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US banks are beginning to choose their fights against new capital regulations.

Regulators Unveil Reform Package for Post-Financial Crisis Capital Regulations

By Douglas Gillison, Nupur Anand and‌ Tatiana Bautzer

(Reuters) – Now ⁢that ‍regulators in Washington have unfurled a hefty reform‍ package of⁣ post-financial‌ crisis capital regulations, banking industry advisers are​ honing in on what they consider ‍most disruptive, including ⁤risk management requirements that could affect real estate lending, consumer credit and wealth management.

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In a joint proposal on July 27, the top‌ three U.S. bank regulators proposed a ‍thousand-page overhaul ⁤that would in​ aggregate⁢ require banks to set aside an additional 16% in capital the regulators believe is needed to strengthen the financial ⁣system.

By increasing‌ the degree of risk attributed to certain assets, the proposed rules would ​require banks ‍to hold proportionately ⁢more‌ capital, potentially eating into​ returns on equity​ and profits. ⁣Industry lobby groups such ​as‌ the Financial Services Forum (FSF), the Bank Policy ⁢Institute and the Securities Industry and Financial ⁣Markets Association have argued this will make it harder to lend to consumers and warn ⁤it will slow​ the economy.

Though the spring​ of⁤ 2023 saw three of the four biggest bank failures in U.S. history, the FSF reacted to the‍ proposal by saying the Federal Reserve’s own stress tests show the largest banks ​were sound and well capitalized, making the ⁢proposal “a solution without a problem.”

Industry analysts see areas which the‌ well-financed bank lobby will be ​eager to red-pencil.

Joe Saas, senior vice president for balance sheet risk at‌ financial services conglomerate​ FIS, said the proposal’s shift from a standard risk charge ⁢to a range of risk levels to be allocated to ⁢different assets for rental-backed real estate ⁢lending would likely ⁤be “circled for push-backs.”

Making⁢ such lending more expensive ‌will shrink ⁢credit available to historically ⁤under-served borrowers, something the industry is likely to fight, he said.

Chen Xu, an attorney‌ in the financial institutions group at Debevoise & Plimpton, said the new rules viewed high-revenue business lines as higher risk.

“Some businesses that are fee-based such as​ wealth management will need to allocate more capital even if there is no balance sheet risk,” ​he ⁤said, adding that this could weigh on ⁢trading in ‍capital markets.

Reform proponents argue the true danger to public welfare‍ is financial instability.

Fed representatives did not⁤ offer to comment for this article. But ‌when announcing the ⁣proposal, Fed Vice Chair for⁣ Supervision Michael⁣ Barr said “extensive analysis” indicated the benefits ⁣of a strong ⁣financial system “outweigh the costs to economic activity”​ that may come with holding more ⁣capital.

Major banks have commented only sparingly on the proposal. ‌JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie ​Dimon told CNBC‍ on Wednesday that it was “hugely ⁢disappointing,” claiming it was poorly​ designed and would ⁤shrink access ⁤to credit for consumers and small businesses. ⁣

Wells Fargo said it had no comment beyond an Aug 1 regulatory filing in which it‍ said the proposals were likely to alter its risk gauges for lending and result in a net ⁤increase in its ‍capital requirements.

A representative from Citigroup declined to ​comment. ​ Bank of America ‌didn’t‌ respond to a ⁣request for comment.

According to Kevin Stein, a senior adviser at the financial services advisory firm Klaros ⁤Group, the new risk-weight norms could drive more​ business to⁢ non-bank lenders beyond the reach ⁣of regulators.

The bank lobby has had plenty of⁢ time to gear up for this battle as the July proposal was six years in the making. It is intended ⁤to ⁢implement a final set of post-financial crisis reforms, often known as Basel III “Endgame” agreed to in ⁤2017 by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, which comprises regulators from major economies.

Morgan Stanley analysts say the ⁢largest banks may take ⁢up to four years ‍to set aside profits to comply with the ⁤new capital rules. However, Richard Ramsden, a Goldman Sachs analyst covering large banks, said the biggest lenders face an unexpectedly onerous climb.

The increase in risk-weighted assets translates‍ to about $135 billion in incremental capital requirements, or about 200 basis​ points of common equity tier-one capital for ⁤the biggest banks, Ramsden said.

“The banks will have to make decisions pretty much now. What are they going to ‌do with‍ buy-backs?⁣ What are they going to do in terms balance sheet management?” he asked.

Dennis Kelleher, head of the financial reform advocacy group Better Markets, said the banking ⁤industry had made ‌similar complaints in the past which he believed had proven​ unfounded.

“Wall Street is ⁣expert at hiding their special interests behind the concerns of others, which they inflame with scare tactics and false claims,” ⁢he said.

“What they don’t​ talk about is the threat to​ the economy and‌ lending⁣ and main ⁢street ‍and families and contagion from under-capitalized banks.”

‍ (Reporting by Douglas Gillison, Tatiana Bautzer, Nupur Anand and Saeed Azhar; editing by Megan Davies and Anna ⁢Driver)

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