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Fed signals lighter touch on bank supervision, foreign bank oversight

This article is more than 12 months old

WASHINGTON The US Federal Reserve signalled it would take a lighter touch when supervising banks, in another win for the industry which has long complained that the regulator's closed-door supervisory process is opaque and capricious.

In particular, foreign lenders Deutsche Bank, Credit Suisse, UBS and Barclays should no longer be held to the same supervisory standard as big US banks after shrinking their combined US assets by more than 50 per cent over the past decade, Fed governor Randal Quarles said.

"We have been giving significant thought to the composition of our supervisory portfolios and... whether and how we should address the significant decrease in size and risk profile of the foreign firms," said Mr Quarles.

His comments come as the Fed pivots from rewriting a raft of rules introduced following the 2007-2009 global financial crisis, to reviewing the way it puts them into practice.

While regulation draws bright lines on what lenders can and cannot do, Fed supervisors have discretion as to how those often highly complex rules are interpreted and implemented daily by each institution depending on their business profile.

Banks have complained the Fed's supervisory process, which is confidential, is too inflexible and applied unevenly, and have lobbied for greater transparency and predictability.

The Fed supervises institutions according to different buckets, with the eight riskiest US banks along with UBS, Credit Suisse, Deutsche and Barclays subject to the strictest scrutiny.

Mr Quarles said it no longer made sense to hold those foreign lenders to the same standard as the likes of Wells Fargo and Citigroup because their riskiness has declined. He suggested supervising them in line with regional banks such as PNC or Capital One, potentially changing the competitive landscape for firms in that bucket. - REUTERS

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