Financial Deregulation Under Trump
Basel May Not Go Away as Fast as Banks Believe
“We don’t want to [reform] in an unregulated way. We want to do it in a smart, regulated way.” – Gary Cohn, White House National Economic Council Director & Former President, Goldman Sachs & Co.1
Friday’s Presidential Executive Order2 and Memorandum3 kick off the Trump Administration’s ambitious plans for financial deregulation. Notably absent from these documents is any direct mention of the FRTB or other Basel initiatives. A careful reading of Trump’s new Core Principals, in the context of previous publications, leads us to conclude that the FRTB and the Basel Framework will persist for most banks.
Friday’s Presidential Executive Order4 on financial deregulation aligns with previous statements and documents published by candidate Trump as well as the Republicans in Congress. WSJ analysis, published only days after the election entitled “We will Dismantle Dodd-Frank”5, laid out a plan for fundamental reform based on detailed position papers from candidate Trump6 as well as even more detailed draft legislation from the House Financial Services Committee known as the Financial Choice Act (FCA)7. Friday’s headlines8 miss the fact that President’s Trump’s proposed financial reforms, while well telegraphed, do not directly target rules already promulgated by the Basel Committee on Bank Supervision (BCBS)9 and agreed to by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve system (BGFRS).
In our view, these reforms will be substantial, but will not materially impact BCBS initiatives, including the Fundamental Review of the Trading Book (FRTB). The Trump Administration seeks to attack financial deregulation through three mechanisms: Executive Orders and Memoranda, Legislation and Appointments. These reforms will be significant, but most of these changes are directed at regulation specific to the United States and not part of international frameworks. Table 1 summarize the changes we expect to see.
Table 1
Financial Deregulation: What Stays and What Goes | ||
---|---|---|
Major Overhaul or Repeal | Tools of Change | Limited Change Expected10 |
Dept. of Labor (DOL) rules | Changes via Executive Order or Memorandum | NA |
Consumer Finance Protection Bureau (CFPB) | Changes of Legislation – Dodd-Frank Amendment (DFA) | NA |
DFA, Title II (including Systemically Important Financial Institutions or SIFIs) | ||
DFA, FSOC | ||
DFA, CCAR | ||
DFA, Volker Rule | ||
Basel “Opt-Out” for Community Banks (10% test) | Changes through combination of Legislation and Appointments made over more extended periods of time | Basel III, IV for most banks |
Federal Reserve System (FRS), Initiative to bring the Federal Reserve System (FRS) under the Congressional Appropriation Process will be resisted | Fundamental Review of the Trading Book (FRTB) for most banks | |
FRS, various new restrictions through Title VII of FCA11 | ||
FRS, various new notice and consultation requirements for new BCBS initiatives not already agreed |
Presidential Executive Order – February 4th, 2017
President Trump outlined six Core Principles for Financial Regulation and directed the Treasury Secretary to consult with all FSOC12 members and to issue a report within 120 days describing all laws, treaties, regulations, guidance, reporting, recordkeeping requirements, and other government policies that would inhibit regulation according to the Core Principles.
President Trump’s Core Principles for Financial Deregulation |
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Actual changes may take time to implement depending on what this study finds. Trump’s Treasury Secretary and most FSOC13 heads have yet to be confirmed. These confirmations are a prerequisite for orchestrating and executing any rule changes. Past statements imply that the Trump Administration will use the FCA as a blueprint for implementing financial reform.
Executive Memorandum – February 4th, 2017
President Trump also issued an Executive Memorandum on February 4th directing the Department of Labor (DOL) to examine their Fiduciary Duty Rule and to repeal it if it is found to reduce investor access or increase investor costs. It should be noted that this rule change does not require consent beyond the DOL.
Legislation: Deconstructing the Financial Choice Act (FCA) – HR 5983
FCA is the 513 page blueprint for financial reform. Despite recent headlines, the FCA does not seek to replace the DFA in its entirety. Rather, the Republican Congress seeks to replace certain aspects of DFA and other legislation which it considers to be most limiting to growth or which fosters the potential for tax-payer funded bailouts of large financial institutions.
Importantly, only the smallest community banks are expected to meet the 10% leverage test required under the FCA to opt-out of Basel capital and liquidity rules.16
Here is an outline of how the FCA is constructed.
How the Financial Choice Act Works | ||
---|---|---|
Description | Impact | |
I | Opt-Out Capital Option |
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II | Ending “Too Big to Fail” |
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III | Replace CFPB |
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IV | Capital Markets Reforms |
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V | Insurance Regulation | a. Repeals the Federal Insurance Office |
VI | Reforms in the Oversight of Regulators Other Than the Fed |
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VII | Fed Oversight Reforms |
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VIII | Penalty Reforms |
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IX | Repeal of Volcker Rule |
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X-XI | Reforms Aimed at Small Business |
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Note that neither the FCA, the Executive Order, nor the Presidential Memorandum on Fiduciary Duty Rule19 have any direct mention of Basel III, Basel IV or the FRTB other than FCA Title I. Congress has already granted the BGFRS with broad powers to create implementing legislation for international rules and these powers have not been rescinded within the FCA.
Executive Branch and the Federal Reserve System Appointments
Financial regulation in the U.S. is governed by a complex network of agencies, bureaus and governmental authorities. Sitting atop it all is the Federal Reserve System (FRS) and governing the FRS is its 7-member board. The BGFRS represents the U.S. at most international bank regulatory organizations including the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), the BCBS, and the Financial Stability Board (FSB).
Unlike cabinet or agency appointments in the Executive Branch, the FRS’s governance is independent. No member of the BGFRS can be removed by Presidential Order alone and no members’ term expires prior to February 1st, 2020.20 Of the 7-member board, the Trump Administration does have the power to nominate 2 new individuals to vacant board seats, including the Vice-Chair for Supervision.Trump can also elect to change the Chair (currently held by Janet Yellen) and Vice-Chair (currently held by Stanley Fischer) in 2018, but only from within the existing members of the BGFRS and only with Senate confirmation. While there is speculation that Ms. Yellen, Mr. Fischer and a third governor, Daniel Tarullo, may retire early21, there is no legal mandate for them to do so. We do not expect that the governors who spent years creating the Basel framework will easily now step aside to see it undone
Conclusion
Unlike many parts of the DFA, CFPB, Volker and other U.S. focused reform initiatives, we fully expect that rules promulgated by the BCBS under BGFRS guidance will be implemented on a timely basis for most banks. In particular, this includes the Fundamental Review of the Trading Book (FRTB) which is the first BCBS rule to contain specific
dates for local rule making and implementation.
While we do expect an opt-out provision for Basel capital and liquidity standards to prevail in the U.S. and possibly other parts of the world, we believe such a provision will be directed onlyto the smallest, community banks.
- ^ as quoted in the WSJ, 2/3/17, Trump Plans to Undo Dodd-Frank, Fiduciary Rule, by Michael C. Bender and Damian
Paletta - ^ Presidential Executive Order on Core Principals for Regulating the United States Financial System https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2017/02/03/presidential-executive-order-core-principles-regulating-united-states
- ^ Presidential Memorandum on Fiduciary Rule, https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2017/02/03/presidentialmemorandum-fiduciary-duty-rule;
- ^ https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2017/02/03/presidential-executive-order-core-principles-regulatingunited-states
- ^ Donald Trump’s Transition Team: We will ‘Dismantle’ Dodd-Frank”, by Ryan Tracy, WSJ, 11/10/16
- ^ https://www.donaldjtrump.com/policies
- ^ A 513-page bill proposed by the House Financial Services Committee in 2016, HR 5983, http://financialservices.house.gov/uploadedfiles/bills-114hr-hr5983-h001036-amdt-001.pdf
- ^ Such as “Trump Begins Assault on Dodd-Frank Financial Regulations”, New York Times, by Ben Protess and Julie Hirshfield Davis, 2/3/17
- ^ he Basel Committee for Bank Supervision (BCBS)
- ^ The FCA does provide an opt-out provision to these rules under Title I, but only under liited circumstances. Please see FCA, Title 1 discussion below.
- ^ http://financialservices.house.gov/uploadedfiles/bills-114hr-hr5983-h001036-amdt-001.pdf
- ^ The Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC) is a creation of the DFA designed to foster cooperation and coordination amongst disparate US financial regulators, as well as to implement consolidated rulemaking around G-SIFI’s. The FSOC voting member agencies are the BGFRS, CFTC, FDIC, FHFA, NCUA, OCC, SEC, Treasury, CFPB. The US Treasury Secretary serves as Chair. More information can be found at https://www.treasury.gov/initiatives/fsoc/rulemaking/Pages/default.aspx. Also, please see our earlier whitepaper entitled Basel Under Trump.
- ^ See footnote 7
- ^ Total Leverage means Tangible Equity/Total Liabilities. The term Total Leverage Exposure is defined under section 3.10(c)(4)(ii), 217.10(c)(4), or 324.10(c)(4) of title 12, Code of Federal Regulations as of 1/1/15.
- ^ The key, U.S. regulatory metric of depository solvency measured on a scale of “1” (best) to “5” (worst). CAMEL rating are not publically available but are made known to bank executive managements and boards. CAMELS stands for Capital adequacy, Assets, Management capability, Earnings, Liquidity, and Sensitivity to market risk.
- ^ A peer review of 20 regional banks published by Wintrust Financial Corporation finds that the median average Tangible Equity/Total Assets ratio was 8.61% as of 12/31/16, well below the 10% threshold. These 20 banks were:Associated Banc-Corp (ASB), BancorpSouth, Inc. (BXS), Cullen/Frost Bankers, Inc. (CFR), First Citizens BancShares, Inc.(FCNCA), First Horizon National Corporation (FHN), First Midwest Bancorp, Inc. (FMBI), First Niagara Financial Group, Inc. (FNFG), FirstMerit Corporation (FMER), Fulton Financial Corporation (FULT), International Bancshares Corporation (IBOC), MB Financial, Inc. (MBFI), Old National Bancorp (ONB), PrivateBancorp, Inc. (PVTB), Susquehanna Bancshares, Inc. (SUSQ), TCF Financial Corporation (TCB), UMB Financial Corporation (UMBF), Umpqua Holdings Corporation (UMPQ), Valley National Bancorp (VLY), Webster Financial Corporation (WBS), Wintrust Financial Corporation (WTFC). Please see http://www.wintrust.com/investor-relations/peer-analysis
- ^ Largely through the elimination of provisions in the Financial Stability Act of 2010
- ^ Legislation will not be required to overturn the DOL rules if the DOL, under the Trump Administration, revokes these rules on its own
- ^ Dated 2/3/17 directing the Labor Secretary to investigate elimination of this rule, https://www.whitehouse.gov/thepress-office/2017/02/03/presidential-memorandum-fiduciary-duty-rule
- ^ https://www.federalreserve.gov/aboutthefed/bios/board/default.htm
- ^ http://www.cnbc.com/2016/11/16/obscure-part-of-law-could-let-yellen-fischer-thwart-trump-on-reshaping-thefed.html