The Fed's $200 Billion Bank Stimulus Poses a Big Risk

The Federal Reserve is about to give America’s biggest lenders an extra $200 billion of capital to play with. Later this week, US regulators will launch fresh proposals to update and, in some ways, loosen US capital rules that will fuel stock buybacks, lending and trading. But there’s a danger here: Too much haste in deploying all this spare cash risks overheating the economy and housing markets in unhealthy ways.

Having so much additional capital will present the biggest banks with tricky choices. Goldman Sachs Group Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Morgan Stanley will each have to think twice about handing billions of dollars straight back to investors through stock buybacks — an expensive exercise because their shares are so highly valued. But all large lenders should be wary of growing their loan books rapidly because that almost always leads to higher bad debts as lending standards slip.

Republican leaders at the Fed and two other watchdogs are ripping up the previous Democrat-sponsored proposals for updating capital rules after a disastrous attempt to get tougher on banks that kicked off in 2023. The Fed’s then-vice-chair for financial supervision, Michael Barr, had tried to force big lenders to meet capital hurdles that were nearly 20% higher than existing rules.

The big six banks held back billions in profits over the past couple in anticipation of Barr’s stiffer standards — most of the $200 billion about to be freed up is just that money being no longer needed. There looks likely to be more gains on top, however. JPMorgan, for example, has about $60 billion of excess common equity tier-one capital (as it is technically known) that was retained to prepare for the Democrat plan. The new Republican proposals could boost that to $75 billion, according to Bloomberg Intelligence.

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Michelle Bowman quickly scrapped the previous proposal and started again when she was handed Barr’s role by President Donald Trump last year. She set out to review the capital rules, the extra charges applied to systemically important banks and how all of these requirements interact with stress testing. Bowman and others in the administration also wanted to undo some of the regulatory arbitrage that has squeezed so much lending out of banks and into less regulated funds and other sources of finance, including private credit.

Two new proposals are due to be released after the Fed holds an open board meeting on Thursday, Bowman said in a speech last week. They will aim to bring US rules more in line with the international standards already adopted in Europe and overhaul America’s much tougher systemic risk requirements for its largest banks. “Together, these proposals would decrease the requirements by a small amount,” she said.