Fed may change stress tests, capital buffers for US banks: Yellen
[WASHINGTON] The Federal Reserve is considering changing the annual stress tests it gives to US banks to see if they can withstand a massive financial crisis, and also using test results to set the capital buffers that banks must maintain to blunt the effects of a downturn, according to its chair, Janet Yellen.
In prepared testimony for a House of Representatives Financial Services Committee hearing on Wednesday, Ms Yellen said the Fed is "now considering making several changes to our stress testing methodology and process."
"The existing capital conservation buffer would be replaced with a risk-sensitive, firm-specific buffer that is sized based on stress test results," she also said.
For the eight US banks that are large and considered important to the global financial system the new buffer calculation "would result in a significant aggregate increase in capital requirements," Ms Yellen said.
Ms Yellen did not comment on the outlook for the economy or monetary policy in her prepared remarks.
REUTERS
Share with us your feedback on BT's products and services
TRENDING NOW
Singtel H2 net profit down 20.9% at S$2.2 billion; telco open to Aussie minority partner in Optus
Yeo’s, Tiger Beer and now Gardenia – flight of food manufacturing from Singapore might be just as planned
Apex court rejects resulting trust claim in 99-1 condo dispute
Singtel seeks clarity on participating in telco consolidation after M1-Simba fallout; weighs Reit IPO