Fed’s Bowman Says ‘Time Has Come’ to Revisit Key Capital Buffer

Federal Reserve Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman warned the current approach to leverage ratio requirements has led to unintended consequences in the market while adding she could support lowering interest rates as soon as July.

Bowman said the “time has come” to revisit the key capital buffer after concerns the rule has constrained lenders’ trading in the $29 trillion Treasuries market.

“Leverage ratio impacts on bank-affiliated broker-dealers can have broader impacts, including market impacts like those observed in Treasury market intermediation activities,” Bowman on Monday said in prepared remarks for a research conference in Prague. “Once we’ve identified emerging unintended consequences — issues that were not contemplated during the development of a regulatory approach, we must consider how to revisit earlier regulatory and policy decisions.”

Bowman outlined an ambitious agenda earlier this month — from reviewing a capital buffer known as the supplementary leverage ratio to insulating community banks from requirements targeting bigger firms.

The Fed and other regulators this week are set to unveil potential changes to leverage rules in a proposal that would change the overall ratio instead of excluding specific assets like Treasuries as some observers had predicted, Bloomberg News reported earlier.

Bowman said the Fed will host a July 22 conference to to discuss bank capital and noted “simple reforms” could improve Treasury market functioning by building resilience in case of stress events. She previously criticized regulators’ plan to require the country’s largest lenders to hold significantly more capital to buffer against losses and a potential financial crisis.