to allow individual firms to fail without jeopardizing the
broader financial system. Currently we have laws and regulations in
place for the orderly resolution of banks, and we have had
guidelines, such as “prompt corrective action,” that require bank
supervisors to address individual situations quickly, so that isolated
problems do not fester and possibly affect the broader financial
system.
While these laws and regulations were effective in addressing
problem situations in banks, a significant void existed relative to
nonbank financial firms. The Dodd-Frank Act provides a new
mechanism for the orderly resolution of systemically important
nonbank firms that fail. This will send a strong message to financial
firms and market participants that no firm is too big to fail—whether
a bank or a nonbank financial firm. In sending this message, I believe
the legislation adds stability to the financial system.
I am especially pleased to see the legislation also calls for
organizational “living wills.” These living wills are not just paper
tigers. They must be carefully drawn up and updated regularly. By

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Regulatory Reform: The New Face of Bank Regulation :: September 11, 2010 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
ensuring that no one firm can be too big to fail, the playing field is
leveled, and the perception that the very largest firms will always
benefit from some implicit government guarantee against failure is
addressed.
Trust and stability are the broad themes that I believe are important
to take away from this historic legislation. Keeping these themes in
mind will help keep the many complexities of the Act in the proper
context and will help guide us as we build out the details of this new
law.
So just like the house that remains to be finished, much work
remains to craft the specific aspects of the regulations called for by
the law. The various regulatory agencies involved in this effort are a
lot like the electricians and plumbers and carpenters who must work
together effectively to build a quality house. The tools and materials
they use must be of the highest quality, installed properly, and in the
right sequence, to prevent underlying structural problems.
In that respect, you as bankers play a critical role in making this
regulatory house we are building solid and secure for the long term. I
am very aware of the concerns that many of you have expressed
about the potential regulatory burdens that may arise from this
legislation. As we move into the rule-making phase of the process, it
is essential that your input is sought, provided, and considered. As
you know, a formal process exists to seek comments on proposed
rulemaking, and I encourage you to take an active role in that
process.
During this rule-making phase, issues of compliance, reporting, and
accountability will be addressed, and as we write the rules, it will be
critical to distinguish between firms that pose significant risk to the
financial system and those that do not. Some of you have heard me
talk about my proposal for a new regulatory and supervisory
framework called “tiered parity.” In this framework, financial firms
would be placed into a particular category, or tier, based on their
complexity and the level of risk they pose to the overall financial
system. The regulatory and supervisory approach applied to each tier
would be consistent within each tier—resulting in parity of treatment
for firms with similar risk profiles. However, the regulations and
supervisory approach would differ between the tiers. They would
become more restrictive from one tier to the next as the risk to the
financial system increases.
The provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act incorporate one aspect of this
tiered parity framework—that is, the most restrictive regulatory
requirements are imposed on the riskiest, systemically important
firms. The legislation applies this concept in a general way, in that
systemically important firms are distinguished from all others.
However, even greater clarification should take place during the rulewriting phase to better define the requirements for less-complex
firms. I am hopeful that in this rule-writing phase, the principles of
tiered parity will be more explicitly incorporated. Ultimately, I would
like to see a clear distinction made between those firms that pose
greater risk to the financial system versus those that pose less risk.
The rules and regulations should be written accordingly to prevent
overly burdensome requirements for community banks.
Following the rulemaking phase of the reform process, the next and
final phase of reform will be implementation. As financial
supervisors, we at the Federal Reserve will play an important role in
this phase of the process. The effectiveness of the regulations will, in
large part, be determined by the effectiveness of supervision. A key
lesson learned from the financial crisis is that supervision must be
strong enough to ensure financial stability.

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Regulatory Reform: The New Face of Bank Regulation :: September 11, 2010 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
But tiered parity applies here as well. The Act mandates that the
riskiest firms receive the highest degree of supervisory scrutiny. In
other words, there is no “one size fits all” formula for supervision. It
is our job as supervisors to recognize the great diversity of financial
firms, and we have to adapt our supervisory approach according to
the firms’ varying degrees of complexity and according to the risk
they pose to the financial system.
As an example, one of the key supervisory lessons learned from the
financial crisis is the critical role that effective enterprise risk
management plays in preventing excessive risk-taking by individual
firms. Accordingly, financial supervisors will focus greater attention
on enterprise risk management. The financial crisis revealed that a
silo approach to risk identification and management does not produce
good results.
The robustness of a firm ’s enterprise risk management processes—
their information reporting systems, their risk measurement
methodologies, even their governance structures-should be matched
to the nature and complexity of the firm ’s activities. The risk
management process for a community bank—while still necessarydoes not need to be as sophisticated as that for a regional bank, and
it certainly does not need to be as sophisticated as that for a money
center bank with many different business lines. What financial
supervisors need to keep in mind is the complexity and risk profile of
the supervised firm. The expectations for review areas such as risk
management or incentive compensation, for example, must be
harmonized with the nature, complexity, and risk profile of the firm.

Conclusion
In conclusion, I think it is important to view the Dodd-Frank Act in
the proper perspective. This legislation was a response to the
oversight gaps that were revealed by the financial and economic
crisis. Some believe that the legislation has gone too far, while
others think it hasn’t gone far enough. I maintain that this new
legislation, with thoughtful rule-making, provides an opportunity to
strengthen the American financial industry. Together, our goals
should be to reaffirm the public’s trust and confidence in their
banks, and above all to help ensure the stability of the financial
system.
Just like the finishing of a house, the finishing process of financial
reform will be a complex and challenging task. Numerous rules and
regulations will need to be written by the various regulatory agencies
in the next phase, and the outcomes of this phase will benefit from
the input and feedback received from the industry. We must take
into consideration the varying levels of risk to the financial system
posed by different tiers of firms. We want to close the gaps in our
supervisory and regulatory framework without overburdening our
least complex banking organizations with rules designed for the most
complex financial firms. We must also find new ways to work
effectively across traditional boundaries to achieve the stability we
are seeking for the financial industry.
As the new rules and regulations are implemented, our financial
supervisors will also need to be sensitive to this balance. We must
tailor our supervisory approach in a way that ensures parity among
financial firms with similar risk profiles.
An open and continuous dialogue between all stakeholders must be
maintained through this next phase to prevent the outcome from
tipping too far in any one direction. Again, I encourage you to raise
your voices during this all-important rule-writing phase. I am
optimistic that, with all of us working together, the ultimate
outcome will be a strong and stable foundation for our country’s

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Regulatory Reform: The New Face of Bank Regulation :: September 11, 2010 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

financial system.

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